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Peer reviewedFrieman, Barry B.; And Others – Childhood Education, 1996
Discusses research on homosexuality, including origins and physiology. Claims that teachers play an important role in developing and maintaining the classroom as a psychologically safe and appreciative environment. Provides suggestions on how teachers should handle biases. Concludes that by treating all children with respect and dignity, teachers…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Child Development, Classroom Environment, Conflict Resolution
Peer reviewedWadlington, Elizabeth; And Others – Childhood Education, 1996
Provides a definition of dyslexia and characteristics of students who have this condition. Claims that when teaching dyslexic students, teachers may need to change the academic environment to enable students to demonstrate what they know. Provides suggestions to teachers on how the needs of dyslexic students can be met in the regular classroom.…
Descriptors: Child Development, Classroom Environment, Dyslexia, Early Childhood Education
Ard, Linda; Wilkerson, Kristen – Texas Child Care, 1996
Describes hummingbirds and how they can serve as sources of learning and enjoyment for young children. Gives information on feeding, breeding, and behavior of hummingbirds, and on their natural predators. Outlines activities for "discovery," making feeders, watching and charting hummingbirds, and other creative learning activities. (BGC)
Descriptors: Birds, Child Development, Discovery Learning, Discovery Processes
Peer reviewedKochanska, Grazyna; And Others – Child Development, 1996
Explored children's conscience using narrative measures of responses to hypothetical moral dilemmas and objective measures. Found that children who experienced more power-assertive maternal discipline produced fewer themes of commitment to and concern about good behavior and were more poorly internalized on observed and mother-reported measures.…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Behavior, Child Development, Longitudinal Studies
Peer reviewedHotulainen, Risto H. E.; Schofield, Neville J. – High Ability Studies, 2003
A 10-year longitudinal study investigated whether 37 children identified as academically gifted at preschool but who received no specific support would be identifiably different from their peers after 10 years of Finnish comprehensive school. The gifted group scored significantly higher than controls for final school grades and scholastic…
Descriptors: Ability Identification, Academic Achievement, Child Development, Elementary Secondary Education
Thurber, Christopher A. – Camping Magazine, 2003
Four studies in child development show that children socialize parents as much as parents socialize children. Child development is a function of biological maturation and child-environment interaction. The most important determinants of resiliency are caregiver quality and socioeconomic status. Implications for camp are discussed, the most…
Descriptors: Behavior Development, Camping, Caregiver Child Relationship, Child Behavior
Powell, Gwynn M. – Camping Magazine, 2003
The features of positive youth development settings, identified in recent research, are applied to camp program planning, staff selection, and comprehensive program evaluation. A web-like model of positive features of the program's organizational and social environment provides a systemic viewpoint. (TD)
Descriptors: Camping, Caregiver Child Relationship, Child Development, Leadership Qualities
Peer reviewedPutkiewicz, E. – Early Child Development and Care, 1996
Presents a brief history of early childhood education in Poland and changes occurring in the 1990s. Outlines the government's minimum standards for kindergarten education, including aspects of child development that are considered crucial, and ways in which classroom practices have become more child responsive. Discusses the roles of religion,…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cultural Traits, Curriculum Design, Early Childhood Education
Peer reviewedCooney, Margaret; And Others – Early Childhood Education Journal, 1996
Discusses the importance of supporting young children's socialization process from the perspective of a teacher educator/researcher, a parent, and a caregiver. Describes four stages of socialization (using physical aggression, asking for help, using words, and problem solving) and offers recommendations for corresponding spacial needs, play…
Descriptors: Caregiver Child Relationship, Caregiver Role, Child Development, Developmental Stages
Peer reviewedDeVries, Rheta – Educational Researcher, 1997
Argues that Piaget did not consider social factors to be important in his developmental theory and considers some of the practical educational implications of Piaget's social theory. Piaget's notion of the role of social factors is reviewed, and the educational implications of the cooperative context favoring operational development with reference…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Psychology, Cultural Influences
Peer reviewedLittle, Todd D.; Lopez, David F. – Developmental Psychology, 1997
Examined whether children's causality beliefs about school performance show similar developmental profiles across six distinct sociocultural settings. Found markedly similar developmental patterns in their beliefs about the importance of effort, ability, luck, teachers, and unknown factors as influences on school performance. Found that factors…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Causal Models, Child Development, Childhood Attitudes
Peer reviewedIreland, Lorraine; Holloway, Immy – Children & Society, 1996
Uses a study about children's experience of asthma to show that qualitative research with children has inherent difficulties relating to access and ethical and developmental issues. Asserts that because of children's stage of development and the asymmetrical relationship between researcher and informants, adequate safeguards and awareness of these…
Descriptors: Access to Information, Asthma, Child Development, Child Health
Peer reviewedPerel'man, I. M.; And Others – Russian Education and Society, 1996
Describes a course in ethics for younger children taught in a gymnasium school in the Russian city of Ufa. Provides a fascinating look at the conception and implementation of ethical instruction in contemporary Russia (students assume the role of head of the family and devise "taboos" to maintain peace and harmony). (MJP)
Descriptors: Child Development, Comparative Education, Course Content, Educational Change
Peer reviewedKetner, Carla S.; And Others – Journal of Educational Research, 1997
Primary teachers completed the Theoretical Orientation to Reading Profile and Primary Teacher Questionnaire to determine their endorsement of developmentally appropriate practice. Results indicated a substantial congruence between the constructs underlying the notion of developmentally appropriate practice and those that are fundamental to a whole…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Child Development, Developmental Stages, Developmentally Appropriate Practices
Peer reviewedPelco, Lynn E.; Reed-Victor, Evelyn – Young Exceptional Children, 2003
This article discusses the role of temperament in the development of young children with disabilities and the five dimensions of temperament: activity level, intensity, mood, persistence, and reaction to new experiences. Types of behavioral tendencies that exemplify each temperament dimension are described, along with interaction adaptation…
Descriptors: Academic Accommodations (Disabilities), Child Development, Cognitive Style, Disabilities


