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Rohde, Leigh – SAGE Open, 2015
The early skills of Emergent Literacy include the knowledge and abilities related to the alphabet, phonological awareness, symbolic representation, and communication. However, existing models of emergent literacy focus on discrete skills and miss the perspective of the surrounding environment. Early literacy skills, including their relationship to…
Descriptors: Emergent Literacy, Alphabets, Phonological Awareness, Models
Cortez-Castro, Diana H. – ProQuest LLC, 2015
Play has been globally recognized as valuable to children's learning and development (Frost et al., 2012). The value of play is acknowledged as a developmentally appropriate practice in part because it fosters cognitive, physical, emotional, and social benefits to children. Play is also known as a human right that should be protected. However, in…
Descriptors: Play, Child Development, Qualitative Research, Grounded Theory
Montessori, Maria – NAMTA Journal, 2013
This piece of writing addresses the "boundless" garden created through the web of foresight and patience combined with the spontaneous activity necessary for growing food and harvesting the bounty. Most will be familiar with this unique writing by Montessori who suggests that it is not the work and actual produce of the garden but the…
Descriptors: Natural Resources, Montessori Method, Outdoor Education, Food
de Ruyter, Doret J.; Schinkel, Anders – Educational Theory, 2013
In this article Doret J. de Ruyter and Anders Schinkel argue that parents' ideals can enhance children's autonomy, but that they may also have a detrimental effect on the development of children's autonomy. After describing the concept of "ideals" and elucidating a systems theoretical conception of autonomy, de Ruyter and…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Childrens Rights, Parent Attitudes, Values
Trice-Black, Shannon; Bailey, Carrie Lynn; Kiper Riechel, Morgan E. – Professional School Counseling, 2013
Play therapy is an empirically supported intervention used to address a number of developmental issues faced in childhood. Through the natural language of play, children and adolescents communicate feelings, thoughts, and experiences. Schools provide an ideal setting for play therapy in many ways; however, several challenges exist in implementing…
Descriptors: Play, Therapy, School Counseling, Case Studies
Perfetti, Charles A.; Harris, Lindsay N. – Language Learning and Development, 2013
The connections among language, writing system, and reading are part of what confronts a child in learning to read. We examine these connections in addressing how reading processes adapt to the variety of written language and how writing adapts to language. The first adaptation (reading to writing), as evidenced in behavioral and neuroscience…
Descriptors: Reading Processes, Written Language, Orthographic Symbols, Child Development
Johnson, Elizabeth I.; Easterling, Beth – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2013
Johnson and Easterling's original review was intended to underscore both the methodological challenges of disentangling the effects of parental incarceration from other adversities that often co-occur with parental incarceration and the need for conceptual models that can explain how and why parental incarceration may have unique effects on child…
Descriptors: Institutionalized Persons, Parents, Correctional Institutions, Child Development
Tenenbaum, Elena J.; Shah, Rajesh J.; Sobel, David M.; Malle, Bertram F.; Morgan, James L. – Infancy, 2013
This study examines face-scanning behaviors of infants at 6, 9, and 12 months as they watched videos of a woman describing an object in front of her. The videos were created to vary information in the mouth (speaking vs. smiling) and the eyes (gazing into the camera vs. cueing the infant with head turn or gaze direction to an object being…
Descriptors: Infants, Eye Movements, Longitudinal Studies, Age Differences
McCarthy, Marie – International Journal of Education & the Arts, 2013
The purpose of this paper is to examine children's spirituality from the
perspective of music learning, using arts based research as a mode of
inquiry. Six interrelated themes are chosen to explore the landscape of
music and children's spirituality and to evaluate the potential of arts
based research to inform the intersections…
Descriptors: Spiritual Development, Religion, Child Development, Music Education
Setodji, Claude Messan; Le, Vi-Nhuan; Schaack, Diana – Developmental Psychology, 2013
Research linking high-quality child care programs and children's cognitive development has contributed to the growing popularity of child care quality benchmarking efforts such as quality rating and improvement systems (QRIS). Consequently, there has been an increased interest in and a need for approaches to identifying thresholds, or cutpoints,…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Child Development, Toddlers, Child Care
Osina, Maria A.; Saylor, Megan M.; Ganea, Patricia A. – Developmental Psychology, 2013
Three experiments that demonstrate a novel constraint on infants' language skills are described. Across the experiments it is shown that as babies near their 1st birthday, their ability to respond to talk about an absent object is influenced by a referent's spatiotemporal history: familiarizing infants with an object in 1 or several nontest…
Descriptors: Familiarity, Language Skills, Infants, Object Permanence
Holtmann, Martin – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2013
In this commentary, Martin Holtmann, discusses Doehnert and colleagues' article in this issue (Doehnert et al., 2013). Holtmann comments that the article illustrates the value of longitudinal electrophysiological and experimental approaches to disentangle different pathways underlying the phenotype of ADHD, and points out that their…
Descriptors: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, Longitudinal Studies, Children, Neuropsychology
Wu, Zhen; Pan, Jingtong; Su, Yanjie; Gros-Louis, Julie – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2013
Joint attention has been suggested to contribute to children's development of cooperation; however, few empirical studies have directly tested this hypothesis. Children aged 1 and 2 years participated in two joint action activities to assess their cooperation with an adult partner, who stopped participating at a specific moment during the tasks.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Toddlers, Attention, Cooperation
Meadan, Hedda; Ostrosky, Michaelene M.; Santos, Rosa Milagros; Snodgrass, Melinda R. – Young Exceptional Children, 2013
The goal of prompting a child is to prevent him or her from making errors while learning a new skill, and to decrease the amount of time it takes to learn the new skill. As a child shows improvement in performing the skill, adults can fade the amount of assistance provided until the child reaches his or her level of independence. Several prompting…
Descriptors: Skill Development, Child Development, Teaching Methods, Prompting
Rohwer, Michael; Kloo, Daniela; Perner, Josef – Child Development, 2012
Previous research yielded conflicting results about when children can accurately assess their epistemic states in different hiding tasks. In Experiment 1, ninety-two 3- to 7-year-olds were either shown which object was hidden inside a box, were totally ignorant about what it could be, or were presented with two objects one of which was being put…
Descriptors: Child Development, Children, Experiments, Young Children

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