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Jung, Jeesun – Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 2013
Using a qualitative research approach, this article explores teachers' roles in infants' play and its changing nature in an infant group care setting. Three infant teachers in a child care center were followed over three months. Observations, interviews, ongoing conversations, emails, and reflective notes were used as data sources. Findings…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Play, Group Dynamics, Infants
Glenn, Nicole M.; Knight, Camilla J.; Holt, Nicholas L.; Spence, John C. – Childhood: A Global Journal of Child Research, 2013
The purpose of this study was to examine meanings of play among children. Thirty-eight students aged 7-9 years from a suburban public school in Western Canada participated in focus groups. Data analysis revealed participants saw almost anything as an opportunity for play and would play almost anywhere with anyone. However, they perceived parents…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Play, Children, Public Schools
Howarth, Grace Z.; Guyer, Amanda E.; Perez-Edgar, Koraly – Social Development, 2013
This study presents a novel task examining young children's affective responses to evaluative feedback--specifically, social acceptance and rejection--from peers. We aimed to determine (1) whether young children report their affective responses to hypothetical peer evaluation predictably and consistently, and (2) whether young children's responses…
Descriptors: Shyness, Peer Acceptance, Rejection (Psychology), Peer Evaluation
Hobson, Jessica A.; Hobson, R. Peter; Malik, Supriya; Bargiota, Kyratso; Calo, Susana – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2013
The focus of this study is the nature and concomitants of pretend play among young children with autism. Age- and language-matched children with autism ("n"= 27), autism spectrum disorder ("n"= 14), and developmental disorders without autism ("n"= 16) were administered the Test of Pretend Play (ToPP; Lewis &…
Descriptors: Correlation, Play, Interpersonal Relationship, Autism
van Hoogdalem, Anne-Greth; Singer, Elly; Eek, Anneloes; Heesbeen, Daniëlle – Journal of Early Childhood Research, 2013
We need methods to measure friendship among very young children to study the beginnings of friendship and the impact of experiences with friendship for later development. This article presents an overview of methods for measuring very young children's friendships. A behavioural sociometric method was constructed to study degrees of friendship…
Descriptors: Friendship, Young Children, Sociometric Techniques, Child Behavior
Barrera, Maru; Alam, Rifat; D'Agostino, Norma Mammone; Nicholas, David B.; Schneiderman, Gerald – Death Studies, 2013
We investigated longitudinally parental perceptions of siblings' bereavement after childhood cancer death. Parents were interviewed 6 months (n = 25) and 18 months (n = 15) post-death. Data are analyzed combined and over time. The following themes emerged: (a) expression of grief: missing deceased child (verbally, crying), behavioral problems,…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Grief, Siblings, Cancer
Krug, Kate – Collected Essays on Learning and Teaching, 2011
Engaging students while providing them with the necessary linguistic and critical skills as a foundation for further exploration are the principle challenges for those of us who teach disciplinary introductory courses. My own response to this challenge has been to develop and implement what I refer to as the "pedagogy of play." Informed…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Play, Manipulative Materials, Educational Principles
Kawash, Samira – American Journal of Play, 2011
For most children in North America, Halloween is one of the most exciting holidays of the year. But some critics insist that its emphasis on ready-made costumes, store-bought candy, and trick-or-treating seduces children into cultural passivity and socializes them to mindless consumption. These critics argue that trick-or-treating was an inherited…
Descriptors: Play, Holidays, Cultural Influences, Newspapers
Shanley, Jenelle R.; Niec, Larissa N. – Child & Family Behavior Therapy, 2011
This study evaluated the inclusion of uncoded segments in the Dyadic Parent-Child Interaction Coding System, an analogue observation of parent-child interactions. The relationships between warm-up and coded segments were assessed, as well as the segments' associations with parent ratings of parent and child behaviors. Sixty-nine non-referred…
Descriptors: Observation, Parent Child Relationship, Interaction, Rating Scales
King, Daniel L.; Delfabbro, Paul H.; Griffiths, Mark D. – International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction, 2011
The research literature suggests that the structural characteristics of video games may play a considerable role in the initiation, development and maintenance of problematic video game playing. The present study investigated the role of structural characteristics in video game playing behaviour within a sample of 421 video game players aged…
Descriptors: Play, Video Games, Role, Addictive Behavior
Cooper, Kenneth J. – Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, 2011
Is playing big-time college sports an extracurricular activity or a job? Two law professors at Michigan State University, Robert and Amy McCormick, think it is definitely a job for football and basketball players on athletic scholarships at Division I schools. The married couple has added a new dimension to the long debate over paying athletes by…
Descriptors: Extracurricular Activities, Play, Employees, Team Sports
van der Meij, Hans; Albers, Eefje; Leemkuil, Henny – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2011
This paper examines whether people benefit more from playing a commercial off-the-shelf game in pairs rather than in solitary mode. The basic idea behind this didactic method is that there is a serious risk that solitary game play yields insufficient articulation and explanation for learning to take place. Participants in the experimental…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Play, Educational Games, Cooperation
Weber, Barbara – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2011
Philosophy for Children claims to foster not only critical thinking, but also creative and caring thinking. However, its theoretical foundations draw mainly on the analytic and pragmatist philosophical tradition. Consequently, and made evident by the choice of the terms "caring thinking" and "creative thinking", it seem to reduce these concepts…
Descriptors: Children, Philosophy, Critical Thinking, Creative Thinking
"Their Little Wooden Bricks": A History of the Material Culture of Kindergarten in the United States
Prochner, Larry – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2011
This article explores the material culture of kindergarten in the United States in relation to the production and consumption of materials and kindergarten theory and pedagogy. The focus is on Friedrich Froebel's building gifts as they were manufactured and sold by the Milton Bradley Company from 1869 to 1939. A review of trade catalogues over the…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Experiential Learning, Kinesthetic Perception, Manipulative Materials
Nathanson, Amy I.; Rasmussen, Eric E. – Human Communication Research, 2011
This study compared the amount and style of maternal communication with toddlers and preschoolers while mother-child pairs watched TV, read books, and played with toys. We found that mother-child communication was less frequent and less verbally responsive when dyads viewed TV compared with when they read books, and in many cases, when they played…
Descriptors: Television Viewing, Reading, Play, Toddlers

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