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Showing 1 to 15 of 35 results Save | Export
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Bialystok, Ellen – Developmental Science, 2009
Morton and Harper (2007 ) argue that research presented in support of a bilingual advantage in the development of executive control has been confounded with social class, the actual mechanism for group differences. As evidence, they report a study in which a small group of monolingual and bilingual 6- and 7-year-olds performed similarly on a Simon…
Descriptors: Hypothesis Testing, Children, Reaction Time, Responses
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Wierson, Michelle; Forehand, Rex – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1994
Notes that longitudinal data can play an important role in child psychopathology and treatment. Introduces review of some of the research questions that longitudinal designs can answer and how longitudinal studies have been used in evaluating traditional syndromes in child clinical psychology. (Author/NB)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Children, Clinical Psychology, Longitudinal Studies
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Runco, Mark A. – New Directions for Child Development, 1996
Makes recommendations regarded cross-sectional and longitudinal research needed on creativity, developmental trends and processes related to creativity, and determinants of the development of creativity. (DR)
Descriptors: Children, Creative Development, Creativity, Creativity Research
Jacob, Evelyn – 1982
The inclusion of an ethnographic approach within the basic framework of a quantitative one is outlined in an attempt to combine their methodologies. Examples from an ethnographic case study of kindergarten aged children in Utuado, Puerto Rico are used to illustrate the issues being discussed, especially research design. The Puerto Rican study…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Measurement, Cultural Context, Educational Research
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Schneider, Barry H. – Developmental Psychology, 1998
Asserts that cross-cultural comparison serves a crucial function as a final test of paradigms emerging from intracultural studies of child and adolescent adjustment and maladjustment. Argues that cross-cultural research's doorkeeper function is best performed when a wide range of cultures is sampled, for which core beliefs are measured directly…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Children, Cross Cultural Studies, Emotional Adjustment
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Gathercole, Susan E.; Baddeley, Alan D. – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1995
This letter points out flaws in van der Lely and Howard's argument that children with specific language impairments have no deficits in verbal short-term memory. The original methodology is faulted for providing uninterpretable assessment of verbal short-term functions and for failure to follow memory techniques from previous studies. Sample…
Descriptors: Children, Language Impairments, Research Design, Research Methodology
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von Eye, Alexander; Schuster, Christof – Child Development, 2000
Presents sample research designs for the investigation of questions concerning resilience. Describes hypotheses from specific research designs in the form of odds ratios. (Author)
Descriptors: Children, Cross Sectional Studies, Hypothesis Testing, Longitudinal Studies
Gelles, Richard J. – 1983
This paper discusses the problems of conducting research on a low-base rate sensitive family problem, parental child snatching, and proposes that telephone interviewing is a cost efficient and methodologically appropriate solution to these problems. The paper reviews the scant literature on parental child snatching by presenting what are…
Descriptors: Children, Cost Effectiveness, Family Problems, Interviews
Winegar, Lucien T. – 1989
"Child as cultural apprentice" is a developmental psychologist's heuristic metaphor which is embedded in an individual-socioecological frame of reference. A basic theoretic feature of this metaphor is the explicit recognition of the interdependence of the process of child development and the socially provided resources for that…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Developmental Psychology, Heuristics
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Jenkins, Jennifer M. – Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 2002
Advances debate on the causal mechanism involved in the link between marital conflict and children's development by addressing three issues: (1) identifying basic processes in emotion; (2) operationalizing theories in order to differentiate between their predictions; and (3) designing research to identify causal mechanisms. Asserts that Davies and…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Children, Emotional Development, Measurement
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Mahon, Ann; And Others – Children & Society, 1996
Draws on studies of child carers and the impact of the Child Support Act 1991 to examine the methodological, ethical, theoretical, and practical implications of researching children's views. Identifies social, political, and legal trends which form a background to growing interest in children as potential and actual participants in the research…
Descriptors: Child Caregivers, Childhood Attitudes, Children, Ethics
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Rutter, Michael – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1994
Addresses strategies needed in using longitudinal data on psychopathology to test cause-and-effect relationships, including natural experiments, testing of competing hypotheses on mechanisms, study of reversal effects, multiple replications in different circumstances, use of designs to dissociate possible mechanisms, testing for dose-response…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Children, Foreign Countries, Longitudinal Studies
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Roosa, Mark W. – Child Development, 2000
Identifies interaction effects as the defining feature of resilience and resilience research. Maintains that interaction effects are responsible for the unique contributions of this field of study to the understanding of human development. Suggests that the methodological and statistical challenges posed by interaction effects do not, by…
Descriptors: Child Development, Children, Definitions, Individual Development
Watkins, Bruce – 1984
Research on children and media has generally focused on the negative impact of media on developing minds. However, a theoretical framework is proposed for thinking about the role of television for American children from a developmental perspective. Instead of focusing on television's effects, television viewing can be examined as is any other…
Descriptors: Child Development, Childhood Interests, Children, Mass Media Effects
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McGuire, Jacqueline Barnes; And Others – Children & Society, 1997
Describes quasi-experimental designs to be used as alternatives to randomized controlled trials in decisions concerning clinical practice and policy-making in the child mental health field. Highlights importance of taking a systems-level approach to evaluation, and describes ways in which qualitative outcomes measures can be used to sensitively…
Descriptors: Children, Evaluation Methods, Mental Health, Outcomes of Treatment
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