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Ioanna Bakopoulou – Education 3-13, 2024
The transition to school is a critical period for children and families. Successful transition predicts later school achievement and socio-emotional outcomes with sustained long-term benefits. Educational disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic meant that support for the transition of children from nursery to school was limited. The study…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, COVID-19, Pandemics, Student Adjustment
Nathaniel A. Sowa; Katie Gaffney; Amanda Sanders; Caroline Murrell – Journal of School Health, 2024
Background: Telehealth utilization exploded during the COVID-19 pandemic, including within school-based health programs. School-based tele-behavioral health can help programs overcome barriers of access to care, but the current state and effectiveness of such programs are unknown. Methods: A scoping literature review was conducted. Studies were…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Young Children, Adolescents, School Health Services
Marta Bialecka; Arkadiusz Gut; Malgorzata Stepien-Nycz; Krystian Macheta; Jakub Janczura – Infant and Child Development, 2024
Previous research on children's knowledge about the mind has primarily focused on their comprehension of false beliefs, leaving the conceptualization of thoughts and thinking less explored. To address this gap, we developed a new assessment tool, the interview about the mind (IaM), to assess children's understanding of the mind. Two studies…
Descriptors: Childrens Attitudes, Theory of Mind, Cognitive Development, Beliefs
Narrative Language Production: Examining How Young Spanish-English Learners Use the English Language
Trinh N. Le – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The study examined 37 language samples of 37 Spanish-English kindergartners and first graders from a larger sample of the Multitudes Project in California. The focus was on investigating how these young English language learners produced narratives in English, what language elements they included, and whether these elements correlated or related…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Kindergarten, Grade 1, Young Children
Jaleesa Steward – Young Exceptional Children, 2024
The separation between young children with disabilities and their peers is not merely physical but represents a deeper gap in opportunity, engagement, and understanding. True equity in inclusive education hinges on viewing disability not as an inherent limitation, but as a gap between personal capacity and the demands of the educational context --…
Descriptors: Young Children, Disabilities, Inclusion, Teacher Role
Kostas A. Fanti; Chara A. Demetriou; Maria Petridou; Ioannis Mavrommatis; Maria Sikki; Eva Kimonis – European Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2024
Recognizing and appropriately responding to others' emotional expressions is important for children's moral and social development. Impairments in the emotion recognition of individuals high on Callous-Unemotional (CU) traits are thought to explain their reduced empathic responding, interpersonal problems, and persistent antisocial behaviour. The…
Descriptors: Prosocial Behavior, Emotional Response, Psychological Patterns, Intervention
Adriana Luna; Ilene Schwartz – Young Exceptional Children, 2024
Families play a central role in EI services for young children with disabilities (Division for Early Childhood [DEC], 2014). Family coaching in early childhood is a core piece to providing services for young children with disabilities and their families (Rush & Shelden, 2011). It is an identified best practice method of service delivery that…
Descriptors: Family Role, Early Intervention, Young Children, Disabilities
Tracy Gebhart; Jing Tang; Rebecca Madill – Administration for Children & Families, 2024
This snapshot provides updated findings about parents' child care and early education (CCEE) search and decision-making using the 2019 National Survey of Early Care and Education (NSECE) Household (HH) Survey. We present findings on (1) the prevalence of CCEE searches among household respondents, usually parents, that reported on children under…
Descriptors: Child Care, Early Childhood Education, National Surveys, Parents
Deborah Bergman Deitcher; Margarita Martín Martín; Dorit Aram – Early Education and Development, 2024
Research Findings: Cultural differences emerge in the home literacy environment and the nature of shared book-reading (SBR), yet the impact of culture on parents' book selection remains unexplored, despite the centrality of the book in SBR. Parents in Spain (n = 132) and Israel (n = 123), two Western countries with different cultural patterns,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cultural Differences, Family Environment, Reading Material Selection
Ankita Bhattashali – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Refugee children comprise half of the total world refugee population and face numerous complex challenges (UNHCR, 2021). The purpose of this study was to explore equitable family-professional partnerships between refugee families of children with disabilities or considered at-risk (i.e., who has/had been referred to special education evaluation or…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Teachers, Young Children, Refugees, Parent Teacher Cooperation
Susan Sonnenschein; Michele Stites; Hatice Gursoy; Besjane Krasniki – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2024
This study addresses three overarching issues using an online survey. (1) What do parents do with their children to facilitate their early mathematics and literacy learning? What are their beliefs and attitudes about academic socialization, for both mathematics and literacy, and what opportunities do these parents provide their children? (2) Does…
Descriptors: Parent Participation, Parents as Teachers, Family Environment, Parent Child Relationship
Ban Haidar; Hedda Meadan – Journal of Developmental and Physical Disabilities, 2024
This study examined caregivers' lived experiences during the initial weeks of stay-at-home mandates within the unique socio-cultural and healthcare context of the United States. To learn about the experiences of caregivers during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, we conducted seventeen semi-structured interviews with caregivers of young…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Experience, Young Children
Amoako, Wendy Kwakye; Stemberger, Joseph Paul – Journal of Child Language, 2021
This paper addresses how input variability in the adult phonological system is mastered in the output of young children in Akan, a Kwa language spoken in Ghana, involving variability between labio-palatalized consonants and front rounded vowels. The high-frequency variant involves a complex consonant which is expected to be mastered late, while…
Descriptors: African Languages, Foreign Countries, Adults, Phonology
Xu, Ying; Yau, Joanna C.; Reich, Stephanie M. – Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 2021
Young children are introduced to mobile technology at an early age, with many using touchscreens daily. One appeal of touchscreen technology is that it seems to be intuitive for very young children. As a result, many children's e-books are designed for tablets rather than for e-readers or computers. E-books often contain hotspots--interactive…
Descriptors: Books, Electronic Publishing, Learner Engagement, Interaction
Jimenez-Gomez, Corina; Haggerty, Katherine; Topçuoglu, Basak – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2021
Activity schedules consist of a series of visual discriminative stimuli, arranged in booklets or binders, which function as prompts for appropriate behavior. Although activity schedules are useful, their typical presentation in binders can be cumbersome and stigmatizing, placing additional barriers for independence and inclusion. The purpose of…
Descriptors: Measurement Equipment, Scheduling, Daily Living Skills, Prompting