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Showing 16 to 30 of 373 results Save | Export
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Sara Knight; Janine Kim Coates; Judith Lathlean; Rossana Perez-del-Aguila – British Educational Research Journal, 2024
A growing evidence base has demonstrated the value of Forest School as an outdoor learning approach which supports a range of benefits including improved physical, social and mental wellbeing, increased confidence and self-esteem and the development of problem-solving skills. However, critics of Forest School have argued that a lack of theoretical…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Forestry, Outdoor Education, Experiential Learning
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Hodge, David R.; Gebler-Wolfe, Molly M. – Children & Schools, 2022
Most adolescents have mobile devices (e.g., smartphones) and daily access to the internet. Scholars, however, have only recently begun to consider the impact of this technology on youth. This article draws on attachment theory to explain how adolescents' attachment styles may be represented in their attachment to technology. The authors posit that…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Adolescents, Handheld Devices, Internet
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Edwards, Susan; McLean, Karen; Bartlett, Jacinta; Nolan, Andrea; Evangelou, Maria; Henderson, Michael; Skouteris, Helen; Tarasuik, Joanne – British Educational Research Journal, 2022
This paper identifies the shared features of provision in exemplar school playgroups defined using the social capital concepts of bonding and bridging relationships. Relationships promote capabilities amongst people, with play a known capability for advancing children's developmental and educational outcomes. By attending to the bonding and…
Descriptors: Play, Group Activities, Social Capital, Attachment Behavior
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Steele, Miriam; Steele, Howard – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2021
This comment on the Special Issue contributions regarding the attachment network addresses the clinical implications of the findings from three perspectives: (1) the need to look beyond maternal influences on child developmental outcomes; (2) to be open to every seemingly peripheral influence on the child as this may have a central impact on the…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Networks, Child Development, Parent Child Relationship
Williams, Dorinda Silver; Mulrooney, Kathleen – ZERO TO THREE, 2021
This article focuses on the fundamental role that early childhood educators (ECEs) play in the lives of infants and very young children and their families--underscoring the power of early interactions and relationships between infant--toddler and preschool educators and the children in their programs. The authors explore the ECEs' unique roles,…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Teachers, Teacher Role, Infants, Young Children
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Trethewy, Tracy; Vanderburg, Michelle; van den Akker, Jose – Journal of Research in International Education, 2022
Arising from increasing globalization, growing numbers of families may find themselves relocating internationally because of work, while children in these families, often referred to as Third Culture Kids, may find themselves grieving for family, friends or possessions left behind. Research suggests that what Doka (2002) describes as…
Descriptors: Grief, Child Development, Foreign Countries, Self Concept
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Lawrence, Marie – Journal of Organizational and Educational Leadership, 2023
Educational attachment bonding helps students to progress academically and to develop strong positive emotional ties with members of the educational community. This educational bond serves as a stabilizing factor and may serve to compensate for deficiencies in early attachment bonds and thus help students develop sound psychological health.…
Descriptors: Student School Relationship, Academic Persistence, Attachment Behavior, Educational Theories
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Carotta, C.; Born, S.; Elverson, C.; Hauck, A.; Hillerud, K. – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2022
This analysis examined key protective factors among preschool children in low-income, rural areas. Teacher-reported Devereux Early Childhood Assessments for Preschoolers were completed for 182 Head Start children (54% female, 46% male) from seven rural, midwestern communities. The majority of children were in the typical range for each protective…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Low Income, Disadvantaged Youth, Preschool Education
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Sacristan, Dolly; Lalane, Monique – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2022
The development of a social work professional identity is an element of social work education. It is not clear how students in social work programs develop this identity; its development seems to be dependent on the integration of various learning experiences and exposure to curriculum content in the classroom, and in the fieldwork assignments.…
Descriptors: Caseworkers, Social Work, Professional Identity, Teacher Student Relationship
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Eisenberg, Nancy – Developmental Psychology, 2020
In this commentary, I delineate several questions raised by the Hammond and Drummond (2019) paper: (a) to why there seems to be an association between state positive emotion and prosocial behavior in young children, and if and how early positively tinged prosocial behavior provides a pathway to (b) later prosocial behavior more generally…
Descriptors: Prosocial Behavior, Positive Attitudes, Psychological Patterns, Young Children
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Petrovic, John E.; Kuntz, Aaron M. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2018
The authors present a materialist analysis of the effects of neoliberalism in education. Specifically, they contend that neoliberalism is a form of cultural invasion that begets necrophilia. Neoliberalism is necrophilous in promoting a cultural desire to fix fluid systems and processes. Such desire manufactures both individuals known and…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Alienation, Cultural Influences, Political Attitudes
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Farber, Naomi; Penney, Patrice – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2020
Features of the academic context of social work education threaten the loss of traditional educational attention to relational capacity, an indispensable condition for all forms of social work practice and thus a necessary priority for professional education. We argue that the development of relational capacity should occur in classroom as well as…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Social Work, Instruction, Interpersonal Relationship
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Wierzchowska, Justyna – International Journal of English Studies, 2018
This article examines seventeen children poems by Sylvia Plath written in the years 1960-63, in relation to the poetics of romantic love. Drawing on motherhood studies (Klein, 1975; O'Reilly, 2010; Rich, 1976; Winnicott, 1956, 1965, 1967), the maternal shift in psychoanalysis (see Bueskens, 2014: 3-6), and attachment theory (Bowlby, 1950, 1969,…
Descriptors: Children, Poetry, Authors, Withdrawal (Psychology)
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Little, Stephanie; Maunder, Rachel E. – Educational & Child Psychology, 2021
Aim: This paper aims to discuss the link between childhood trauma and young people's disruptive behaviour in the classroom, and argues that teachers should receive training on 'attachment aware' approaches to help them respond effectively. Rationale: Two inter-connected problems affecting the UK education system are the number of young people who…
Descriptors: Trauma, Teacher Education, Coping, Teacher Competencies
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Andrea Middleton – International Journal of Nurture in Education, 2020
From its origins within the deprived schools of inner London in the late 1960s, nurture group practice has evolved organically. Based on instinctive, clinically observed and evidence-based principles, nurture groups continue to offer a viable educational response in providing for the fundamental attachment needs of vulnerable children in schools.…
Descriptors: Place Based Education, Educational Practices, Foreign Countries, Classroom Environment
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