438 results on '"EXPERIENCE in children"'
Search Results
2. Feasibility and potential benefits of the Observe, Reflect, Improve Children's Learning (ORICL) tool: Perspectives of infant-toddler educators
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Elwick, Sheena, Wong, Sandie, Harrison, Linda, Williams, Kate E, McFarland, Laura, Dealtry, Lysa, and Janus, Magdalena
- Published
- 2023
3. The Bodily Roots of Experience in Psychotherapy
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Ruella Frank and Ruella Frank
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- Motor ability in infants, Experience in children, Parent and infant, Infants--Development
- Abstract
This book explores the significance of movement processes as they shape one's experience through life. With an introductory foreword by Michael Vincent Miller, it provides a comprehensive, practical understanding of how we lose the wonder and curiosity we move with as children, and how we can reclaim that. A new paradigm is presented in the making of experience through a radical and thorough investigation into the basics of animated life. The book utilizes a precise phenomenological language for those subverbal interactions that form the foundation of lived experience. The centrality of those interactions to the therapeutic encounter is set forth through richly detailed therapy vignettes. The building of experience is meticulously explored via the bridging of infant-parent dyads and the functional similarity of those dyads to the unfolding patient-therapist relationship. Readers learn to acknowledge routine inhibitions developed in early life, appreciate their former usefulness, and discover how to restore the lively flow of moving-feeling responses.This book is essential for all psychotherapists who wish to integrate the dynamics of movement into their work; educators who work with babies and young children; and all those wishing to understand better their psychophysical selves.
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- 2023
4. Early life stress and perceived social isolation influence how children use value information to guide behavior.
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Smith, Karen E. and Pollak, Seth D.
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STRESS in children , *SOCIAL isolation , *LIFE change events , *VALUE neutrality , *VALUES (Ethics) , *EXPERIENCE in children - Abstract
Learning the value of environmental signals and using that information to guide behavior is critical for survival. Stress in childhood may influence these processes, but how it does so is still unclear. This study examined how stressful event exposures and perceived social isolation affect the ability to learn value signals and use that information in 72 children (8–9 years; 29 girls; 65.3% White). Stressful event exposures and perceived social isolation did not influence how children learned value information. But, children with high stressful event exposures and perceived social isolation were worse at using that information. These data suggest alterations in how value information is used, rather than learned, may be one mechanism linking early experiences to later behaviors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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5. Different Types of Childhood Experience With Mothers and Caregiving Outcomes in Adulthood.
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Kong, Jooyoung, Martire, Lynn M., Tate, Ashley M., Bray, Bethany C., and Almeida, David M.
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EXPERIENCE in children ,MOTHER-child relationship ,ABUSED children ,MATERNAL love ,DISCIPLINE of children ,CAREGIVERS ,AGING parents - Abstract
Objective and Background: The current study examines the types of childhood experiences with mothers (i.e., maternal abuse, affection, discipline) among caregivers of aging mothers and investigates whether membership in specific latent classes, particularly maternal maltreatment, is associated with psychological functioning among caregivers. Method: Using data from the Midlife in the United States (MIDUS), we used the Bolck, Croon, and Hagenaars approach of latent class analysis to predict distal outcomes. Results: We identified four latent classes (prevalence rate noted): "Affectionate and authoritative" (65%), "affectionate and permissive" (11%), "emotionally abusive and neglectful" (8%), and "emotionally/physically abusive and authoritative" (16%). Caregivers in the "emotionally/physically abusive and authoritative" class endorsed high probabilities of both maternal affection and abuse and were most negatively affected across the three psychological functioning outcomes (i.e., self‐rated mental health, psychological distress, and psychological well‐being). Conclusion: In support of the life course perspective, our findings emphasized the importance of examining adult children caregivers' early life experiences with aging mothers and how those experiences can impact the psychological effects of caregiving. Implications: This study suggests specific practice implications; for example, assessment tools for evaluating caregiver burden should consider life course factors, such as caregivers' childhood experiences with aging parents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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6. The Human Experience : The Early Years
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Cedric Cullingford and Cedric Cullingford
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- Experience in children, Child psychology, Child development
- Abstract
First published in 1999, the focus of this ground-breaking study is on representing the mental world of the child with unprecedented clarity. Cedric Cullingford aims to show that this world, in its normal experience by children, is significantly unlike what we typically assume it to be, and significantly unlike anything exposed by the most prominent research programs. Querying common assumptions about children's thinking, Cullingford begins with an outline of children's understanding which emphasizes its range and complexity, along with an address of the mythology of children's intellectual incapacity and preparation for the approach to be taken in detailing children's construction of a sense of their world. The following four chapters combine to construct a description of how children approach their world, exploring theory of mind, the self, the family, the school and then the wider social and physical worlds. Cullingford achieves a vividness, immediacy and intensity not seen elsewhere, using the constant medium of the child's gaze and demonstrating that the youngest child is not simply responsive but is active and critical in interrogating the world.
