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Rich, Cynthia Jo – Race Relations Reporter, 1973
Argues that black mothers in the U.S. are adversely affected by the white stereotype of the quiet passive baby, citing evidence that in Africa, black neonates show a rapid growth in motor development, while in Mexico, Mayan Indian babies, just minutes old, demonstrate a precocious development in sensory perception. (Author/JM)
Descriptors: Blacks, Cultural Differences, Heredity, Infant Behavior
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Kilbride, Philip L. – 1972
Research was undertaken to determine what informal education practices lend themselves to the precocity in sensorimotor development noted among Bagandan infants in Uganda, relative to their American white and black counterparts. With the assistance of a Muganda midwife/nurse a prenatal questionnaire was answered by women visiting antenatal clinics…
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Context, Cultural Differences