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Panton, Donald – ProQuest LLC, 2023
The purpose of this quantitative study was to examine the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on students from disadvantaged communities in South Florida who were significantly affected by the sudden switch to online learning resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic. This study explored the academic year Spring 2020 through Spring 2021. This study…
Descriptors: African American Students, Socioeconomic Status, Socioeconomic Influences, Disadvantaged Environment
Brunner, Eric J.; Schwegman, David; Vincent, Jeffrey M. – Education Finance and Policy, 2023
We examine how funding for public school facilities varies with school district property wealth and household income. Using data on school facility (i.e., capital) funding in California from fiscal years 1986-87 to 2015-16, we find that funding for school construction and modernization varies widely across districts. Disparities in funding are…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Educational Facilities, Educational Finance, Fiscal Capacity
Lim, Sijeong; Moon, Chungshik; Kim, Youngwan – Youth & Society, 2023
The COVID-19 pandemic has had a negative effect on children's mental health worldwide. Existing studies suggest that children with greater levels of hope are more likely to be resilient in the face of disaster. While social support at the family and community level is proposed as an important factor in sustaining and fostering hope, the children…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Nongovernmental Organizations, Mental Health
Andrew J. Ross; Elizabeth D. Handley; Sheree L. Toth; Dante Cicchetti – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly: Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2023
Despite findings that developmental timing of maltreatment is a critical factor in predicting subsequent outcomes, children's developmental stage is understudied in maltreatment research. Moreover, childhood maltreatment is associated with the development of maladaptive peer relationships and psychopathology, with social cognition identified as a…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Child Development, Peer Relationship, Psychopathology
Rachel Madison – ProQuest LLC, 2023
The problem of the study involved the pandemic exasperating the learning conditions for students of economic disadvantage and teacher turnover rates. Before the pandemic, educators of students of economic disadvantage worked in conditions that did not offer them the same experiences as educators in schools with fewer low-socioeconomic status.…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Elementary School Teachers, Economically Disadvantaged
Korman, Hailly T. N. – State Education Standard, 2021
An estimated five million young people were experiencing disruptions to their education through experiences like a placement in foster care, an experience with homelessness, or incarceration. Despite these students' different circumstances, the root causes of their educational challenges are consistent: interrupted learning, barriers to…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Disadvantaged Youth, Student Needs, Educational Quality
Vural, Derya; Piskin, Nur Banu; Durmusoglu, Mine Canan – International Journal of Curriculum and Instructional Studies, 2021
This research study was conducted in order to determine the problems that preschool teachers experience in the inclusive education processes and to define the educational practices of teachers for students who benefit from inclusive education. The study was designed as qualitative research and purposeful sampling was used. In the study,…
Descriptors: Preschool Teachers, Inclusion, Disadvantaged Youth, Foreign Countries
Massó-Guijarro, Belén; Pérez-García, Purificación; Cruz-González, Cristina – Educational Research, 2021
Background: Applied Theatre (AT) is a relatively recently-created interdisciplinary field that includes investigation of the social and educational uses of its practices. Since its emergence as a discipline in the 1990s, research has proliferated. However, to better understand the breadth and depth of AT's social and educational applications,…
Descriptors: Theater Arts, Interdisciplinary Approach, Intervention, Disadvantaged Youth
García, Jorge Luis; Heckman, James J.; Ronda, Victor – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2021
This paper demonstrates multiple beneficial impacts of a program promoting intergenerational mobility for disadvantaged African-American children and their children. The program improves outcomes of the first-generation treatment group across the life cycle, which translates into better family environments for the second generation leading to…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Program Effectiveness, Skill Development, Social Mobility
Tout, Kathryn; Halle, Tamara; Douglass, Anne; Cleveland, Jennifer; Doyle, Stephanie; Agosti, Jen; Bamdad, Tiffany; Nagle, Kerensa – Administration for Children & Families, 2021
Young children and their families benefit from early care and education (ECE) settings that implement high-quality practices that support children's well-being, health, and safety. Activities to support quality are a focal point of federal and state investments, including more than $1 billion of the Child Care and Development Fund and nearly $240…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Educational Quality, Quality Assurance, Sustainability
Christopher R. Gonzales; Alexis Merculief; Megan M. McClelland; Simona Ghetti – Grantee Submission, 2021
Children's ability to monitor subjective feelings of uncertainty (i.e., engage in uncertainty monitoring) is a central metacognitive skill. The study examines the development of uncertainty monitoring as well as its relations with vocabulary and executive function development in children (N = 137, 52% female) from predominately White and…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Metacognition, Executive Function, Vocabulary
Laredo Clark, Thelma – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Exclusionary discipline like a Discipline Alternative Education Program (DAEP) has not decreased student discipline referrals. Instead, economically disadvantaged students are often disproportionally assigned exclusionary discipline consequences, and often the impact of these consequences are overlooked (Anderson & Ritter, 2017; Moore et al.,…
Descriptors: School Administration, Administrators, Administrator Attitudes, Disadvantaged Youth
Clavel, Jose G.; García Crespo, Francisco Javier; Sanz San Miguel, Luis – Asia Pacific Journal of Education, 2022
The Programme for International Student Assessment, carried out every three years by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development across a large number of countries and economies, have shown that socioeconomically disadvantaged students are almost three times more likely than advantaged students not to attain the baseline level of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Achievement Tests, Secondary School Students, International Assessment
Shakiyya Bland; Pamela Burdman; Melodie Baker – Just Equations, 2024
As states and districts seek to elevate learning and prepare more students for work in the digital future, they have not only a unique opportunity, but also an urgent imperative, to redesign high school math. This report examines an array of education policies that exert considerable influence on the math students learn and when they learn it,…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Mathematics Education, Secondary School Mathematics, High School Students
Stefanie Deluca; Nicholas W. Papageorge; Joseph L. Boselovic – RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 2024
This article examines heterogeneity in adverse events and conditions and how low-income African American young adults respond. Although nearly all individuals in the sample report at least one instance of adversity, the nature and frequency of adversity varies, as do the responses. Some individuals see their lives and plans derailed; others engage…
Descriptors: Low Income Groups, African Americans, Young Adults, Barriers