- Published
- 2018
7. How children experience creative writing in the classroom
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Healey, Brett
- Published
- 2019
8. The Association Between Adverse Childhood Experiences and Child Telomere Length: Examining Self-Regulation as a Behavioral Mediator.
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Sosnowski, David W., Kliewer, Wendy, Valrie, Cecelia R., Winter, Marcia A., Serpell, Zewelanji, and Amstadter, Ananda B.
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ADVERSE childhood experiences , *TELOMERES , *EXPERIENCE in children , *SELF regulation , *SELF-control in children , *CHILD behavior , *CONTROL (Psychology) in children - Abstract
Childhood adversity is linked to shortened telomere length (TL), but behavioral indicators of telomere attrition remain unclear. This study examined the association between adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and child TL, and if ACEs were indirectly associated with TL through children's self-regulatory abilities (i.e., effortful control and self-control). Hypotheses were tested using national data from teachers, parents, and their children (N = 2,527; Mage = 9.35, SD = .36 years). More ACEs were uniquely associated with short TL, and low self-control mediated the association between more ACEs and short TL. While longitudinal studies are needed to strengthen claims of causation, this study identifies a pathway from ACEs to TL that should be explored further. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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9. Infection control practices in children during COVID-19 pandemic: Differences from adults.
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Devrim, İlker and Bayram, Nuri
- Abstract
• High rate of asymptomatic children may increase the spreading of the disease. • Healthcare workers in the pediatric hospitals are under great risk for exposure. • Infection control precautions play crucial role to prevent the transmissions to HCWs. • Personal protective equipment use is a very important strategy for protection of HCWs. Limited studies have been published on practices and management of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) in children. Despite the fact that COVID-19 rarely caused any severe disease in children, the asymptomatic children might be playing an important role for spreading COVID-19 in healthcare facilities. This review aimed at sharing our experience of how to handle patients with COVID-19 in a pediatric referral and tertiary care hospital to prevent the possible transmissions to the healthcare workers (HCWs). This review sought to identify infection control practices measures during COVID-19 pandemic comes from our daily practice combined with the most recent guidelines with the new experience and information. Prevention the transmission of COVID-19 to the HCWs, 4 primary themes should be taken into consideration; (1) ongoing education and importance of the organization of the healthcare facility, (2) proper clinical triage and isolation of the suspected or confirmed COVID-19 patients in the outpatient clinics and in the emergency departments, (3) necessity of the organization of the COVID-19 wards, and (4) utilization of personal protective equipment. Infection control precautions to prevent the possible transmissions to HCWs as well as the other patients and their caregivers from children with COVID-19 are very critical. If sufficient precautions are not taken, healthcare settings may serve as additional source of transmission and spread of COVID-19 in the society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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10. Researching the Neighborhood and Schooling Experiences of Black Male High School "Students Who Play Sports" in Atlanta and Chicago.
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ADEYEMO, ADEOYE O. and MORRIS, JEROME E.
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HIGH school athletes , *BLACK high school students , *HIGH school boys , *NEIGHBORHOODS , *EXPERIENCE in children - Abstract
Background/Context: The corpus of scholarship on Black male students who play sports focuses on students at the collegiate level, thus ignoring the regional, neighborhood, and K-12 educational backgrounds and experiences of these young people before some matriculate into a college or university. This omission suggests the need for more robust investigations that (a) focus on Black males during K-12 schooling, (b) place Black male students' experiences within the larger geographic (e.g., regions, neighborhoods and schools) and social and historical contexts in which they live and go to school, and thereby, (c) seek to understand how these contexts shape students' experiences and beliefs about race and the role of academics and athletics in their lives and future. Purpose/Objective/Research Question/Focus of Study: We investigated two research questions: (1) For Black male students who play high school sports, how do the social contexts shape their experiences and their beliefs about race and the role of academics and athletics in their lives and future? (2) And, what are the consequences of Black male students' experiences and beliefs for their academic and athletic outcomes? This investigation across geographically and economically contrasting cities, neighborhoods, and schools in the U.S. South (metro Atlanta, Georgia) and Midwest (Chicago, Illinois) offers empirical, theoretical, and practicerelated evidence about young Black males' experiences and beliefs about race, academics, and athletics, while providing a window into the complex social and cultural worlds in which they live, go to school, and play sports. Research Design: This article emanates from research studies that employed ethnographic research methods such as interviews and observations, while embedding the researchers within the communities where Black people resided. The research design used a cross-case analysis to investigate participants' experiences and beliefs. The constant comparative method allowed for the synthesizing of data collected from two different research sites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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11. Taking Care of Ourselves First.
