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Showing 1 to 15 of 42 results Save | Export
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Fynn, Gabrielle; Porter, Melanie; Pellicano, Elizabeth – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2023
Background: Children with intellectual disability are at greater risk of developing anxiety than the general population. Limited research has examined the challenges associated with recognising and responding to anxiety in children with intellectual disability, and its perceived impact. Aim: This study aimed to explore anxiety in children with…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disability, Preadolescents, Adolescents, Anxiety
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Nur Elibol-Pekaslan; Buse Gönül; Hatice Isik; Didem Türe; Fatma Betul Abut; Fatma Seyma Kalkan-Inan; Sibel Kazak Berument; Aysun Dogan; Deniz Tahiroglu; Basak Sahin-Acar – Applied Developmental Science, 2024
Emotion regulation is one of the important skills helping children and parents to deal with stressful conditions within the family context during the pandemic. We aimed to investigate whether mothers' emotion regulation strategies before COVID-19 and their COVID-19-related anxiety would predict children's sadness regulation during the pandemic…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, COVID-19, Pandemics, Anxiety
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Qianqian Zhang-Wu – Multilingua: Journal of Cross-Cultural and Interlanguage Communication, 2024
In this study I indicate that lengthened family interaction time during pandemic lockdowns can afford children significantly more exposure and opportunities to enhance their heritage language, but that this does not diminish the constant dilemma between striving to balance English acquisition and heritage language maintenance. Using…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Native Language, Language Maintenance
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Brookman, Ruth; Kalashnikova, Marina; Conti, Janet; Xu Rattanasone, Nan; Grant, Kerry-Ann; Demuth, Katherine; Burnham, Denis – Child Development, 2020
This longitudinal study investigated the effects of maternal emotional health concerns, on infants' home language environment, vocalization quantity, and expressive language skills. Mothers and their infants (at 6 and 12 months; 21 mothers with depression and or anxiety and 21 controls) provided day-long home-language recordings. Compared with…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Depression (Psychology), Mothers, Mental Health
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Clifford, Brandon Neil; Stockdale, Laura A.; Coyne, Sarah M.; Rainey, Vanessa; Benitez, Viridiana L. – Journal of Child Language, 2021
Maternal depression and anxiety are potential risk factors to children's language environments and development. Though existing work has examined relations between these constructs, further work is needed accounting for both depression and anxiety and using more direct measures of the home language environment and children's language development.…
Descriptors: Mothers, Parent Child Relationship, Mental Health, Expressive Language
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Natsuaki, Misaki N.; Neiderhiser, Jenae M.; Harold, Gordon T.; Shaw, Daniel S.; Reiss, David; Leve, Leslie D. – Developmental Psychology, 2019
A plethora of studies with parents and children who are biologically related has shown that the family environment plays an important role in child development. However, scientists have long known that a rigorous examination of environmental effects requires research designs that go beyond studies of genetically linked family members. Harnessing…
Descriptors: Family Environment, Child Development, Environmental Influences, Siblings
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Berman, Ilana S.; Petretric, Patricia; Bridges, Ana J. – Journal of American College Health, 2021
Child maltreatment is associated with negative mental health outcomes including depression, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and anxiety. Maltreatment experiences can result in negative beliefs about safety and wellbeing, which may maintain negative mental health symptoms. Household dysfunction (eg, impaired caregiver) is considered less…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Mental Health, Depression (Psychology)
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Akmese, Pelin Pistav; Kayhan, Nilay – Universal Journal of Educational Research, 2016
Communication in the family environment is highly important for every child although their cognitive, emotional, social and language development characteristics differ. The children are able to communicate with the adults who take the most or the caregivers in the mother's role in terms of development in the family environment in most cultures.…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Intellectual Disability, Children, Mothers
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Schneider, William; Waldfogel, Jane; Brooks-Gunn, Jeanne – Developmental Psychology, 2015
This article examines associations between the Great Recession and 4 aspects of 9-year olds' behavior--aggression (externalizing), anxiety/depression (internalizing), alcohol and drug use, and vandalism-using the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study, a longitudinal birth cohort drawn from 20 U.S. cities (21% White, 50% Black, 26% Hispanic,…
Descriptors: Child Behavior, Behavior Problems, Aggression, Anxiety
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Hudson, Jennifer L.; Dodd, Helen F.; Bovopoulos, Nataly – Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 2011
This research examines the relationship between behavioural inhibition (BI), family environment (overinvolved and negative parenting, parental anxiety and parent-child attachment) and anxiety in a sample of 202 preschool children. Participants were aged between 3 years 2 months and 4 years 5 months, 101 were male. A thorough methodology was used…
Descriptors: Models, Child Rearing, Preschool Children, Risk
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Mennen, Ferol E.; Trickett, Penelope K. – Family Relations, 2011
This study evaluated parenting attitudes, family environments, depression, and anxiety in a sample of primarily minority urban mothers to better understand maltreating mothers (n = 83), who retain custody of their children and how they are similar to and different from foster mothers (n = 50), kin caregivers (n = 52) of maltreated children, and…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Mothers, Caregivers, Child Rearing
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Lereya, Suzet Tanya; Wolke, Dieter – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2013
Background: Prenatal stress has been shown to predict persistent behavioural abnormalities in offspring. Unknown is whether prenatal stress makes children more vulnerable to peer victimisation. Methods: The current study is based on the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, a prospective community-based study. Family adversity, maternal…
Descriptors: Stress Variables, Prenatal Influences, Peer Relationship, Victims
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Arteche, Adriane; Murray, Lynne – Journal of Child and Family Studies, 2011
Children's perceptions of family relationship are related to their later emotional and social adjustment. This is of particular relevance in the context of family stressors such as maternal affective disorder. This study investigated the effects of maternal postnatal depression and anxiety on children's family representations. In our sample of…
Descriptors: Mothers, Conflict, Psychopathology, Parent Child Relationship
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Hudson, Jennifer L.; Dodd, Helen F.; Lyneham, Heidi J.; Bovopoulous, Nataly – Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2011
Objective: Behavioral inhibition (BI) in early childhood is associated with increased risk for anxiety. The present research examines BI alongside family environment factors, specifically maternal negativity and overinvolvement, maternal anxiety, and mother-child attachment, with a view to providing a broader understanding of the development of…
Descriptors: Anxiety Disorders, Child Rearing, Inhibition, Path Analysis
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McFarlane, Elizabeth; Burrell, Lori; Fuddy, Loretta; Tandon, Darius; Derauf, D. Christian; Leaf, Philip; Duggan, Anne – Journal of Community Psychology, 2010
Family engagement in home visiting (HV) is challenging. This study related attachment security of home visitors (n=48) and mothers (n=328) to family engagement in an HV program to prevent child maltreatment. Attachment security was assessed by using the Attachment Style Questionnaire to measure attachment anxiety and attachment avoidance. Family…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Mental Health, Home Visits, Attachment Behavior
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