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Swick, Kevin – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2005
Promoting caring in children is a powerful venue to prevent violence in our society. This article reviews the roots of violence, explores the various contexts of violence, and then describes how caring can be used to prevent violence. In particular, the role that families and schools can play in helping children develop caring is discussed.
Descriptors: Violence, Family Role, School Role, Prevention
Gerstenzang, Sarah – Zero to Three (J), 2005
The author presents journal entries from her first 7 months as a foster parent of a 5-week-old girl in 2000, illustrating how she, her husband, and her birth children wrestled with their emotions and their role as a foster family. Their expectations of themselves as temporary caretakers were reinforced in foster parent training. What the training…
Descriptors: Foster Care, Journal Writing, Infants, Child Rearing
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Martindale, Russell J. J.; Collins, Dave; Daubney, Jim – Quest, 2005
The transformation of talented youngsters into senior world-beaters is a topic of interest for practitioners and researchers alike. Unfortunately there is a dearth of research to guide the optimization of this process. Accordingly, this paper offers an overview of key themes apparent in the literature that have relevance to the effective…
Descriptors: Talent Development, Athletics, Models, Holistic Approach
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Maier, Markus A.; Bernier, Annie; Pekrun, Reinhard; Zimmermann, Peter; Grossmann, Klaus E. – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2004
Internal working models of attachment (IWMs) are presumed to be largely "unconscious" representations of childhood attachment experiences. Several instruments have been developed to assess IWMs; some of them are based on self-report and others on narrative interview techniques. This study investigated the capacity of a self-report measure, the…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Models, Children, Measurement Techniques
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Newcombe, Rhiannon; Reese, Elaine – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2004
The present study examined the socialisation of children's narrative ability across the preschool period, exploring the association between children's and mothers' narrative style and children's attachment security. Fifty-six children and their mothers engaged in past event memory conversations about everyday shared past experiences when the…
Descriptors: Mothers, Attachment Behavior, Longitudinal Studies, Security (Psychology)
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Fonagy, Peter; Gergely, George; Target, Mary – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2007
Developmental psychology and psychopathology has in the past been more concerned with the quality of self-representation than with the development of the subjective agency which underpins our experience of feeling, thought and action, a key function of mentalisation. This review begins by contrasting a Cartesian view of pre-wired introspective…
Descriptors: Cues, Caregivers, Infants, Psychopathology
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Elfer, Peter – Children & Society, 2007
Anxiety about the emotional experience of young children in nursery has been central in thinking about the development of nursery provision. The main theory of emotion that has been applied to nursery practice has been attachment theory. This article proposes that there is a need to open up our conceptual framework for thinking about emotional…
Descriptors: Young Children, Emotional Experience, Child Development, Anxiety
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Venet, Michele; Bureau, Jean-Francois; Gosselin, Catherine; Capuano, France – School Psychology International, 2007
A number of studies (see Ethier, 1999) have shown that neglect has a deleterious impact on children's development. However, the effect of neglect on a child's internal representations of their family still needs to be investigated. The aim of this study was to examine the attachment patterns observed in a subsample of neglected children as…
Descriptors: Social Services, Classification, Child Neglect, Attachment Behavior
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Wallace, John J. – RMLE Online: Research in Middle Level Education, 2007
This study compared two configurations of sixth-grade students and core teachers to measure the students' perceived levels of social bonding with their peers, their school, and their teachers. One configuration featured a team of four teachers, each specializing in a core subject area and teaching this subject to all 100 students on the team. The…
Descriptors: Grade 6, Attachment Behavior, Social Psychology, Team Teaching
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Salami, Samuel O.; Aremu, A. Oyesoji – Career Development International, 2007
Purpose: The purpose of this paper was to investigate the relationships of parental attachment and psychological separation to the career development process of secondary school adolescents. Design/methodology/approach: An "ex post facto" survey research design was adopted. The sample comprised 242 (males = 121, females = 121) senior…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Parent Child Relationship, Multiple Regression Analysis, Foreign Countries
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Dallaire, Danielle H.; Weinraub, Marsha – Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology, 2007
With a large and diverse sample of children from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development, the role of infant-mother attachment security as a protective factor against the development of children's anxious and aggressive behaviors at first grade was examined. When child's sex,…
Descriptors: Grade 1, Child Health, Family Income, Anxiety
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Edwards, Oliver W.; Sweeney, Aldrin E. – Educational Psychology in Practice, 2007
The growing social phenomenon of grandparents caring for their grandchildren has implications for educational psychology practice, since children who are wards of their grandparents frequently experience problematic school functioning. In this paper, the literature regarding children cared for by grandparents is reviewed. Issues concerning…
Descriptors: Grandparents, Grandchildren, Educational Psychology, Theory Practice Relationship
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Smeekens, Sanny; Riksen-Walraven, J. Marianne; van Bakel, Hedwig J. A. – Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 2007
In a community sample of 116 children, assessments of parent-child interaction, parent-child attachment, and various parental, child, and contextual characteristics at 15 and 28 months and at age 5 were used to predict externalizing behavior at age 5, as rated by parents and teachers. Hierarchical multiple regression analysis and path analysis…
Descriptors: Interaction, Path Analysis, Multiple Regression Analysis, Parent Child Relationship
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Carr, Deborah; Khodyakov, Dmitry – Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 2007
Dying persons are encouraged to name as durable power of attorney for health care (DPAHC) someone who will thus be empowered to make end-of-life treatment decisions for them in the event that they become incapacitated. We use data from the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study to investigate whether and whom older adults designate as their DPAHC. DPAHC…
Descriptors: Terminal Illness, Decision Making, Empowerment, Death
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Purvis, Karyn B.; Cross, David R.; Pennings, Jacquelyn S. – Journal of School Counseling, 2007
During the last decade, nearly 190,000 children from outside the United States have been adopted by families in the United States, and many of these children have experienced orphanage care. These children are vulnerable to a complex constellation of deficits crossing behavioral, physical, educational and emotional domains. Parents and schools are…
Descriptors: Institutionalized Persons, Children, Foreign Nationals, Adoption
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