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Robert J. Sternberg; Maren Stern – Roeper Review, 2025
Just as children have fairly consistent attachment styles toward parents, we argue that parents have fairly consistent attachment styles toward children. It generally will be easiest for gifted children to develop their gifts and display them successfully if their parents were securely attached to them. But the children who have experienced…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Attachment Behavior, Gifted, Child Development
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Stephen Newman; Nathan Archer – Journal of Montessori Research, 2024
Maria Montessori's work remains popular and influential around the world. She provided fascinating descriptions of her observations of children's learning. Yet at the heart of her work is a lacuna: the issue of how children learn their first language. For Montessori, it was a marvel, a miracle--but a mystery. We argue that the later philosophy of…
Descriptors: Montessori Method, Child Development, Language Acquisition, Educational Philosophy
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Gail Post – Gifted Education International, 2025
Resilience, or the ability to bounce back from hardship, has been studied extensively and identified as a protective factor against negative long-term physical and mental health outcomes. Most research has addressed the child's resilience in the face of adversity; however, the parent's capacity for resilience has received limited attention.…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Self Concept, Parents, Parent Influence
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Rupal Parekh; Margaret Lloyd Sieger; Caitlin Elsaesser; Rebecca Mauldin; Lukas Champagne – Child & Youth Care Forum, 2024
Background: Previous literature suggests that children removed from home due to parental substance use disorder (SUD) and placed with older adult foster parents are more likely to achieve permanency than children placed with younger foster parents; however, little, if any, literature has examined this trend across racial identities. Objective: The…
Descriptors: Children, Foster Care, Child Caregivers, Older Adults
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Tilbe Göksun; Asli Aktan-Erciyes; Dilay Z. Karadöller; Ö. Ece Demir-Lira – Child Development Perspectives, 2025
Children need to learn the demands of their native language in the early vocabulary development phase. In this dynamic process, parental multimodal input may shape neurodevelopmental trajectories while also being tailored by child-related factors. Moving beyond typically characterized group profiles, in this article, we synthesize growing evidence…
Descriptors: Parent Participation, Parent Child Relationship, Child Language, Vocabulary Development
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John McGrew; Yue Yu; Lisa Ruble; Donna S. Murray – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2024
We examined parent activation in families with autistic children over time. Activation is one's belief, knowledge, and persistence in obtaining and managing one's care (e.g., patient activation) and others (e.g., parent activation) and is associated with better outcomes. Four aims were examined: the associations between baseline parent activation…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Children, Parents, Parent Child Relationship
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Maria Mirandi; Adriana Lis; Claudia Mazzeschi; Elisa Delvecchio – European Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2024
Perceived parenting is a crucial and complex factor for the psychological well-being of adolescents. The Adolescent Family Process Short-Form (AFP-SF) investigates the perception of adolescents' maternal and paternal parenting across six dimensions: closeness, support, communication, monitoring, peer approval, and conflict. This was the first…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adolescents, Parent Child Relationship, Adolescent Attitudes
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Sara A. Hart; Callie Little; Elsje van Bergen – npj Science of Learning, 2021
Across a wide range of studies, researchers often conclude that the home environment and children's outcomes are causally linked. In contrast, behavioral genetic studies show that parents influence their children by providing them with both environment and genes, meaning the environment that parents provide should not be considered in the absence…
Descriptors: Family Environment, Genetics, Methods, Parent Child Relationship
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Khalid, Aliya – Gender and Education, 2022
Research shows that in Pakistan, daughters of educated mothers are likely to be enrolled in school, thus proposing a decontextualised relationship between mothers and their daughters' education. This article draws on interview data to narratively analyse the situated experiences of Pakistani mothers for supporting their daughters' education. When…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mothers, Parent Child Relationship, Educational Attainment
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Noomi Matthiesen; Peter Clement Lund – Ethics and Education, 2024
In this article, we argue that contemporary parenting ideals are characterised by labour-intensive introspective emotional work akin to the techniques used by psychological coaches. We situate these ideals of contemporary parenting in an emotionalized culture that focuses on the production of happy, thriving children that is simultaneously linked…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Parents, Parent Child Relationship, Parent Role
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Leysen, Joyce; Jacobs, Delphine; Ramaekers, Stefan – Educational Theory, 2021
The biomedical model states that autism "is" a neurodevelopmental disorder, called autism spectrum disorder (ASD). In this article, Joyce Leysen, Delphine Jacobs, and Stefan Ramaekers argue that this is a narrow way of looking at autism and, further, that the biomedical view has implications for our understanding of parenthood and…
Descriptors: Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Biomedicine, Models
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Cahill, Helen – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2022
In this paper I analyse the influence of drama-based learning activities in an education encounter exploring an instance of gendered violence. I use data stories to chart the multiple material, social, and historical influences that emanated within a role-played act of violence by a father upon his daughter following her transgression of the…
Descriptors: Learning Activities, Role Playing, Violence, Dramatics
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Mijs, Jonathan J. B. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
In this article, I develop the point that whereas talent is the basis for desert, talent itself is not meritocratically deserved. It is produced by three processes, none of which are meritocratic: (1) talent is unequally distributed by the rigged lottery of birth, (2) talent is defined in ways that favor some traits over others, and (3) the market…
Descriptors: Talent, Social Systems, Advantaged, Justice
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Clarke, Daniel Wade – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2023
In this autoethnography I explore the impact of my father's alcohol dependency on my relationship with him and implications for my own recovery from alcohol-related harm. Sketching, layering and poetic interludes help to move around the hyphenated space of son-father relations showing the wounds associated with his alcohol ab/use. The writing…
Descriptors: Adults, Fathers, Sons, Alcoholism
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Shaw, Jennifer E. – Global Studies of Childhood, 2022
This paper explores perspectives on family reunification and emergent forms of separation among young migrants. These young people lived apart from and later reunited with their migrant parents who moved from the Philippines to Canada for work. I draw from 15 months of ethnographic, arts-based, and participatory research with ten participants…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Family Relationship, Immigrants, Parent Child Relationship
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