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Success in the Classroom and in Life: Focusing on Strengths of the Head "and" Strengths of the Heart
Pfeiffer, Steven I. – Gifted Education International, 2017
"Strengths of the heart" is a new and potentially useful paradigm for understanding how the "whole" gifted child can thrive and flourish. Until recently, those who have written about and have researched the gifted have focused much of their work on "strengths of the head"--understanding, identifying, and promoting…
Descriptors: Gifted, Holistic Approach, Child Development, Emotional Intelligence
Gonzalez, Antonya M.; Steele, Jennifer R.; Baron, Andrew S. – Child Development, 2017
Studies with adults suggest that implicit preferences favoring White versus Black individuals can be reduced through exposure to positive Black exemplars. However, it remains unclear whether developmental differences exist in the capacity for these biases to be changed. This study included 369 children and examined whether their implicit racial…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Children, Age Differences, Child Development
Gaw, Clyde; Fralick, Clark – Art Education, 2020
Twenty-two individuals are drawing, painting, collaging, sculpting with cardboard, and building with wooden blocks. Some are working collaboratively, and others work alone. Dialogue with the teacher and social interaction between learners catalyze the learning experience. The core curriculum goal, expressing ideas through self-directed art…
Descriptors: Art Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Art Activities, Student Centered Learning
Yurtçu, Meltem; Pekdogan, Serpil – Research in Pedagogy, 2020
In this study, the social network structure of the studies conducted in the early childhood towards the concept of temperament was examined. The research was considered as a descriptive study since it examined the relation between the existing studies according to the citations. The concept of temperament in early childhood has taken its place in…
Descriptors: Social Networks, Young Children, Personality Traits, Network Analysis
Chen, Feiyan – International Research in Early Childhood Education, 2020
Emotion regulation--as a vital part of children's development, school readiness, and academic success--begins to develop in infancy and toddler time. Much of the research on toddler emotion regulation are correlational studies in laboratory settings. Little attention has been directed to toddlers' emotion regulation in everyday naturalistic…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Self Control, Correlation, Child Development
Teichert, Laura – Journal of Early Childhood Literacy, 2020
The literature on infant and toddler screen time has been built on two traditions--cognitive models of learning and sociocultural models of learning. Cognitive studies have cautioned against the use of screen time for young children because clinical research has not shown children can learn as effectively from screens as they do from human…
Descriptors: Mass Media Use, Television Viewing, Computer Games, Recreational Activities
Thompson, Eleanor D. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2020
The Trump Administration's rollbacks in nutritional standards for school meals have been the subject of much criticism and the basis for a lawsuit. Research into food insecurity and public school meal quality shows that food security and high nutritional standards are essential to any efforts to improve both school equity and student performance.…
Descriptors: Nutrition, Lunch Programs, Breakfast Programs, Public Schools
Vong, Keang Ieng Peggy; Mak, Chi Kuan Miranda; Leung, Shing On; Chang, Shih-Hui – Creativity Research Journal, 2020
This study investigated the relationship among gender, sibling constellation, age, and young children's creativity performance in the Fluency, Imagination, Originality dimensions of creativity, as well as the developmental trajectory of their creativity performance. In total, 493 young children took the Torrance's Thinking Creatively in Action and…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Predictor Variables, Young Children, Performance Factors
Howard, Steven J.; Siraj, Iram; Melhuish, Edward C.; Kingston, Denise; Neilsen-Hewett, Cathrine; de Rosnay, Marc; Duursma, Elisabeth; Luu, Betty – Early Child Development and Care, 2020
Research increasingly acknowledges the importance of high quality interactions that support and extend children's thinking. Few measurement tools currently exist, however, to capture this specific aspect of process quality. The Sustained Shared Thinking and Emotional Wellbeing (SSTEW) scale was developed to assess interactional quality in early…
Descriptors: Teacher Student Relationship, Preschool Teachers, Preschool Children, Test Construction
Määttä, Marju; Uusiautti, Satu – Early Child Development and Care, 2020
This research focused on narcissistic homes as described by adult daughters of narcissistic mothers. The definition of narcissism reveals the problematic behaviours of narcissists (e.g. blaming, manipulation, nullification, and self-sufficiency to hide one's own low self-esteem). How do these affect upbringing? How do children of narcissistic…
Descriptors: Personality Problems, Adults, Daughters, Mothers
Smith, Chauncey D.; Smith Lee, Jocelyn R. – Applied Developmental Science, 2020
This commentary engages the three elements of a social justice framework in the study of African American Boys and Men's (AABM) positive development, proposed by Barbarin, Tolan, and Gaylord-Harden (2019). In agreement with the importance of and in support of employing a social justice framework in developmental science, we offer theoretical and…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Humanism, African Americans, Males
Figueiredo, Sandra – Journal of Cognitive Education and Psychology, 2020
The objective of this research is to comparatively analyze the performance of two generations of children (as first generation of immigrants) attending primary and secondary education in different geographical areas, evaluated in different decades but with equivalent age brackets. Two samples of 169 immigrant school populations in Portugal, with…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Elementary School Students, Secondary School Students, Foreign Countries
Honig, Alice Sterling – Early Child Development and Care, 2020
Teachers are sometimes puzzled and frustrated by some children's difficulties and troubles as these children respond aggressively when feeling that peers crowd too close or seem 'threatening'. This article provides a variety of bodily games to help children become more aware of how their bodies and muscles work. The activities suggested are…
Descriptors: Teacher Role, Early Childhood Teachers, Child Caregivers, Young Children
Murray, Emily J.; Williams, Patricia Hrusa – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2020
Risk-taking during the toddler years is crucial for the development of autonomy, initiative, and independence. However, the current culture in the U.S. seeks to minimize the risks young children are exposed to. This small-scale, mixed methods study examined parental attitudes towards toddler risk-taking and children's behavior during nature play.…
Descriptors: Risk, Toddlers, Outdoor Education, Child Care Centers
Gaither, Sarah E.; Fan, Samantha P.; Kinzler, Katherine D. – Developmental Science, 2020
Studies of children's developing social identification often focus on individual forms of identity. Yet, everyone has multiple potential identities. Here we investigated whether making children aware of their multifaceted identities--effectively seeing themselves from multiple angles--would promote their flexible thinking. In Experiment 1, 6- to…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Problem Solving, Children, Thinking Skills

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