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Abel, Madelaine R.; Hambrick, Erin P.; Vernberg, Eric M. – Child & Youth Care Forum, 2021
Background: Talking about past experiences with parents is generally thought to promote positive psychological adjustment in children. Less is known about parent-child co-reminiscing when discussing past traumatic experiences, such as natural disasters, a unique type of shared trauma that can have long-lasting, and variable, psychological impacts…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Interpersonal Communication, Natural Disasters, Trauma
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Renner, Elizabeth; Somai, Rosyl S.; Van der Stigchel, Stefan; Campbell, Clare; Kean, Donna; Caldwell, Christine A. – Infant and Child Development, 2021
Assessing children's working memory capacity (WMC) can be challenging for a variety of reasons, including the rapid increase in WMC across early childhood. Here, we developed and piloted an adapted WMC task, which involved minimal equipment, could be performed rapidly, and did not rely on verbal production ability (to facilitate the use of the…
Descriptors: Task Analysis, Short Term Memory, Child Development, Computer Assisted Testing
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Ahi, Berat; Kahriman-Pamuk, Deniz – International Electronic Journal of Environmental Education, 2021
The purpose of the current study is to determine the opinions of children attending forest kindergarten about the concept of environment. The participants of the study are thirty six 50-70 month-old children attending a forest kindergarten. In line with the purpose of the study, the triangulation design, one of the qualitative research models, was…
Descriptors: Young Children, Childrens Attitudes, Kindergarten, Outdoor Education
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Liang, Yuan; Zhang, Lijin; Wang, Chunling; Liu, Yujuan – Infant and Child Development, 2021
This study investigated the influence of spontaneous focusing on numerosity (SFON) tendency on the performance and estimation patterns on number line estimation (NLE). To examine this question, 147 preschoolers (3.51-4.52 years) completed two types of SFON task (referenced SFON task and non-referenced SFON task) and three conditions of NLE…
Descriptors: Numbers, Computation, Preschool Children, Individual Characteristics
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Tong, Donia; Wyman, Joshua; Talwar, Victoria – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2021
There is a need to tell if children are providing truthful testimonies in legal cases. This study examined differences between children's true and false statements obtained using either an interview that included cognitive instructions or one that did not. Children witnessed a theft that they were asked to deny and were interviewed with or without…
Descriptors: Children, Deception, Interviews, Ethics
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Ryan, Joseph J.; Gontkovsky, Samuel T. – Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment, 2021
We analyzed data from the WASI-II manual to determine discrepancy score reliabilities of the Verbal Comprehension (VCI) and Perceptual Reasoning (PRI) indexes and the four subtests in the child and adult standardization samples. Reliabilities of the VCI-PRI discrepancy scores range from 0.78 to 0.86 for children and 0.82 to 0.89 for adults and…
Descriptors: Intelligence Tests, Test Reliability, Scores, Children
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Gongola, Jennifer; Williams, Shanna; Lyon, Thomas D. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2021
Concealment (i.e., omitting information without saying anything untrue) has received little empirical attention relative to falsification (i.e., false statements). This study examined free recall reports among a sample of 349 maltreated and nonmaltreated children ages four to nine, and found that concealment of a minor transgression was…
Descriptors: Deception, Recall (Psychology), Responses, Children
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Blampain, Elise; Gosse, Claire; Van Reybroeck, Marie – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2021
While copying skills are used daily at school and involve spelling abilities, studies examining copying performance in children with dyslexia are very scarce. The present study aims to determine whether children with dyslexia present a specific deficit in their copying processes or if their difficulties in copying are a consequence of their…
Descriptors: Duplication, Children, Dyslexia, Spelling
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Ünal, Ercenur; Richards, Catherine; Trueswell, John C.; Papafragou, Anna – Developmental Science, 2021
Although it is widely assumed that the linguistic description of events is based on a structured representation of event components at the perceptual/conceptual level, little empirical work has tested this assumption directly. Here, we test the connection between language and perception/cognition cross-linguistically, focusing on the relative…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Language, Perception, English
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Lipman, Corey; Williams, Amanda; Kawakami, Kerry; Steele, Jennifer R. – Developmental Psychology, 2021
Across three studies, we examined non-Black children's spontaneous associations with targets who differed by both race and emotional expression. Children aged 5 to 10 years (N = 419; 215 girls; 58% White; 65% of household incomes >$75,000/year) completed Implicit Association Tests (IAT; Greenwald et al., 2003) containing smiling Black and…
Descriptors: Association (Psychology), Children, Race, Affective Behavior
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Masek, Lillian R.; Ramirez, Alexus G.; McMillan, Brianna T. M.; Hirsh-Pasek, Kathy; Golinkoff, Roberta Michnick – Child Development Perspectives, 2021
"The 30-million-word gap," the quantified difference in the amount of speech that children growing up in low-resourced homes hear compared to their peers from high-resourced homes, is a phrase that has entered the collective consciousness. In the discussion of quantity, the complex and nuanced environments in which children learn…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Vocabulary, Poverty, Children
Kristen Marie Schraml – ProQuest LLC, 2021
Historically caregivers of individuals with disabilities have engaged in individual (for their children) and systemic advocacy (for others). Although it is widely known that caregivers advocate for their school-aged children with disabilities, little is known about how caregivers who have infants and toddlers (birth to three years old) with delays…
Descriptors: Caregivers, Disabilities, Advocacy, Young Children
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Labelle, Fannie; Béliveau, Marie-Julie; Jauvin, Karine; Akzam-Ouellette, Marc-Antoine – Canadian Journal of School Psychology, 2023
Intellectual impairments in preschoolers have been widely studied. A regularity that emerges is that children's intellectual impairments have an important impact on later adjustments in life. However, few studies have looked at the intellectual profiles of young psychiatric outpatients. This study aimed to describe the intelligence profile of…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Referral, Intelligence Quotient, Intellectual Disability
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Karren Amadio – Journal of the International Society for Teacher Education, 2023
In this paper, I explore the importance of incorporating principles of social justice and cultural awareness in 21st century education. Specifically, I explore the utilization of autoethnographic research as a powerful tool for non-Indigenous teachers to enhance their cultural awareness. To illustrate this, I present a vignette featuring an…
Descriptors: Teacher Researchers, Cultural Awareness, Social Justice, Early Childhood Education
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Jan van Ravens; Luis Crouch; Katherine Merseth King; Elisa A. Hartwig; Carlos Aggio – RTI International, 2023
Only three out of five children are enrolled in preschool globally, and only one out of five in low-income countries, yet the expansion of preschool education came to a near standstill in 2020. To restart it, we propose a policy instrument called the Preschool Entitlement. It entails the right of every child to 600 hours of quality…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Educational Improvement, Educational Policy, Preschool Children
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