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Marcia M. Ward; Divya Bhagianadh; Fred Ullrich; Kimberly A. S. Merchant; Carlos Mena – Journal of School Nursing, 2024
Telehealth can expand and enhance access to school-based health care, but its use has been relatively limited. Recognizing that school-based health care is still not reaching many students, the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) funded the School Based Telehealth Network Grant Program to expand telehealth in rural school-based…
Descriptors: Telecommunications, Access to Health Care, Rural Schools, Children
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Clarice Martins; Nadia C. Valentini; Arja Sääkslahti; Eileen K. Africa; E. Kipling Webster; Glauber Nobre; Leah E. Robinson; Michael Duncan; Patrizia Tortella; Paulo F. Bandeira; Lisa M. Barnett – Journal of Motor Learning and Development, 2024
The first years of life are an optimal time for developing motor competence. However, the evidence regarding motor competence in early childhood is fragmented and needs to be clearly synthesized and presented. To establish effective evidence-based decision making in research, practice, and policy for the early years, this expert statement, on…
Descriptors: Psychomotor Skills, Child Development, Motor Development, Child Health
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Thurston Domina; Leah Clark; Vitaly Radsky; Renuka Bhaskar – American Educational Research Journal, 2024
The Community Eligibility Provision (CEP) allows high-poverty schools to offer free meals to all students regardless of household income. Conceptualizing universal meal provision as a strategy to alleviate stigma associated with school meals, we hypothesize that CEP implementation reduces the incidence of suspensions, particularly for students…
Descriptors: Federal Programs, Nutrition, Welfare Services, Child Health
Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University, 2024
Water is essential for life. The brain, heart, kidneys, and lungs require continued hydration to function, and our bodies need water for digestion, nutrient absorption, blood distribution, and so much more. While water comprises around 60% of the adult body, 75% of infants' bodies are water. Children also drink more water per pound of body weight…
Descriptors: Child Development, Water, Water Quality, Natural Resources
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Zhang, Wangyang; Qin, Guomin; Zhao, Zijian; Liu, Wenhao; Zhang, Shiyu; Kumar, Priyan Malarvizhi – Early Child Development and Care, 2023
Gradients across socioeconomic status occur for many children's health and improvement in high-income countries. The objective is to explore infant growth and child development in four developed countries around the socioeconomic landscape. In this paper, Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) enhances the socioeconomic status gradients for the…
Descriptors: Children, Child Development, Infants, Child Health
Ezra Golberstein; Irina Zainullina; Aaron Sojourner; Mark A. Sander – W. E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research, 2023
This brief studies an intervention that placed mental health clinicians in Minnesota schools. This analysis focuses on the implementation of the school-based mental health (SBMH) program in K-12 public schools in Hennepin County, Minnesota, which includes the city of Minneapolis and its suburbs. The analysis uses administrative data and survey…
Descriptors: Mental Health, School Health Services, Public Schools, Access to Health Care
Maithreyi Gopalan; Rohitha Edara – AERA Open, 2023
Despite lagging behind other high-income countries, the United States has made slow but steady improvements in health, especially for children from low-income households, through a series of health policies and programs since the 1990s. Have these health benefits spilled over to educational attainment and achievement? In this article, we…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Child Health, Health Education, Outcomes of Education
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AnnCatrin Röjvik; Gunilla Jaeger; Erland Hjelmquist; Kerstin W. Falkman – European Journal of Special Needs Education, 2024
Rare diseases are usually complex syndromes, which sometimes cause extensive functional impairments affecting everyday life. The number of rare diseases and of people having one is increasing. Children with rare diseases often display special education needs and require support and adapted pedagogical methods to participate and achieve academic…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Diseases, Physical Health, Child Health
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Charles B. Corbin; Kathleen F. Janz; Gregory J. Welk – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance, 2024
The relationship between youth-fitness test items related to cardiorespiratory endurance and body composition and health outcomes is well established. Until recent years, the link between musculoskeletal fitness measures and health markers has been less conclusive. The information provided in this article offers evidence of the health links…
Descriptors: Health Behavior, At Risk Persons, Physical Fitness, Muscular Strength
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Cassam, Quassim – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2023
This paper argues that vice-charging, the practice of charging other persons with epistemic vice, can itself be epistemically vicious. It identifies some potential vices of vice-charging and identifies knowledge of other people as a type of knowledge that is obstructed by epistemically vicious attributions of epistemic vice. The hazards of…
Descriptors: Parents, Children, Immunization Programs, Parent Responsibility
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María Eugenia Chaoul – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2024
The transition to the use of paper in public elementary schools in Mexico was not easy. At the end of the nineteenth century, the use of slates had been questioned due to the health risk they represented since students often erased their writing with saliva and the material with which the slates were made did not always meet the necessary…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Elementary Schools, Foreign Countries, Educational History
Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University, 2024
It is widely accepted that investing in early childhood helps build the foundations of a healthy, productive, and equitable society. Guided by that knowledge, a range of broad-based programs and targeted services make a significant difference for millions of children, yet a closer look at outcome data shows that some benefit greatly, some benefit…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Child Development, Equal Education, Educational Discrimination
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Gheaus, Anca – Philosophical Inquiry in Education, 2022
This article brings into relief two "desiderata" in childrearing, the importance of which the pandemic has made clearer than ever. The first is to ensure that, in schools as well as outside them, children have ample opportunities to enjoy goods that are particular to childhood: unstructured time, to be spent playing with other children,…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Childhood Interests, Child Rearing
National Scientific Council on the Developing Child, 2023
A wide range of conditions in the places where children live, grow, play, and learn can get "under the skin" and affect their developing brains and other biological systems. Rapidly advancing science around early childhood development provides increasingly clear evidence that, beginning before birth, these environmental conditions shape…
Descriptors: Place of Residence, Physical Environment, Geographic Location, Environmental Influences
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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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