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Lee, Sharon; Van Middendorp, Judy – 1990
Parents need to be involved in the academic lives and the literacy learning of their children. Literature is a natural way to involve parents in the process. Through a thematic unit on families, students learn about themselves and their families. Students read books with a family theme and work in literature circles on projects, papers, and…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Family Involvement, Family Life
Tasmanian Education Dept., Hobart (Australia). – 1983
Intended for teachers in Tasmania, this booklet discusses the role of parents and the home in language development as an integral and important part of a school's language program. The booklet suggests that schools need to determine the best way to communicate to parents: how important parents are to the early development of children's language;…
Descriptors: Child Language, Early Childhood Education, Elementary Education, Foreign Countries
Moore, Kristin A.; And Others – 1985
This report is based on evidence that despite the negative outcomes so often associated with early childbearing, not all teenage parents experience difficult lives. Given the heterogeneity of outcomes among teenage parents and their children, the issue addressed in the research is to identify the factors that explain variations in academic…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Birth Order, Dropouts, Early Parenthood
Lemish, Dafna; Rice, Mabel L. – 1984
This study provides longitudinal observations of young children's behaviors while viewing television in their own homes, over a time when the children were actively involved in the process of language acquisition. A total of 16 children were observed for a period ranging from 6 to 8 months. At the beginning, their ages ranged from 6 and 1/2 to 29…
Descriptors: Child Language, Comparative Analysis, Infants, Language Acquisition
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Phillips, Shelley – 1986
Television's impact on children and the positive role of parents in moderating that impact is discussed in terms of: (1) the view that television has a largely negative impact on children; (2) the importance of television literacy; (3) ways in which parents are molding television's impact to their purposes; (4) variation in television's impact…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Comprehension, Emotional Development
Singer, Merrill – 1988
This document reviews the literature on the following: (1) studies on the nature of the Hispanic family; (2) studies on the prevalence of Hispanic alcohol use and abuse; (3) general impact studies on the consequences for children of family alcoholism; and (4) studies of family factors that appear to protect or shield high risk children from the…
Descriptors: Alcoholism, Child Psychology, Children, Drinking
Kilbey, M. Marlyne; Davis, James – 1983
Type A behavior is an epidemiological construct whose major features are aggressiveness, hostility, a sense of time urgency, and competitiveness; these features are considered measures of coronary-prone behavior in men and women. To determine a possible relationship between sex role orientation, parenting behavior, and Type A behavior, college…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, College Students, Heart Disorders, Higher Education
Wigfield, Allan; Asher, Steven R. – 1983
Race and socioeconomic class differences in children's reading performance are influenced by social and motivational factors. For example, children from poverty backgrounds are more likely to attribute success to conditions outside personal control, and thus do not experience as much pride in achievement as middle class students who have learned…
Descriptors: Environmental Influences, Parent Influence, Peer Influence, Racial Differences
Vaughan, Jerry L. – 1984
This discussion argues that two approaches are helpful in reconciling the dissonance and conflict between attitudes and behavior in families, that results from faulty expectations in childrearing processes. One such approach is to change attitudes so they conform to actual behavior. An alternative approach is to change behavioral patterns to make…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Influences, Family Life
Zahn-Waxler, Carolyn – 1989
Discussion explores the role of guilt in depression, arguing that "how children come to view themselves as pervasively responsible for bad things that happen" is a key element in the social transmission of affect that involves guilt. "Guilt" basically is an adaptive emotion that involves thoughts of remorse or responsibility…
Descriptors: Child Caregivers, Comparative Analysis, Depression (Psychology), Early Childhood Education
Adams, Alison K. – 1986
Two studies of concept development and categorization among 1-, 2-, and 3-year-old children suggest that concept formation is a socially guided process involving convergence on an adult model. Convergence in labeling is an early strategy for shaping children's category boundaries, while later, more elaborate linguistic means are used to…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Language, Classification, Cognitive Development
Ackerman-Ross, Susan; Khanna, Prabha – 1986
This study investigated the relationship between day care and young children's language performance. Receptive, expressive and a combined language score plus an intelligence quotient (IQ) were derived for middle-class, Caucasian 3-year-olds from intact families who attended high quality day care since infancy and were compared to the scores of…
Descriptors: Birth Order, Child Rearing, Comparative Analysis, Day Care
Joyner, Rosanne; Ray, G. Erin – 1987
A pilot study (using the case study, or field research format) examined the acquisition of behaviors in infants who are read to and with on a consistent basis from their first day of life through the first year. Three parent/infant teams participated in a year-long course which consisted of reading "familiar" books to the infants,…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Child Development, Developmental Stages, Infant Behavior
Velleman, Shelley L. – 1987
This longitudinal pilot study, which extends Veneziano's (1987) work on phonetically and semantically contingent maternal response types, compared, microanalytically and globally, maternal response types and mother-child dyadic interactions of normally developing and Down syndrome children. Participants were three normally developing infants, five…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Consonants, Downs Syndrome, Infants
Schickedanz, Judith A. – 1986
Based on the premise that reading and writing, like other aspects of development, have histories that reach back into infancy, this book for teachers and parents introduces a comprehensive understanding of literacy development for infants through preschool age children. A practical approach, it emphasizes age-appropriate methods, books, and…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Bibliographies, Child Development, Early Childhood Education
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