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Showing 1 to 15 of 373 results Save | Export
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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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Dor-Haim, Peleg – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2023
In the course of the COVID-19 crisis, teachers and students experienced a prolonged separation from vital social needs, such as social interaction, and therefore many of them felt a sense of loneliness. However, while some teachers may perceive school as a place that provides comfort and support, others may be suspicious of it and feel neglected.…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, COVID-19, Pandemics, Social Isolation
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Jalongo, Mary Renck – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2023
Amid COVID-19, children's interactions with pet animals in the household were at times strengthened, strained, or established anew. Extensive periods of confinement made the home environment not only the site for most family activities but also the hub for children's school and many adults' work. Research on the role of pets during the pandemic…
Descriptors: Young Children, Animals, Family Environment, COVID-19
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Kim, Hyunhee; Carney, JoLynn V.; Hazler, Richard J. – Preventing School Failure, 2023
Research demonstrates that school connectedness protects students from risky behaviors and improves healthy development and academic achievement. Despite its importance, there has been little focus on how to promote school connectedness through school-based interventions. One problem with this area of practical application is that school…
Descriptors: Student School Relationship, Learner Engagement, Intervention, Ecology
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Dagan, Or; Sagi-Schwartz, Abraham – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2021
Early attachment has been commonly hypothesized to predict children's future developmental outcomes, and robust evidence relying on assessments of single caregiver-child attachment patterns has corroborated this hypothesis. Nevertheless, most often children are raised by multiple caregivers, and they tend to form attachment bonds with more than…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Child Development, Caregiver Child Relationship, Child Caregivers
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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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Forslund, Tommie; Hammarlund, Mårten; Granqvist, Pehr – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2021
Attachment theory, research, and assessments have become increasingly applied to settle child custody cases. We discuss such applications in relation to admissibility criteria for scientific evidence and testimony proposed by Faigman et al. (2014). We argue that attachment theory and research can provide valid "framework evidence";…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Child Custody, Decision Making, Evidence
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Jessica A. Stern; Stephanie Irby Coard; Oscar A. Barbarin; Jude Cassidy – Child Development Perspectives, 2024
Within a sociohistorical context of racism-related physical and emotional threats, Black families in the United States have developed sources of resilience to promote children's safety and positive development. Yet research on Black family resilience has rarely been integrated into one of the most influential theories of child development:…
Descriptors: African American Family, Parent Child Relationship, Attachment Behavior, Caregiver Role
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Bullough, Robert V. – Teacher Development, 2023
Only recently have researchers and practitioners become interested in teacher educator development and identity formation. The author explores the place of 'distant teachers' -- giants of the past whose lives and works prove powerful in self-formation. John Dewey and Boyd H. Bode are offered as examples of distant teachers; the development of the…
Descriptors: Teacher Educators, Teacher Educator Education, Professional Development, Professional Identity
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Rutland, Julie Harp; Hawkins-Lear, Sarah; Gooden, Caroline J. – Young Exceptional Children, 2023
Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome (NAS) is the term used to describe newborn experiences of withdrawal after exposure to opioids or other substances in utero (Kondili & Duryea, 2019). An urgent need exists for trained practitioners to serve children with NAS and their families (e.g., Gregory, 2014; Hancock et al., 2017; Health care Cost and…
Descriptors: Neonates, Drug Abuse, Prenatal Influences, Drug Rehabilitation
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Elizabeth Chapman Hoult; Mel Gibson – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2024
Children who are currently, or were previously, 'looked after' by the state, are educationally disadvantaged, with exclusion rates historically higher than in other groups in the UK. A conventional way of thinking about these children is that they have been affected by trauma and attachment issues in their early years, and that they import their…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educationally Disadvantaged, Children, Foster Care
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Cliffe, Johanna; Solvason, Carla – Power and Education, 2023
Within this literature-based article the authors consider the importance and power of relationships, within the field of early years education and care (ECEC). Drawing on the lenses of attachment and development theory, alongside current literature and research, the authors critically explore the significance of relationships in child development,…
Descriptors: Young Children, Early Childhood Education, Attachment Behavior, Instruction
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Durrani, Huma – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2020
Sensory Integration Dysfunction (SID) is a core deficit of Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) that is associated with high levels of anxiety and dysregulation, which may contribute to impaired attachment. This article explicates current discourse on the relationship between SID and attachment for children with ASD. Art therapy is uniquely able to…
Descriptors: Art Therapy, Children, Attachment Behavior, Autism
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Arawjo, Ian; Mogos, Ariam – ACM Transactions on Computing Education, 2021
Even in the turn toward justice-oriented pedagogy, computing education tends to overlook the quality of intergroup relationships, which risks entrenching division. In this article, we establish an intercultural approach to computing education, informed by intercultural and peace education, prejudice reduction, and the sociology of racism and…
Descriptors: Intergroup Relations, Computer Science Education, Social Justice, Cultural Awareness
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Thompson, Ross A. – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2021
Attachment theorists have long recognized that multiple attachments characterize the typical experience of most children. But an appreciation of attachment networks is new, and this commentary draws on some of the most theoretically provocative themes of the contributions to this special issue. These include: how the quality of attachment…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Futures (of Society), Security (Psychology), Child Development
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