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Showing 136 to 150 of 208 results Save | Export
Clark, Christina; Picton, Irene; Riad, Lara; Teravainen-Goff, Anne – National Literacy Trust, 2021
Research has shown that book ownership has a significant impact on life outcomes. In 2019, we found that that children who reported that they had a book of their own were not only more engaged with reading but also six times more likely to read above the level expected for their age than children who did not own a book (22% vs. 3.6%). We included…
Descriptors: Books, Ownership, Socioeconomic Status, Reading Attitudes
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Michele Capurso; Federico Bianchi di Castelbianco; Magda Di Renzo – Continuity in Education, 2021
Pediatric hospitalization is a common experience that may increase children's sense of isolation and impinge on their social-emotional wellbeing. Educators and medical practitioners could minimize these negative effects of hospitalization if they were able to listen to the voices of the children and, therefore, better meet their needs. This…
Descriptors: Hospitalized Children, Children, Early Adolescents, Childrens Attitudes
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Durrleman, Stephanie; Delage, Hélène – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2020
Purpose: Children with developmental language disorder (DLD) experience difficulties with an important Theory of Mind milestone, namely, false belief (FB) reasoning. Their FB success relates to mastery of a linguistic structure that is also challenging for them, namely, sentential complements (e.g., "Claire says/thinks [that Santa Claus…
Descriptors: Developmental Disabilities, Language Impairments, Theory of Mind, Misconceptions
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Vaucheret Paz, E.; Martino, M.; Hyland, M.; Corletto, M.; Puga, C.; Peralta, M.; Deltetto, N.; Kuhlmann, T.; Cavalié, D.; Leist, M.; Duarte, B.; Lascombes, I. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2020
People punish transgressors with different intensity depending if they are members of their group or not. We explore this in a cross-sectional analytical study with paired samples in children with developmental disorders who watched two videos and expressed their opinion. In Video-1, a football-player from the participant's country scores a goal…
Descriptors: Children, Neurological Impairments, Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders
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Perry, Nicole B.; Dollar, Jessica M.; Calkins, Susan D.; Keane, Susan P.; Shanahan, Lilly – Developmental Psychology, 2020
A fundamental question in developmental science is how parental emotion socialization processes are associated with children's subsequent adaptation. Few extant studies have examined this question across multiple developmental periods and levels of analysis. Here, we tested whether mothers' supportive and nonsupportive reactions to their…
Descriptors: Mothers, Socialization, Emotional Response, Self Control
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Theobald, Maryanne; Busch, Gillian; Danby, Susan – Global Studies of Childhood, 2018
Investigating children's pop cultures that rely on myth-making provide understandings about how children are active agents in the socialization into cultural and moral practices in their everyday lives. An annual visit to Santa Claus is important in children's pop culture in the Western world, however, the social practices associated with the…
Descriptors: Children, Socialization, Popular Culture, Cultural Context
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Mutch, Carol; Romero, Noah – Waikato Journal of Education, 2022
Towards the end of the first COVID-19 lockdown in early 2020, in Aotearoa New Zealand, the authors conducted a small-scale study to gain insight into children's responses to the pandemic restrictions. As it was not possible to interview children ourselves, we recruited parents to read a set of digital stories about a toy bear in lockdown to their…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Young Children, Children, Family (Sociological Unit)
Clark, Christina; Picton, Irene – National Literacy Trust, 2021
The National Literacy Trust's research during the first national lockdown in spring 2020 showed that more children and young people said that they enjoyed reading and more read more often during lockdown compared with before the pandemic. Children and young people's comments suggested that this was because they suddenly had time to (re)engage with…
Descriptors: Children, Adolescents, Reading Motivation, Learner Engagement
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Canosa, Antonia; Graham, Anne; Wilson, Erica – Environmental Education Research, 2020
This paper explores how the socio-cultural milieu of a community may foster a sense of environmental stewardship among children and young people. Ethnographic fieldwork, carried out in a popular tourist destination in Australia, revealed that the overt impacts of tourism activity such as littering provoke negative feelings among children and young…
Descriptors: Tourism, Early Experience, Children, Adolescents
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Amigó, María Florencia; Bilous, Rebecca; Rawlings-Sanaei, Felicity – Global Studies of Childhood, 2022
This article delves into the controversies of student volunteers working around children in developing world contexts, by proposing a model where the organisations that send and those that receive volunteers can collaborate to ensure volunteers' purposeful involvement. The article is based on the results of a collaborative initiative between an…
Descriptors: Volunteers, Volunteer Training, Developing Nations, Nongovernmental Organizations
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Jones, Siân E.; Dalnoki, Laura; Kaliff, Alicia; Muir, William; Uusitalo, Kiia; Uytman, Clare – Psychology of Education Review, 2020
Previous research indicates that imagining contact with someone who is an immigrant can reduce prejudice and promote positive friendship intentions. Much less is known about the optimal ways of effecting imagined contact. The reported research used an experimental design, where the status of a target-child toy puppet (immigrant versus refugee…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Refugees, Peer Relationship, Friendship
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Moyer-Packenham, Patricia; Ashby, M. Jill; Lister, Kristy; Roxburgh, Allison; Kozlowski, Joseph S. – Journal of Computers in Mathematics and Science Teaching, 2020
This study examined children's learning when they played 12 digital math games to understand how design features promoted children's awareness of the affordances in the games, and how this contributed to their learning. Elementary-aged children (N=193) played three digital math games during 60-minute interviews. We collected quantitative (pre-post…
Descriptors: Affordances, Game Based Learning, Mathematics Instruction, Elementary School Students
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Carone, Nicola; Barone, Lavinia; Lingiardi, Vittorio; Baiocco, Roberto; Brodzinsky, David – Developmental Psychology, 2021
Thirty-one children of gay single fathers and 28 children of heterosexual single fathers, all born through surrogacy, were compared with 31 children of gay partnered fathers through surrogacy and 30 children of heterosexual partnered fathers through in-vitro fertilization on their perceptions of self-worth and their father- and caregiver-reported…
Descriptors: Homosexuality, Fathers, Children, Pregnancy
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Berger, Nathan; Holmes, Kathryn; Gore, Jennifer M.; Archer, Jennifer – Australian Educational Researcher, 2020
Young people often are asked what they want to be when they grow up. How do their aspirations change as students move through childhood and adolescence? To investigate the formation of career aspirations, we analysed 6308 questionnaires from 4213 students aged 8 to 18 years arranged in an accelerated longitudinal design. Using a person-centred…
Descriptors: Occupational Aspiration, Childrens Attitudes, Adolescent Attitudes, Children
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Darracott, Charles R.; Darracott, Shirley H.; Harris, Paulette P. – Reading Improvement, 2019
Evidence is growing that physical activity can impact cognitive functioning. This study examined the associations between physical activity, sedentary behavior and attitude toward physical activity on measures of literacy. Community literacy center participants (n = 20, mean age = 9.5 yrs.) wore accelerometers for three days and completed the…
Descriptors: Physical Activities, Physical Activity Level, Literacy, Children
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