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Gordon, Ira J. – 1970
The games described in this book for parents are designed to do several things. First, they will help the baby develop basic skills such as focusing the eyes, coordinating the eye and hand, and distinguishing differences among almost identical objects. Second, once he has these basic skills, he needs to become aware of how the skills can be useful…
Descriptors: Child Development, Childrens Games, Cognitive Development, Early Experience
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Gordon, Ira J. – Theory Into Practice, 1972
First, what parents do with their young children does influence child intellectual performance; second, we cannot categorize any group of parents; third, many parents are now doing the right thing"; fourth, parent education is a reasonable effort. (Author)
Descriptors: Child Development, Educational Research, Family Environment, Infants
Gordon, Ira J.; And Others – 1978
This paper presents data on the Parent Education model of Project Follow Through as one example of the impact of Follow Through on education in the home and school. It is reported that data from ten communities in nine different states indicate a consistent impact in two areas: (1) the home-school partnership and parental teaching behaviors, and…
Descriptors: Data Analysis, Home Visits, Parent Participation, Parent Role
Gordon, Ira J. – 1972
This paper is a general discussion of parents-as-teachers. This topic is approached from the standpoint of natural observation studies and laboratory studies. The natural field observations have been made in homes and in other settings, in which the main analytic technique was correlation. Numerous investigators have examined relationships between…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Family Influence, Family Relationship, Family Role
Gordon, Ira J.; And Others – 1979
This paper reports on the assessment of parent involvement in the Parent Education Follow Through Program (PEFT) which focuses on the development of a home/school/community partnership and stresses the importance of the home learning situation. A pluralistic evaluative approach was used to assess the program. Case study data were collected in…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Models, Parent Child Relationship, Parent Education
Gordon, Ira J.; And Others – 1970
This document is a first year report on a project which examines the effectiveness of (1) teaching the mother versus teaching the infant, and (2) using a professional versus using a paraprofessional as the intervening agent. Also being studied is the relationship between the sex of the infant and the way he is taught and the effectiveness of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Economically Disadvantaged, Home Visits, Infants
Gordon, Ira J. – 1971
Approximately 258 mothers and their children (aged 3 months to 3 years) participated in a home visit program using paraprofessionals as home visitors on a once-a-week basis in the first two years of life, combined with a small-group setting for four hours a week for children 2 to 3 years old. Findings indicate that such a Home Learning Center…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Economically Disadvantaged, Flow Charts, Home Programs
Gordon, Ira J. – 1974
The focus of the study reported here is on two issues: whether the two most elaborate systems of natural observation, that is, those developed by Escalona and Watts could be applied to mother-child interaction recorded in a teaching situation; and whether there are relationships between maternal-child behavior so observed, and a more extended…
Descriptors: Classroom Observation Techniques, Cognitive Development, Individual Development, Individual Differences