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Tongyan Ren; Xuechen Ding; Chen Cheng – Developmental Science, 2025
Working memory (WM) is a critical cognitive system that supports processing a variety of information. Remembering different types of objects may impose different levels of cognitive demands on WM performance. In the present study, we examined 205 children's WM in representing different types of content and its developmental trajectories in early…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Schemata (Cognition), Preschool Children, Concept Formation
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Osnat Atun-Einy; Maram Ibrahem; Ora Oudgenoeg-Paz; Saskia D. M. van Schaik; Alexandra Danial-Saad; Eynat Gal – Infant and Child Development, 2025
Parental beliefs and practices regarding motor development vary across cultures. However, there is a gap in cross-cultural studies focusing on minority groups. This mixed-methods study explores the cultural construction of infant motor development within the Druze-Israeli (Druze-IL) minority group. Using questionnaires, we measured beliefs,…
Descriptors: Infants, Motor Development, Mothers, Foreign Countries
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David Kellogg; Maria Nicholas – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2025
Early years education begins with the rejection of the notion that children are deficient adults. But it has culminated in a deep and abiding concern for learning difficulties, particularly in the field of reading. The purpose of this paper is to reconcile the seeming contradiction between the former view, which appears to eschew the concept of…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Learning Disabilities, Students with Disabilities, Reading Instruction
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Samuel Ronfard; Brandon W. Goulding; Jonathan D. Lane – Child Development Perspectives, 2025
Unlike adults, young children think that many weird and unlikely events are impossible. Existing theories have argued that this developmental shift is driven primarily by age-related changes in knowledge as well as an increasing ability to reflect on one's modal intuitions. However, this intuition + reflection model fails to explain…
Descriptors: Young Children, Childrens Attitudes, Cognitive Development, Child Development
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Daan Keij – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
Deleuze and Guattari's thought on remainders of childhood has proven its worth for educational theory and philosophy. However, thus far the discussion has not paid much attention to their notion of infantilization, which reveals a new dimension of their understanding of childhood. In this article, I develop both their concept of becoming-child and…
Descriptors: Child Development, Social Systems, Educational Theories, Educational Philosophy
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Seungyoun Lee – Dimensions of Early Childhood, 2024
The capacity for growth and development is an integral part of being human. Infant social-emotional development is critically important to overall development and begins in the first months of life. These processes encompass how we relate to ourselves and others in our everyday lives (Malti & Cheah, 2021). Social-emotional development includes…
Descriptors: Social Development, Emotional Development, Infants, Child Caregivers
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Anna Volodina; Sabine Weinert; Elizabeth Washbrook; Jane Waldfogel; Renske Keizer; Valentina Perinetti Casoni; Sanneke de la Rie; Sarah Jiyoon Kwon – Child & Youth Care Forum, 2024
Research on factors underlying socioeconomic status (SES)-related inequalities in child development mainly focuses on single countries and specific influential factors. Only few studies scrutinize to what extent differences in children's early behavioural outcomes vary across countries and whether the processes that account for them are common or…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Preschool Children, Socioeconomic Status, Behavior
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David C. Mallinson; Felix Elwert; Deborah B. Ehrenthal – Early Child Development and Care, 2024
Adverse health events within families can harm children's development, including their early literacy. Using data from a longitudinal Wisconsin birth cohort, we estimated the spillover effect of younger siblings' gestational ages on older siblings' kindergarten-level literacy. We sampled 20,014 sibling pairs born during 2007-2010 who took…
Descriptors: Age, Siblings, Young Children, Kindergarten
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Allison J. Williams; Judith H. Danovitch – Child Development, 2024
Across two studies, children ages 6-9 (N = 160, 82 boys, 78 girls; 75% White, 91% non-Hispanic) rated an inaccurate expert's knowledge and provided explanations for the expert's inaccurate statements. In Study 1, children's knowledge ratings decreased as he provided more inaccurate information. Ratings were predicted by age (i.e., older children…
Descriptors: Accuracy, Child Development, Decision Making, Children
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Fernando J. Ballesteros; Bartolo Luque; Herminia Filgaira – Discover Education, 2024
The subjective number-space mapping and, especially, its evolution in young children has been the subject of intense controversy among different competing models. Many studies point out that: (i) young children's innate estimates follow a logarithmic mapping (Weber-Fechner law) and (ii) driven by education, children evolve into a linear mapping.…
Descriptors: Concept Mapping, Numbers, Young Children, Child Development
Karlene DeGrasse-Deslandes – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The Early Childhood Commission (ECC) is an agency of the Ministry of Education and Youth in Jamaica responsible for early childhood development. It has been proposed that Early Childhood Practitioners (ECPs) should engage in more child friendly and age-appropriate teaching practices. This is especially critical as they use the Jamaica Early…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Teachers, Beliefs, Child Development, Foreign Countries
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Farahiyah Wan Yunus; Sakinah Idris; Siti Noraini Asmuri; Bess Fowler; Muhammad Hibatullah Romli – American Journal of Play, 2024
The authors contend that children benefit from play as a form of intervention and as a means of fostering their cognitive, social, and physical growth. They review several standardized instruments developed over the last fifty years to assess this benefit of play on child development. They identify twenty-one such play measures, the majority of…
Descriptors: Child Development, Play, Test Reliability, Standardized Tests
Janina Bocher – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Speech exhibits quasi-rhythmic regularities at multiple timescales, which seem to be crucial to comprehension. Both children's ability to extract rhythm from complex stimuli and to produce rhythmic patterns are known to undergo changes from infancy to adulthood. However, it remains unclear what rhythm skills specifically related to speech look…
Descriptors: Language Rhythm, Speech Communication, Language Acquisition, Children
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Karlis Kanders; Louis Stupple-Harris; Laurie Smith; Jenny Louise Gibson – Infant and Child Development, 2024
Generative artificial intelligence (GAI) is rapidly becoming ubiquitous in many contexts. There is limited scholarship, however, in the fields of Developmental Psychology and Early Childhood Education exploring the implications of generative AI for babies and young children. In this Perspectives piece, we discuss potential use cases,…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Early Childhood Education, Child Development, Infants
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Charlotte Verhagen; Stefanie Duijndam; Nina Kupper; Paul Lodder; Myrthe Boekhorst – Infant Mental Health Journal: Infancy and Early Childhood, 2026
In toddlerhood, parents play a crucial role in supporting the socio-emotional development of children through their parenting behaviors. Certain parental risk factors, such as emotion regulation difficulties and parenting stress, have been found to be related to both parenting practices and child outcomes. As the interplay between these risk…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Parent Influence, Stress Variables, Emotional Response
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