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Showing 1 to 15 of 26 results Save | Export
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Little, Stephanie; Maunder, Rachel – Educational Studies, 2022
This small-scale study investigated the impact of training teachers on early attachment and adolescent neuroscience. The aim was to assess change in empathy pre and post training. Forty secondary school teachers in England completed the Empathy Components Questionnaire before and after Attachment Awareness training, showing small but…
Descriptors: Secondary School Teachers, Teacher Education, Faculty Development, Attachment Behavior
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Downes, Ciara; Kieran, Sara; Tiernan, Bridget – Child Care in Practice, 2022
Many children who enter the care system and are subsequently adopted have had exposure to a range of potentially traumatising experiences including domestic violence, abuse, neglect and loss of key caregivers. There are also an increasingly high number of adopted children presenting with the impact of intrauterine exposure to alcohol, drugs and…
Descriptors: Group Therapy, Parents, Adoption, Child Abuse
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Langlois, Riel – BU Journal of Graduate Studies in Education, 2017
John Bowlby's (1982) attachment theory can be applied to an existing therapeutic framework to enhance the effectiveness of therapy. Using the Adult Attachment Inventory (AAI), a therapist can identify the type of attachment the client formed with his/her caregivers, and use this to navigate an authentic attachment between client and therapist.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Attachment Behavior, Adults, Counselor Client Relationship
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Neitzel, Jen – Young Exceptional Children, 2020
The recent attention being given to early childhood trauma and its negative effects on long-term learning and development has led many policymakers, practitioners, and researchers to focus on developing practices that support children and families who are experiencing trauma. Given the fact that many young children spend a significant amount of…
Descriptors: Trauma, Early Childhood Education, Early Childhood Teachers, Student Needs
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Columbia Embury, Dusty; Clarke, Laura S.; Leaver, Christy – Preventing School Failure, 2020
Students with Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD) often display significant intrusive behaviors and need specific behavioral, social-emotional, and academic supports. Given the background of trauma consistent with a RAD diagnosis, it is imperative that school personnel understand the social-emotional behavioral supports needed to help children with…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Behavior Disorders, Trauma, Social Support Groups
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DePasquale, Carrie E.; Gunnar, Megan R. – Future of Children, 2020
Parental sensitivity and nurturance are important mechanisms for establishing biological, emotional, and social functioning in childhood. Sensitive, nurturing care is most critical during the first three years of life, when attachment relationships form and parental care shapes foundational neural and physiological systems, with lifelong…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Parenting Styles, Child Development, Attachment Behavior
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Moutsiana, Christina; Fearon, Pasco; Murray, Lynne; Cooper, Peter; Goodyer, Ian; Johnstone, Tom; Halligan, Sarah – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2014
Background: Animal research indicates that the neural substrates of emotion regulation may be persistently altered by early environmental exposures. If similar processes operate in human development then this is significant, as the capacity to regulate emotional states is fundamental to human adaptation. Methods: We utilised a 22-year longitudinal…
Descriptors: Infants, Attachment Behavior, Security (Psychology), Psychological Patterns
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Waite, Douglas; Greiner, Mary V.; Laris, Zach – Journal of Applied Research on Children, 2018
Across the country, placements in foster care are rising. In 2016, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services reported that 273,539 children in the U.S. entered foster care. In 34 percent of those cases, parental drug abuse was one of the factors leading to the child's removal from their family. Additionally, the U.S. Substance Abuse and…
Descriptors: Child Welfare, Foster Care, Drug Abuse, Parents
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Creeden, Kevin – International Journal of Behavioral Consultation and Therapy, 2013
While theories on the etiology of sexually problematic and offending behavior have become increasingly developmental in their perspective, treatment approaches that are utilized to address these issues have not significantly changed to address this thinking. Adolescent behavioral problems are especially linked to a wide range of personal and…
Descriptors: Therapy, Juvenile Justice, Behavior Problems, Sexual Abuse
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Tottenham, Nim; Shapiro, Mor; Telzer, Eva H.; Humphreys, Kathryn L. – Developmental Science, 2012
In altricial species, like the human, the caregiver, very often the mother, is one of the most potent stimuli during development. The distinction between mothers and other adults is learned early in life and results in numerous behaviors in the child, most notably mother-approach and stranger wariness. The current study examined the influence of…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Mothers, Brain, Brain Hemisphere Functions
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Bay, Esther H.; Blow, Adrian J.; Yan, Xie – Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 2012
Recovery from a mild-to-moderate traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a challenging process for injured persons and their families. Guided by attachment theory, we investigated whether relationship conflict, social support, or sense of belonging were associated with psychological functioning. Community-dwelling persons with TBI (N = 75) and their…
Descriptors: Marital Status, Head Injuries, Conflict, Brain
Lieberman, Alicia F.; Soler, Esta – ZERO TO THREE, 2013
Children's exposure to violence is a national crisis. The high prevalence of exposure to violence in infancy and early childhood has implications for lifelong health and development because early experiences are most influential in shaping the structure and functioning of the brain, the quality of attachments and other relationships, and the…
Descriptors: Violence, Public Health, Child Development, Brain
Fox, Nathan A.; Zeanah, Charles H.; Nelson, Charles A. – ZERO TO THREE, 2014
Neuroscientists have long believed that there are sensitive periods in development during which the effects of experience play a critical role. And developmental psychologists have argued for the importance of early experience in the first years of life as being critical for brain and behavioral development. Most of the neuroscience research…
Descriptors: Child Development, Brain, Child Behavior, Environmental Influences
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Maikoetter, Michelle – Reclaiming Children and Youth, 2011
Nicholas Hobbs, a visionary in the field of psychology, believed strongly that how one defines a problem determines in large part the strategies that can be generated to solve it (Hobbs, 1982). He questioned the validity of psychiatric labels and other means of classification that pathologized children, believing that such approaches guided people…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Interpersonal Relationship, Children, Psychological Patterns
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Atzil, Shir; Hendler, Talma; Zagoory-Sharon, Orna; Winetraub, Yonatan; Feldman, Ruth – Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2012
Objective: Research on the neurobiology of parenting has defined "biobehavioral synchrony," the coordination of biological and behavioral responses between parent and child, as a central process underpinning mammalian bond formation. Bi-parental rearing, typically observed in monogamous species, is similarly thought to draw on mechanisms of…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Cues, Mothers, Child Rearing
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