4 results on '"Abel, Yolanda"'
Search Results
2. Young, disadvantaged fathers’ involvement with their infants: an ecological perspective.
- Author
-
Gavin, Loretta E., Black, Maureen M., Minor, Sherman, Abel, Yolanda, Papas, Mia A., and Bentley, Margaret E.
- Abstract
Purpose: To investigate fathers’ involvement with their children using an ecological model, multiple respondents, and a comprehensive definition of fathers’ involvement. The study’s primary objectives were: (a) to describe the characteristics of fathers whose infants are born to low-income, urban, African-American adolescent mothers; (b) to describe the ways in which fathers are involved with their children; and (c) to identify factors associated with fathers’ involvement.Methods: A total of 181 first-time mothers (aged <18 years) living in three-generation households (infant, mother, and grandmother) were recruited from three urban hospitals shortly after delivery and invited to participate in a longitudinal study of parenting. Mothers provided the name of their infant’s father; 109 (60%) of the fathers also agreed to participate. Baseline interviews of mothers, fathers, and grandmothers addressed demographic characteristics, relationships, and the father’s involvement with his child.Results: Three multivariate regression models were used to identify factors associated with paternal involvement, explaining 35% to 51% of the variability in father involvement. Regardless of the respondent (mother, father, or grandmother), paternal involvement was predicted most strongly by the quality of the parents’ romantic relationship. The father’s employment status, the maternal grandmother’s education, and the father’s relationship with the baby’s maternal grandmother were also associated with paternal involvement.Conclusions: The study confirmed the value of an ecological perspective that uses multiple informants and a comprehensive definition of father involvement that includes multiple role functions. Efforts to increase paternal involvement should help young parents separate the father’s relationship with their child from the romantic relationship between the mother and father, address the roles played by maternal grandmothers, and assist fathers to complete their education, and obtain and keep jobs. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Exploring the Use of Escribo Play Mobile Learning Games to Foster Early Mathematics for Low-Income First-Grade Children.
- Author
-
Amorim, Americo N., Jeon, Lieny, Abel, Yolanda, Pape, Stephen, Albuquerque, Emilia X.S., Soares, Monique, Silva, Vanessa C., Aguiar, Danilo, Oliveira Neto, José R., Costin, Claudia, Rodrigues, Rodrigo L., Leon, Mariana, de Paula, Carla A., Lopes, Jefferson, Silva, Maxsuel S., do Nascimento, Maria V., Patricio, Gabriella A., da Silva, Vinícius F., and Florentino, Raiane
- Subjects
- *
MOBILE learning , *MOBILE games , *EDUCATIONAL games , *POOR children , *UBIQUINONES , *GEOMETRIC shapes , *MATHEMATICS - Abstract
Mobile games can foster the early mathematics skills of children in poverty at home. This randomized controlled trial examines the efficacy of Escribo Play, an evidence-based, game-enhanced early mathematics program with an initial pool of 2980 first-grade students from 267 classrooms in 132 schools located in Brazil. The intervention reached 47% of the children who installed and used the application. Students from 56 classrooms (20%) did not use the application. The intervention retained 51% of those who installed the application. Children of the experimental group who played Escribo Play advanced 2.27 times more than the increase of the control group for number identification, 2.78 times more in count-sequence, 1.73 times more in geometric shape, and 1.41 times more in spatial sense. The overall reduction in disparities between participants from pretest to posttest of the experimental group was 9.1 times higher than the control group, indicating that the intervention reduced learning inequality for those that played the games. The higher gains observed among those children who used Escribo Play may be attributed to its interactive nature, employing evidence-based instructional strategies with engaging and interactive content (i.e., animation and games). The cost per pupil is much lower than reported in 90% of other educational interventions. The application is easy to scale and provides learning gains for first-grade students. • The intervention retained 51% of the children. • Students who played advanced 2.27 times more in number identification. • They advanced 2.78x more in count-sequence and 1.73x more in geometric shape. • On average the children that played advanced twice more than the others. • Learning disparities were reduced 9.1 times more among the children that played. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Escribo play learning games can foster early reading and writing for low-income kindergarten children.
- Author
-
Amorim, Americo N., Jeon, Lieny, Abel, Yolanda, Albuquerque, Emilia X.S., Soares, Monique, Silva, Vanessa C., and Oliveira Neto, José R.
- Subjects
- *
KINDERGARTEN children , *EDUCATIONAL games , *POOR children , *GROUP reading , *PHONOLOGICAL awareness , *VIRTUAL work teams , *MOBILE games - Abstract
Can mobile games foster the early literacy skills of children in poverty? This pioneering study examines the barriers faced to implement an evidence-based, game-enhanced educational phonological and phonemic awareness program in 12 public schools serving students in poverty in a developing country. The deployment team adequately mitigated barriers such as the lack of proper information and communication technologies and school staff shortages. School interruptions due to sports events, three strikes, and rain that flooded the streets where children in poverty lived challenged the implementation of the intervention. In addition to discussing barriers we faced in the implementation, we also examined the mobile-based intervention's efficacy on 351 kindergarten students' word reading and writing skills. The experimental group children grew 3.63 times more than the control group in reading (d = 0.67) and 2.78 times more in writing (d = 0.36). Compared to 495 high-quality interventions, the Escribo Play effect size ranked above 90% of them. Its per-pupil cost is equivalent to one percent of the average educational intervention cost. Compared with 104 reading interventions conducted in kindergarten, the Escribo Play effect size was 3.35 times stronger than the reading intervention benchmark. • ICT and staffing issues of schools serving children in poverty were mitigated. • School closures due to strikes, floods and sports events harmed the delivery. • Children advanced 3.63 times more in reading and 2.78 times more in writing. • The effect of the games was 3.35 times stronger than 104 reading interventions. • Mobile-based reading instruction was 2.79 times more effective than computer-based. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.