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Showing 1 to 15 of 36 results Save | Export
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Alejandra Abufhele; David Bravo; Florencia Lopez-Boo; Pamela Soto-Ramirez – Comparative Education Review, 2024
The learning and developmental losses from preprimary program closures due to COVID-19 may be unprecedented. These disruptions early in life can be long-lasting. Although there is evidence about the effects of school closures on older children, there is scarce evidence on such losses for children in their early years. This article is among the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, COVID-19, Pandemics, Child Development
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Vásquez-Echeverría, Alejandro; Tomás, Clementina; González, Meliza; Rodríguez, Juan I.; Alvarez-Nuñez, Lucía; Liz, Maite; Pérez, Mónica; Rudnitzky, Fanny; Berón, Cristian; Gariboto, Giorgina; Lopez Boo, Florencia – Early Child Development and Care, 2022
Measurement of early childhood development at the population level has traditionally been neglected in Latin America. In this context, Uruguay stands out for having two population-based protocols: the Nutrition, Child Development and Health Survey (ENDIS), a home survey, and the School Readiness - Child Development Inventory (INDI). This paper…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Child Development, Socioeconomic Status, Sex
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Northrup, Jessie Bolz – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2017
The present article proposes a new developmental model of how young infants adapt and respond to complex contingencies in their environment, and how this influences development. The model proposes that typically developing infants adjust to an increasingly complex environment in ways that make it easier for them to allocate limited attentional…
Descriptors: Infants, Child Development, Adjustment (to Environment), Models
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Dumas, Michael J.; Nelson, Joseph Derrick – Harvard Educational Review, 2016
Drawing on critical childhood studies, Michael J. Dumas and Joseph Derrick Nelson argue that Black boyhood is socially unimagined and unimaginable, largely due to the devalued position and limited consideration of Black girls and boys within the broader social conception of childhood. In addition, the "crisis" focus of the public…
Descriptors: African Americans, Adolescents, Males, Educational Research
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Julian, Megan M. – Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review, 2013
One of the major questions of human development is how early experience impacts the course of development years later. Children adopted from institutional care experience varying levels of deprivation in their early life followed by qualitatively better care in an adoptive home, providing a unique opportunity to study the lasting effects of early…
Descriptors: Children, Age, Adoption, Disadvantaged Environment
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Lickliter, Robert – Developmental Psychology, 2012
Blair and Raver (2012) have provided an organism-in-environment conceptualization of the development of stress response physiology and its relation to the development of self-regulation. They argue that we must consider the context in which self-regulation and stress reactivity occur to understand their implications for developmental outcome. More…
Descriptors: Physiology, Early Experience, Social Development, Self Control
Progar, Michelle – ProQuest LLC, 2011
Social competency gained in early childhood influences numerous domains of a child's life throughout the lifespan. Since the preschool years are a time when children begin forming friendships with peers and may be exposed to a classroom setting for the first time, developing social competency is imperative for functioning well with the many people…
Descriptors: Social Development, Early Childhood Education, Parent Education, Early Experience
Gordon, Mary; Green, Joan – Education Canada, 2008
Roots of Empathy (ROE) is a classroom program that has shown dramatic effect in reducing levels of aggression and violence among schoolchildren, while raising social/emotional competence and increasing empathy. At the heart of the program are a neighbourhood infant and parent who visit the classroom for nine visits, every three weeks, over the…
Descriptors: Emotional Intelligence, Infants, Experiential Learning, Parents
Bailey, Donald B., Jr., Ed.; Bruer, John T., Ed.; Symons, Frank J., Ed.; Lichtman, Jeff W., Ed. – 2001
The concept of critical or sensitive periods in child development provides an example around which to organize discussion of what is known and not known about brain development and the implications of brain science on early childhood policy and practice. This book reviews the early history of critical periods and evidence for their existence in…
Descriptors: Brain, Child Development, Early Experience, Early Intervention
Frost, Joe L. – 1998
This paper presents a brief overview of the array of neuroscience research as it applies to play and child development. The paper discusses research showing the importance of play for brain growth and child development, and recommends that families, schools and other social and corporate institutions rearrange their attitudes and priorities about…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Early Childhood Education, Early Experience
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Peet, Susan H. – Early Education and Development, 1995
Compared parental perceptions of the use of internal information sources--intuitions, religious beliefs, personal childhood experiences--to use of external sources for information about their toddlers' development. Found that parents perceived the internal sources as being used more frequently and as more useful for information on their child's…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Child Development, Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis
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Crossman, Sharyn M.; Adams, Gerald R. – Journal of Psychology, 1980
Investigated whether a preschool intervention program for children from single-parent households could be effective in establishing the conditions appropriate for allowing the child to recover from the harmful consequences of divorce and limited adult-child interaction. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Crisis Intervention, Divorce
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Peisner-Feinberg, Ellen S.; Burchinol, Margaret R. – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, 1997
A portion of the Child Care Cost, Quality, and Outcomes study finds that quality of center-based care was positively related to preschool children's concurrent cognitive and socioemotional development. More advantaged children are not necessarily buffered from effects of poor quality care. In addition, stronger positive effects of child care…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Day Care Centers, Day Care Effects
National Scientific Council on the Developing Child, 2006
Recent advances in neuroscience show clearly how experience can change brain neurochemicals, and how this in turn affects the way the brain functions. As a result, early negative events actually get built into the growing brain's neurochemistry, altering the brain's architecture. Research is continuing to investigate how children with genetic…
Descriptors: Emotional Development, Brain, Child Development, Neurological Organization
Drash, Philip W.; Stolberg, Arnold L. – 1977
This pilot study trained parents in behavior modification techniques and attempted to evaluate the impact of this training on the rate of cognitive, linguistic and social development in infants. A second goal was to identify significant areas in infant development which might be influenced by the teaching strategies used. Subjects were four…
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Child Development, Developmental Programs, Early Experience
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