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Noam Angrist; Sarah Kabay; Dean Karlan; Lincoln Lau; Kevin Wong – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
Children spend most of their time at home in their early years, yet efforts to promote human capital at home in many low- and middle-income settings remain limited. We conduct a randomized controlled trial to evaluate an intervention which encourages parents and caregivers to foster human capital accumulation among their children between ages 3…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Preschool Children, Parent Child Relationship, Parent Participation
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Susana Senos; Neuza Pedro; Nuno Dorotea – Educational Media International, 2024
The project "Academia Digital para Pais" began in a pandemic context, in an effort of the Ministry of Education and the private sector, aiming at helping the digital-struggling families. The COVID-19 pandemic led schools to a sudden closure, highlighting the challenges families faced, both in terms of access to technologies, and in terms…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Technological Literacy, Parents
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Amy E. Mitchell; Rebecca Armstrong; Cathy McBryde; Alina Morawska; Evren Etel; Elizabeth M. Hurrion; Tomomi McAuliffe; Leanne Johnston – Early Child Development and Care, 2024
The transition to school is a sensitive developmental period for young children. Although children born very/extremely preterm have increased risk of health and developmental concerns, predictors of their school readiness and adjustment remain largely unexamined. Parents of very/extremely preterm-born children (aged 3-7 years; pre-transition n =…
Descriptors: Premature Infants, School Readiness, Parents, Parent Attitudes
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Cuevas, Stephany – Journal of Latinos and Education, 2023
Based on the experiences of 15 Latina/o undocumented parents, this qualitative study identifies three distinct ways Latina/o immigrant parents understand their role in their children's post-secondary aspirations: "confident partners," "motivational supporters," and "uncertain spectators." By comparing and contrasting…
Descriptors: Parents, Undocumented Immigrants, College Bound Students, Parent Participation
Molly J. Oliverio – ProQuest LLC, 2023
It is widely accepted that the involvement of parents in their children's education leads to various academic, social, and mental health benefits. Further, parent involvement has been identified as a critical component to ensuring robust and rewarding experiences for students with disabilities throughout their educational journeys and essential in…
Descriptors: Parent Participation, Parent Surveys, Suburban Schools, School Districts
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Cheung, Sum Kwing; Chan, Winnie Wai Lan; Fong, Ricci Wai-tsz – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2023
Parents' high academic expectations have often been found to benefit children's academic outcomes. Nonetheless, little is known whether different ways of expressing the high expectations exert similar influences on early numeracy development. This study therefore investigated the relations of two forms of parents' perfectionistic…
Descriptors: Young Children, Kindergarten, Parents, Parent Attitudes
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Wang, Xichen; Wang, Qianqian; Ma, Minjie; Gu, Zhengwei; Shi, Yang; Wang, Tingzhao – Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, 2023
The study explores the influence of socioeconomic status (SES) on the academic outcomes of children with intellectual disability (ID), and the role of parental participation and parental attitudes toward educational communicators in this process. A total of 305 children with ID from special needs schools and their parents and teachers in China…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Children, Intellectual Disability, Academic Achievement
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Sehrish Shikarpurya; Carly B. Gilson; Claudia M. Dunn; Katherine E. Fletcher – Inclusion, 2024
Alongside ongoing efforts to increase postschool outcomes of racially minoritized young adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD), little is known about their parents' experiences in preparing for and navigating the transition planning process. We conducted a transition survey with 362 racially minorized parents of children…
Descriptors: Developmental Disabilities, Intellectual Disability, Parents, Individualized Transition Plans
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Leoandra Onnie Rogers; Katharine E. Scott; Finn Wintz; Sarah R. Eisenman; Chiara Dorsi; David Chae; Andrew N. Meltzoff – Developmental Psychology, 2024
Previous research on parent-led race conversations reports robust racial differences in the content of race conversations between Black and white parents. It was unknown, however, whether these racial differences shifted in the months immediately following the summer of 2020 when there was heightened public attention directed toward white parents,…
Descriptors: African Americans, Whites, Parents, Parent Child Relationship
EdChoice, 2024
This poll was conducted between May 7-10, 2024 among a sample of 2,252 Adults. The interviews were conducted online and the data were weighted to approximate a target sample of Adults based on gender, educational attainment, age, race, and region. Results based on the full survey have a measure of precision of plus or minus 2.07 percentage points.…
Descriptors: Public Opinion, Parents, Parent Attitudes, Elementary Secondary Education
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Rachel Leslie; Ellen Larsen; Melissa Fanshawe; Alice Brown – Australian Journal of Learning Difficulties, 2024
Parents of dyslexic children often take on additional parental responsibilities as they seek to ensure fair and equitable access to education for their children. Often framed as advocacy, this paper explores the ways in which the term allyship may be well placed to represent the complex primary adjacent and vicarious disability experiences parents…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Children, Parents, Parent Attitudes
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Margaret W. Sallee; Joshua C. Hine; Christopher W. Kohler – New Directions for Higher Education, 2024
This qualitative case study explores how neoliberalism affects how food insecure student-parents experience higher education. Drawing on interviews with administrators, student activists, and student-parents at one U.S. research university, this article argues that neoliberalism's emphasis on revenue generation and a shift toward individualism has…
Descriptors: Parents, College Students, Neoliberalism, Administrators
Christopher Campos – Blueprint Labs, 2024
This paper studies how parents' school choices are affected by information about school and peer quality and how social interactions mediate changes in demand. I design an information intervention that cross-randomizes whether parents receive information about school quality (school value-added) and peer quality. Using a spillover design that…
Descriptors: Interaction, School Choice, Educational Quality, Parent School Relationship
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Laura S. Kabiri; Annie Chen; Brian D. Ray – International Journal of Educational Reform, 2025
Resilience could improve parental response to serving as schooling educators during the COVID-19 pandemic. This study aimed to determine whether schooling type (homeschool vs. public-school) and physical activity resulted in significantly different perceived resilience among 123 parents of school-aged youth. The main effect of schooling type, but…
Descriptors: Physical Activity Level, Parents, Resilience (Psychology), COVID-19
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Sevinç Kiliman; Naif Ergün; Alper Aslan; Idris Göksu – E-Learning and Digital Media, 2025
This study aims to examine children's well-being and life satisfaction in terms of various variables related to parents' and children's problematic technology usage. Specifically, parent/child responses during their technology use and parents' phubbing and technoference behaviors were considered. The study was conducted with 185 children (8-14)…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Technology, Child Welfare, Life Satisfaction
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