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Crow, Judy C. – 1994
Achievement in most academic areas depends on reading. This study examines the relationship between play therapy and reading. Twenty-four first graders from two North Louisiana schools, who were repeating first grade and who had scored lowest on the Gates MacGinite Reading Test (GMRT) and the Stanford Reading Achievement Test the previous year,…
Descriptors: Child Behavior, Children, Compensatory Education, Dramatic Play
Rogers, Sally J. – Journal of the Division for Early Childhood, 1988
Research on the cognitive development of play skills in young handicapped children is reviewed, focusing on two Piagetian styles of play--sensorimotor (exploratory) and symbolic (pretend and dramatic). The review emphasizes developmental patterns, areas of deficit, and implications for intervention in various handicapped groups. (Author/JDD)
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Developmental Stages, Disabilities
Peer reviewedBrewer, Jo Ann; Kieff, Judith – Childhood Education, 1997
Suggests that parents who are aware of the differences between home play and school play more fully understand and value the role of play in the early childhood curriculum. Discusses benefits of school play along several dimensions, including interaction with peers and adults, group size, materials, planning, and guidance. Suggests ways for…
Descriptors: Dramatic Play, Educational Benefits, Interpersonal Competence, Parent Attitudes
Gee, James Paul – American Journal of Play, 2008
The author builds on arguments he has made elsewhere that good commercial video games foster deep learning and problem solving and that such games in fact promote mastery as a form of play. Here he maintains that some good video games engage players with an important type of play, namely of play as discovery, of play as surmising new possibilities…
Descriptors: Video Games, Teaching Methods, Technology Uses in Education, Problem Solving
Schwabe, Adrienne; Craig-Unkefer, Lesley – Online Submission, 2008
This study examined the effects that a multi-component intervention had on play behaviors and mean length of utterance (MLU) of eight Head Start children at risk for language delays and social skill development. The intervention consisted of three components: (a) a planning period included reading a story book that illustrated the play theme and…
Descriptors: Play, Preschool Children, Child Behavior, Disadvantaged Youth
Ozdemir, Selda – Online Submission, 2008
The purpose of this study was to examine the effectiveness of the multimedia social stories on the duration of appropriate social engagement of 3 young children with autism. Using a multiple-baseline-across-participants design, the multimedia social stories were implemented, and observations of 10-min play sessions were conducted three times per…
Descriptors: Autism, Preschool Children, Multimedia Materials, Interpersonal Competence
FPG Child Development Institute, 2008
Inclusive settings are challenging age-old stereotypes about how children with and without disabilities interact. Peek inside a preschool inclusive classroom and one will often find typically developing children altering their games so that children with disabilities can play along. At circle time, children who need help sitting up are supported…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Friendship, Peer Relationship, Inclusion
Roos, Elizabeth M.; McDuffie, Andrea S.; Weismer, Susan Ellis; Gernsbacher, Morton Ann – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2008
Children on the autism spectrum often demonstrate atypical joint attention, leading some researchers to consider joint attention deficits a core feature of the autism spectrum. Structured measures, such as the Early Social Communication Scales (ESCS), are commonly used to provide a metric of joint attention. To explore the assessment of joint…
Descriptors: Autism, Toddlers, Context Effect, Comparative Analysis
Woolsey, Kristina; Woolsey, Matthew – Theory Into Practice, 2008
Emerging digital technologies enable teachers and students to access and manipulate sights and sounds in their school environments. The challenge is to systematically include these new media in academic environments, and to include adults who are ill prepared in technical issues as primary guides in this effort. This article suggests that child's…
Descriptors: Play, Montessori Method, Computer Uses in Education, Technology Integration
Pence, Khara L.; Justice, Laura M.; Wiggins, Alice K. – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 2008
Purpose: This study examined preschool teachers' fidelity to the language-focused curriculum (LFC; B. Bunce, 1995), a comprehensive classroom curriculum designed to improve at-risk children's language outcomes through targeted improvements to a classroom's activity contexts (e.g., dramatic play, art, storybook reading) and instructional processes…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Dramatic Play, Preschool Children, Speech Language Pathology
Mohler, J. L. – Engineering Design Graphics Journal, 2008
This phenomenological investigation examined the lived experience of technically-oriented students over the course of a single semester, attempting to answer the question, "What was it like for a student to experience the spatial ability phenomenon?" The study included 12 interviewees and 8 focus group freshman participants at a Midwestern…
Descriptors: Phenomenology, Investigations, Spatial Ability, College Students
Garner, Pamela W.; Dunsmore, Julie C.; Southam-Gerrow, Michael – Social Development, 2008
We examined associations of maternal and child emotional discourse and child emotion knowledge with children's behavioral competence. Eighty-five upper middle-income, mostly White preschoolers and mothers completed a home-based bookreading task to assess discourse about emotions. Children's anger perception bias and emotion situation knowledge…
Descriptors: Socialization, Prosocial Behavior, Aggression, Mothers
Halpin, David – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2008
Far too much curriculum time in primary schools is overly regulated and assessment driven, with the result that many children attending them are either bored or made to feel anxious. The antidote to this tendency is for teachers to rediscover the value of deregulated ("wasted") curriculum time via a renewed commitment to the value of play,…
Descriptors: Scheduling, Time Management, Productivity, Anxiety
Learning by Looking: Infants' Social Looking Behavior across the Transition from Crawling to Walking
Clearfield, Melissa W.; Osborne, Christine N.; Mullen, Molly – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2008
This study investigated how infants gather information about their environment through looking and how that changes with increases in motor skills. In Experiment 1, 9.5- and 14-month-olds participated in a 10-min free play session with both a stranger and ambiguous toys present. There was a significant developmental progression from passive to…
Descriptors: Play, Physical Activities, Infants, Interpersonal Relationship
Lewis, Michael; Carmody, Dennis P. – Developmental Psychology, 2008
This study examined the relation between self-representation and brain development in infants and young children. Self-representation was assessed by mirror recognition, personal pronoun use, and pretend play. Structural brain images were obtained from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Brain development was assessed by a quantitative measure of…
Descriptors: Play, Form Classes (Languages), Brain, Brain Hemisphere Functions

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