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Gordon Blaine West; Jeanne Beck – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2025
Young, linguistically diverse learners often leverage multimodality to more fully express their ideas in writing. To better support and assess English writing development, it is vital to understand multimodality as part of their emerging writing skills. In this study, we examine how drawings and written language are used jointly in multimodal…
Descriptors: Emergent Literacy, Beginning Writing, Childrens Writing, Multilingualism
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Katie A. Mathew; Vera J. Lee; Claudia Gentile; Casey Hanna; Alene Montgomery – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2025
With a view of children as social negotiators, this study explored how preschool children's voices were nurtured through the implementation of an early-writing/applied phonics approach called Kid Writing (KW). The approach encouraged children to compose writing from their lives as they were guided by an adult who scaffolded the writing process. An…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Childrens Writing, Emergent Literacy, Beginning Writing
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Katherine L. Buchanan; Milena Keller-Margulis; Amanda Hut; Weihua Fan; Sarah S. Mire; G. Thomas Schanding Jr. – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2025
There is considerable research regarding measures of early reading but much less in early writing. Nevertheless, writing is a critical skill for success in school and early difficulties in writing are likely to persist without intervention. A necessary step toward identifying those students who need additional support is the use of screening…
Descriptors: Writing Evaluation, Evaluation Methods, Emergent Literacy, Beginning Writing
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Deb Brosseuk – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2025
Global trends suggest that teaching writing focuses on a skills-based approach to preparing children for high-stakes standardised tests. In the early years, teachers are grappling with finding a better balance between preparing children for such tests and satisfying their sense of pedagogic responsibility to teach them to become joyful, creative…
Descriptors: Childrens Writing, Creative Writing, Standardized Tests, Writing Tests
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Esra Isik; Elif Cilmeli; Özge Ece Özcan; Zeynep Sisman; Ibrahim H. Acar – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2025
Young children and their parents faced difficulties in their daily functioning due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. In this qualitative study, we explored the experiences and perceptions of parents and their young children regarding the pandemic process. A sample of 22 parents (mothers and fathers) and nine children aged between four and six…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Experience, Barriers
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Claire Galea; Serje Robidoux; Andrea Salins; Clayton Noble; Genevieve McArthur – Journal of Research in Childhood Education, 2025
This longitudinal cohort-study investigated the impact of Dolly Parton's Imagination Library (the Imagination Library) in Tamworth, Australia. The Imagination Library delivers age-appropriate books to children from the time of their birth until their fifth birthday. Caregivers of Tamworth children completed surveys about their experience with the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Childrens Literature, Reading Programs, Reading Aloud to Others
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Aryelle Malheiros Caruzzo; Viviany da Silva Brugnhago; Bruno Marson Malagodi; Claudia Godoy Dias; Marcia Greguol – International Journal of Disability, Development and Education, 2025
The practice of physical activities is essential for maintaining the health of children and adults. However, among people with disabilities, there is a high prevalence of physical inactivity, especially among children, mainly due to the lack of access to specific programs aimed at their possibilities. The aim of the current study was to evaluate…
Descriptors: Parent Role, Physical Activity Level, Children, Physical Disabilities
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Lucilla Cardinali; Cristina Becchio; Lara Coelho; Monica Gori – Developmental Science, 2025
The present study assessed the structural and functional representation of the upper limb in a large cohort (N = 84) of typically developing children aged 6 to 10. The first task aimed at obtaining a structural measure of the representation of the arm, specifically the two segments that compose it: the forearm and the hand. Participants were asked…
Descriptors: Children, Human Body, Physical Characteristics, Object Manipulation
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Sophie Bridgers; Kiera Parece; Ibuki Iwasaki; Annalisa Broski; Laura Schulz; Tomer Ullman – Child Development, 2025
What do children do when they do not want to obey but cannot afford to disobey? Might they, like adults, feign misunderstanding and seek out loopholes? Across four studies (N = 723; 44% female; USA; majority White; data collected 2020-2023), we find that loophole behavior emerges around ages 5 to 6 (Study 1, 3-18 years), that children think…
Descriptors: Childrens Attitudes, Compliance (Psychology), Deception, Conflict
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Pallawi Sinha – Global Studies of Childhood, 2025
Children's agency is inextricably linked to dominant, 'western' conceptualisations of human rights, and remains predominantly representative of northern childhood(s) with wanting imagination about its wider sociopolitical contexts. Despite this, and the growing recognition of its significance, iterations of children's agency centre primarily on…
Descriptors: Children, Personal Autonomy, Civil Rights, Postcolonialism
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Satu Grönman; Eila Lindfors; Marja-Leena Rönkkö – International Journal of Technology and Design Education, 2025
Design thinking is a cognitive, iterative process that involves identifying goals, understanding users, and creating solutions. It has changed from a designers' activity to an all-around approach to the innovation process and become a pedagogical phenomenon. In this article, design thinking method is studied in an educational context among young…
Descriptors: Design, Thinking Skills, Early Childhood Education, Young Children
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Naomi Eichorn; Luca Campanelli – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2025
Purpose: Cognitive models of anxiety attribute anxiety and ruminative thought patterns to selective processing of threat-related stimuli that automatically capture attention. We explored whether stuttering was associated with similar attentional biases by examining: (a) whether school-age children who stutter (CWS) differed from controls in…
Descriptors: Attention, Stuttering, Children, Adolescents
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Amandine Van Rinsveld; Christine Schiltz – Child Development, 2025
Acquiring robust semantic representations of numbers is crucial for math achievement. However, the learning stage where magnitude becomes automatically elicited by number symbols (i.e., digits from 1 to 9) remains unknown due to the difficulty to measure automatic semantic processing. We used a frequency-tagging EEG paradigm targeting automatic…
Descriptors: Brain, Numbers, Semantics, Cognitive Processes
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Xiao Y. Zhang; Gary E. Bingham; Lee Branum-Martin; Hope K. Gerde; Ryan P. Bowles – Reading Research Quarterly, 2025
Through the use of multiple early writing assessments and a theoretically aligned refined coding system, this study examined preschool children's early writing skills. A total of 496 preschool-aged (3- to 5-year-old) children were assessed on writing tasks designed to measure their handwriting, spelling, writing concept, and composing skills.…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Writing Skills, Handwriting, Spelling
Jill Cheeseman; Ann Downton; Kerryn Driscoll – Mathematics Education Research Group of Australasia, 2025
This paper contains an analysis of some early thinking of 94 young children aged 5 years 7 months to 6 years 5 months. These children were interviewed as part of a larger study of the multiplicative thinking of children who were midway through their first year of school in Australia. They had not been formally taught multiplication or division at…
Descriptors: Division, Numbers, Young Children, Problem Solving
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