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Showing 1 to 15 of 19 results Save | Export
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Kausik, Neel Harit; Hussain, Dilwar – Child Care in Practice, 2020
This paper presents a conceptual framework to understand the Nurtured Heart Approach (NHA) through the perspective of Self-Determination Theory (SDT). The Nurtured Heart Approach and the Self-Determination Theory are discussed and the parallels are drawn between the two, to provide a theoretical foundation to NHA and support for its effectiveness,…
Descriptors: Self Determination, Models, Intervention, Behavior Problems
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Andrews, Ellen – Educational and Developmental Psychologist, 2019
The intensive Circle of Security intervention is an attachment-based program that utilises video feedback to support parents to understand and respond to their children's attachment needs. The original group format was developed into an individual protocol for flexible delivery and broad dissemination. This protocol, described elsewhere, has been…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Video Technology, Feedback (Response), Parent Child Relationship
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Sommerfeld, Bailey; Chu, Tsz Lun – Strategies: A Journal for Physical and Sport Educators, 2020
Individuals including youth athletes have three basic psychological needs--autonomy, competence, and relatedness--outlined by self-determination theory. In sport, key social agents such as coaches and parents help satisfy these needs. Coaches, as well as fathers and mothers, can independently and interactively satisfy youth athletes' basic needs…
Descriptors: Athletic Coaches, Athletics, Athletes, Adolescents
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Harrison, Judy; Vannest, Kimberly J. – Preventing School Failure, 2008
With the large number of National Guard members and reservists being deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan, public educators find themselves endeavoring to support the emotional and academic needs of military children and their families. Military children may exhibit behavioral and emotional difficulties during these deployments. Educator awareness of…
Descriptors: Military Personnel, Parent Child Relationship, Student Needs, Individual Needs
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Helwig, Charles C. – Cognitive Development, 2006
It is argued here that autonomy entails universal psychological needs pertaining to agency and identity formation, expressed in different ways over different developmental periods. As children develop skills and abilities related to psychological needs for self-expression and competence, they will claim areas related to the exercise of these…
Descriptors: Psychological Needs, Freedom, Personal Autonomy, Psychology
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Rohner, Ronald P. – American Psychologist, 2004
This article reviews theory, methods, and evidence supporting the concept of a relational diagnosis here called the parental acceptance-rejection syndrome. This syndrome is composed of 2 complementary sets of factors. First, 4 classes of behaviors appear universally to convey the symbolic message that "my parent (or other attachment…
Descriptors: Rejection (Psychology), Emotional Adjustment, Parent Child Relationship, Personality Traits
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Elkind, David – NASSP Bulletin, 1988
Refutes sociological and anthropological theories about the generation gap held by Kingsley Davis, Margaret Mead, and Ruth Benedict. Argues for a psychological interpretation of intergenerational conflict. The latter is not a product of adult rigidity, but a natural consequence of adult generational responsibility toward youth. (MLH)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Anthropology, Elementary Secondary Education, Generation Gap
Johnston, Janet R.; Girdner, Linda K. – 2001
Parental abduction encompasses a broad array of illegal behaviors that involves one parent taking, detaining, concealing, or enticing away his or her child from the parent having custodial access. When the abducted parent intends to permanently alter custodial access by hiding the child or removing the child to another locale, the effects on the…
Descriptors: Child Custody, Child Welfare, Children, Family Problems
Kastor, Elizabeth – Schools in the Middle, 1993
With eighth-grader in White House, America is in for four years of voyeuristically observed adolescence. As Chelsea Clinton and millions of other 12 year olds know, junior high is where real psychological action is. Middle school is cruel, self-conscious culture, replete with rumors, complicated dress codes, and popularity-driven status hierarchy.…
Descriptors: Females, Grade 8, Intermediate Grades, Middle Schools
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Bragan, Ken – Journal of the American College Health Association, 1980
Separation conflicts of adolescents and the use of time-limited psychotherapy with the specific aim of promoting self-differentiation and autonomy are discussed. (JMF)
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Adolescents, Attachment Behavior, Intervention
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McKay, Mary McKernan; And Others – Groupwork, 1996
Describes a theoretically and empirically based groupwork approach designed to meet the unique needs of high-risk, inner- city parents and thereby provide effective mental health services. Provides a summary of the clinical issues and needs identified by group members, and recommendations for the development of innovative approaches to serve urban…
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Disadvantaged, Empowerment, Group Dynamics
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Sack, William H. – Journal of Medical Education, 1982
A method of informally interviewing parents of children who have died or are seriously ill--before a small group of medical students in pediatric rotations--helps to sensitize students to parent attitudes, needs, and grief patterns, and gives a longitudinal perspective of the physician's role and the disease process. (MSE)
Descriptors: Diseases, Higher Education, Interviews, Medical Education
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Allen, Joseph P.; McElhaney, Kathleen Boykin; Kuperminc, Gabriel P.; Jodl, Kathleen M. – Child Development, 2004
This study examined both continuity and familial, intrapsychic, and environmental predictors of change in adolescent attachment security across a 2-year period from middle to late adolescence. Assessments included the Adult Attachment Interview, observed mother-adolescent interactions, test-based data, and adolescent self-reports obtained from an…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Poverty, Depression (Psychology), Attachment Behavior
Meiselman, Karin C. – 1985
In late adolescence and early adulthood, an ideally developing woman learns to cope with the world outside her family of origin and acquires a sense of identity that is stable and largely positive. Individuals with severe early trauma may have difficulty completing adolescence. Incest is one childhood trauma that can either be mastered in late…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Adolescents, Females, Incest
Kiernan, Bette Unger; And Others – 1980
This article describes the Child Development and Parenting Program (CDP), a preventative child abuse program that assists single women who are pregnant or have preschool children to cope constructively with the problems of single parenting. The short-term goals of the program, i.e., providing education in child development and parenting skills and…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Child Development, Child Neglect, Fatherless Family
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