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What Works Clearinghouse, 2018
This document provides the following four tips for supporting reading skills for children ages K-3 at home: (1) Have conversations before, during, and after reading together; (2) Help children learn how to break sentences; (3) Help children sound out words smoothly; and (4) Model reading fluently by practicing reading out loud with your child.…
Descriptors: Reading Skills, Young Children, Family Environment, Parent Role
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What Works Clearinghouse, 2018
This document begins by providing four tips parents and care takers can use to supporting childrens' reading skills at home: (1) Have conversations before, during, and after reading together; (2) Help children learn how to break sentences into words and words into syllables; (3) Help children sound out words smoothly; and (4) Model reading…
Descriptors: Reading Skills, Young Children, Family Environment, Parent Role
Grinder, Elisabeth L.; Toso, Blaire Willson – Goodling Institute for Research in Family Literacy, 2012
Parent involvement in children's language and literacy development is a continuum. Parents enhance their newborn baby's language and vocabulary growth, whereas with older children parents are involved in school and provide support by engaging in learning activities such as assisting with homework. Parent involvement is an important part of…
Descriptors: Interaction, Literacy Education, Language Acquisition, Developmentally Appropriate Practices
Miller, Faith; Prins, Esther – Goodling Institute for Research in Family Literacy, 2009
Interactive Literacy Activities, or ILAs, broadly refer to activities that facilitate interaction between adults and children for the purpose of promoting literacy and language development. It is essential to make ILAs developmentally and culturally appropriate for children and to use an approach that integrates various activities in order to…
Descriptors: Interaction, Literacy Education, Language Acquisition, Developmentally Appropriate Practices
Lindner, Barbara – 1988
One of the best guarantees of a child's success in school is his or her parents' involvement in education. This resource guide provides information in the following areas: (1) family types; (2) expectations of parents, teachers, and administrators; (3) barriers encountered by parents and teachers; (4) home environment improvements through family…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Administrator Role, Educational Environment, Elementary Secondary Education
Gillet, Pamela – Academic Therapy, 1979
The article presents suggestions to assist parents of learning disabled (LD) children in modifying the home situaton so that the child can function as smoothly as possible within the family. (DLS)
Descriptors: Family Environment, Family Life, Learning Disabilities, Parent Influence
Salend, Spencer J. – Academic Therapy, 1983
Follow-up information about mainstreamed students' adjustment comes from regular educators, parents, and the students themselves. The classroom teacher can provide information on such aspects as academic achievement and support services. Parents observe the students reactions to the settings and to peers. Students can describe their feelings and…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Disabilities, Mainstreaming, Parent Role
Shaffer, Susan Morris – 1986
The paper collects data concerned with the problem of underachievement in gifted girls. The first section looks at how society limits gifted girls in the schools and in the work place. The next section examines how gifted girls limit themselves through internal barriers to achievement, attitudes, and lack of self-esteem. The final section offers…
Descriptors: Cultural Influences, Elementary Secondary Education, Family Environment, Females
Hoffman, Sandra Josephs – 1983
One preschool-age child's literacy-oriented, self-initiated games and play are described in this report. Some of the games used decontextualized print, some focused on contextualized written language, some were number games, and some involved letters and words. Commercially produced games were used in addition to games constructed at home; these…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Childrens Games, Diaries, Family Environment
Chandler, Louis A. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1981
Rather than shielding children from stress, parents and teachers should assist them in developing coping mechanisms that will enable them to adjust to the realities of life. This article offers guidelines for achieving that goal. (Author/WD)
Descriptors: Children, Coping, Discipline, Educational Environment
Plucker, Jonathan A., Ed.; And Others – 1994
Three pamphlets (Practitioner's Guides) present guidelines from the National Research Center on the Gifted and Talented at the University of Connecticut. The guidelines are based on theory-driven quality research that is problem-based, practice-relevant, and consumer-oriented. Each pamphlet has a section summarizing research from the literature or…
Descriptors: Creative Development, Creativity, Educational Environment, Elementary Secondary Education
Ehrensaft, Diane – 1997
Parents today are tagged as a generation preoccupied with work and themselves but at the same time overly focused on their children. This book attempts to explain this paradox. It explores the ways in which social, cultural, and psychological changes have come together with a new definition of the child to create a situation in which parenthood…
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Rearing, Discipline, Dual Career Family
Studans, Lesley – 2003
In schooling, a learning community is founded on its members, consisting of teachers, children, parents and people who care. As the person with the professional responsibility for building and sustaining a learning community, the teacher is challenged to attend closely to three key areas: classroom environment, curriculum, and social…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Communication Skills, Curriculum Development, Interpersonal Relationship
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Landfried, Steven E. – PTA Today, 1991
Educational enabling occurs when school staff, social agencies, parents, or peers do things for the students they should do themselves to fully develop a work ethic and academic and coping skills. Parents and teachers must keep their roles in perspective. The article advises parents on how to minimize educational enabling. (SM)
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Family Environment, Individual Development, Parent Child Relationship
Hansen, Kirsten A.; Kaufmann, Roxane K.; Saifer, Steffen – 1997
Drawing from a compelling educational initiative that introduced developmentally appropriate teaching techniques from the United States to the well-established early childhood programs in Europe and the former Soviet Union, this book contends that there are subtle, yet effective, teaching techniques that encourage choice, individualism,…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Classroom Techniques, Democracy, Democratic Values
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