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Ghislanzoni, Laura; Tobia, Valentina; Gambarini, Andrea; Rossi, Eleonora; Tombini, Giulia; Ogliari, Anna – European Journal of Special Needs Education, 2022
Individuals with Specific Learning Disorders (SLD) are at risk of increased psychological distress, such as internalising (e.g. anxiety) or externalising (e.g. aggressive behaviour) symptoms. This study investigates the psychopathological profile of children and adolescents with SLD from their point of view and the point of view of their mothers.…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, At Risk Persons, Mental Disorders, Aggression
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Miller, Erin; Tanner, Sam; Willis, Evan; Hancock, Stephen – Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies in Education, 2022
In this manuscript, we revisit data from a 9-month ethnographic study that examined whiteness in early childhood. Specifically, the study explored the epistemological and ontological reality of three young white children and how they learned to conflate ethnocentric love with whitewashed justice through the lens of their religious upbringing. We…
Descriptors: Christianity, Whites, Ethnography, Religious Factors
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Gaviria, José-Luis – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2022
This paper is on the paradox of a right, the right to education that is almost universally declared as compulsory. The reason for the compulsion seems to be in its nature as a right. Within a Hohfeldian framework, any claim-right has a corresponding duty. Given that making education compulsory equates to establishing a duty, the possible…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Access to Education, Equal Education, Political Attitudes
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Wallis, Nicola; Noble, Kate – European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 2022
Despite rapid growth in young children visiting museums, and an increasing acknowledgement that these visits are important to children's development as cultural citizens [Mudiappa and Kluczniok 2015. "Visits to Cultural Learning Places in the Early Childhood." "European Early Childhood Education Research Journal" 23 (2):…
Descriptors: Art, Museums, Exhibits, Child Development
Xin Li – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Evidence has suggested that preschool and kindergarten experiences affect the cognitive and social-emotion development of language-minority students (LMS). This quantitative study aims to illustrate the LMS' preschool and kindergarten experience by investigating the preschool and kindergarten experience, family environment, and school environment.…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Kindergarten, Language Minorities, Student Experience
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Mäkinen, Leena; Gabbatore, Ilaria; Loukusa, Soile; Kunnari, Sari; Schneider, Phyllis – Early Education and Development, 2020
Narratives have been extensively studied in recent decades, but studies investigating differences and similarities in the narrative features from a cross-cultural or cross-linguistic point of view are limited. This study investigated the narrative language of typically developing monolingual four- and eight-year-old Finnish, Italian and Canadian…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Narration, Child Development, English
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Roberts-Law, Nerys – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2021
This article looks at a specific intervention carried out with forty young children over the course of an academic year. The aim of the intervention was to give opportunities for creative thinking, with the ultimate goal of promoting learning free from preconceptions and judgements of ability. The intervention resulted in learning through…
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Young Children, Intervention, Program Effectiveness
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Bates, Agnieszka; Slater, Bryan – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2021
The Government's roadmap to recovery from the educational deficit caused by COVID-19 appears to pivot, primarily, on 'catch-up' plans and 'discipline hubs'. Despite continuous teaching online and in COVID-restricted classroom formats, teachers have been urged to act like 'absolute heroes' and abide by their 'moral duty' to keep schools open.…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Teacher Responsibility, Student Needs
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Van Dijk, Chantal; Van Wonderen, Elise; Koutamanis, Elly; Koostra, Gerrit Jan; Dijkstra, Ton; Unsworth, Sharon – Journal of Child Language, 2021
Although cross-linguistic influence at the level of morphosyntax is one of the most intensively studied topics in child bilingualism, the circumstances under which it occurs remain unclear. In this meta-analysis, we measured the effect size of cross-linguistic influence and systematically assessed its predictors in 750 simultaneous and early…
Descriptors: Bilingual Students, Language Dominance, Children, Language Acquisition
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Christou, Spyros; Sanz-Torrent, Monica; Coloma, Carmen J.; Guerra, Ernesto; Araya, Claudia; Andreu, Llorenç – International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders, 2021
Background: Function words, and more specifically prepositions and prepositional locutions, are considered to be one of the most important difficulties for children with DLD. Aims: To examine the capacity of bilingual children with developmental language disorder (DLD) to comprehend different Spanish prepositions and prepositional locutions in a…
Descriptors: Children, Developmental Disabilities, Bilingualism, Comprehension
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Aussems, Suzanne; Kita, Sotaro – Child Development, 2021
This study investigated whether seeing iconic gestures depicting verb referents promotes two types of generalization. We taught 3- to 4-year-olds novel locomotion verbs. Children who saw iconic manner gestures during training generalized more verbs to novel events ("first-order generalization") than children who saw interactive gestures…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Verbs, Generalization, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension)
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Horn, Sebastian S.; Bayen, Ute J.; Michalkiewicz, Martha – Child Development, 2021
Younger children's free recall from episodic memory is typically less organized than recall by older children. To investigate if and how repeated learning opportunities help children use organizational strategies that improve recall, the authors analyzed category clustering across four study-test cycles. Seven-year-olds, 10-year-olds, and young…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Cognitive Processes, Young Children, Young Adults
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Deck, Sarah L.; Paterson, Helen M. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2021
Some forms of abuse, such as domestic violence, tend to occur repeatedly. Although memory for repeated events has received considerable empirical attention, most of this research has used a child sample. Experiments that have examined adult repeated-event memory tend to use vastly different methodological paradigms to that used for children. To…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Memory, Young Adults, Undergraduate Students
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Kominsky, Jonathan F.; Gerstenberg, Tobias; Pelz, Madeline; Sheskin, Mark; Singmann, Henrik; Schulz, Laura; Keil, Frank C. – Developmental Psychology, 2021
Young children often struggle to answer the question "what would have happened?" particularly in cases where the adult-like "correct" answer has the same outcome as the event that actually occurred. Previous work has assumed that children fail because they cannot engage in accurate counterfactual simulations. Children have…
Descriptors: Simulation, Children, Age Differences, Child Development
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Mu, Guanglun Michael – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2021
This paper intends to develop a sociological thinking of child and youth resilience through recourse to Bourdieu. The paper starts by problematising the misconceptualisation that equates resilience with adaptation. It then marks a clear conceptual boundary between the two notions. This is followed by a review of conceptualisations of resilience…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Children, Youth, Adjustment (to Environment)
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