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Terrell, Ann McClain
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COVID-19 pandemic ,EARLY childhood education ,EXPERIENCE in children ,CHILD psychology ,EARLY childhood teachers - Abstract
The article focuses on the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on early childhood education. Topics discussed include the way traumatic experiences affect children and how that plays out in early childhood classrooms and programs; the role teachers in fostering learning in children; and protection and nurturing of our youngest children.
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- 2020
12. Supporting Young Children after Crisis Events.
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Schonfeld, David J., Demaria, Thomas, and Kumar, Sairam A.
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EXPERIENCE in children ,CHILD psychology ,TEACHERS ,CHILD development ,MENTAL health - Abstract
The article focuses on provide insights into how young children understand both large and small-scale traumatic events, and how teachers can support young children after such a crisis. It mentions about the impact of event of children's health and their social and psychological functioning in adulthood. It also informs on addressing children's preexisting mental health, developmental levels, and baseline resiliency and coping skills.
- Published
- 2020
13. Exploring Autonomy and Relatedness in Church as Predictors of Children's Religiosity and Relationship with God.
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Ingersoll, Heather
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IMPETUS theory ,EXPERIENCE in children ,CHRISTIAN education ,AUTONOMY (Psychology) ,SUPERNATURAL beings - Abstract
Concerns about the shifting religious landscape for young people in the United States provides the impetus to expand research investigating children's experiences in Christian education. A significant number of children regularly attend Christian education in church and yet there is limited research investigating how those programs support children's faith. Guided by self-determination theory, this research investigates whether instructional practices can support children's religiosity and relationship with God. The present study specifically assessed whether children's perceived relatedness with adults and peers in church, and children's perceived autonomy in Sunday school, predicted children's religiosity and relationship with God. Two hierarchical multiple regressions were conducted to identify if the church variables were significant predictors of an identified relationship to God. Neither perceived relatedness in church nor perceived autonomy in Sunday school were significant predictors of identified religiosity. However, perceived relatedness in church did significantly predict relationship with God. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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14. Accelerating the Development of Second-Order False Belief Reasoning: A Training Study With Different Feedback Methods.
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Arslan, Burcu, Verbrugge, Rineke, Taatgen, Niels, and Hollebrandse, Bart
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BELIEF & doubt , *REASONING in children , *PSYCHOLOGICAL feedback , *EXPLANATION , *VERBAL ability in children , *SHORT-term memory in children , *EXPERIENCE in children - Abstract
One-hundred-six 5-year-olds' (Mage = 5;6; SD = 0.40) were trained with second-order false belief tasks in one of the following conditions: (a) feedback with explanation; (b) feedback without explanation; (c) no feedback; (d) active control. The results showed that there were significant improvements in children's scores from pretest to posttest in the three experimental conditions even when children's age, verbal abilities, or working memory scores were controlled for. The training effect was stable at a follow-up session 4 months after the pretest. Overall, our results suggest that 5-year-olds' failures in second-order false belief tasks are due to lack of experience and that they can be helped over the threshold by exposure to many stories involving second-order false belief reasoning, including why questions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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15. Asking Children to "Be Helpers" Can Backfire After Setbacks.
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Foster‐Hanson, Emily, Cimpian, Andrei, Leshin, Rachel A., Rhodes, Marjorie, and Foster-Hanson, Emily
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HELPING behavior , *PROSOCIAL behavior , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *BELIEF & doubt , *EXPERIENCE in children , *CHILD development , *CHILD behavior , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIAL skills - Abstract
Describing behaviors as reflecting categories (e.g., asking children to "be helpers") has been found to increase pro-social behavior. The present studies (N = 139, ages 4-5) tested whether such effects backfire if children experience setbacks while performing category-relevant actions. In Study 1, children were asked either to "be helpers" or "to help," and then pretended to complete a series of successful scenarios (e.g., pouring milk) and unsuccessful scenarios (e.g., spilling milk while trying to pour). After the unsuccessful trials, children asked to "be helpers" had more negative attitudes. In Study 2, asking children to "be helpers" impeded children's helping behavior after they experienced difficulties while trying to help. Implications for how category labels shape beliefs and behavior are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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16. Comparing measures of persuasion knowledge adapted for young children.
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Wang, Shasha and Mizerski, Dick
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PERSUASION (Psychology) ,SOCIAL marketing ,CONSUMER attitudes ,ADVERTISING & children ,SOCIAL perception in children ,KNOWLEDGE base ,EXPERIENCE in children - Abstract
Young children under 8 years old are viewed as especially vulnerable to marketing communications because they do not have sufficient knowledge about the purpose of persuasive advertising messages, also known as children's persuasion knowledge (CPK). However, a review of 25 studies that have tested CPK effects, on primarily older children, finds inconsistent or no support for CPK. The lack of support depends on the effect studied, and a measurement challenge because of young children's limited capabilities in reading and responding to questions from interviewers. Thirteen measures of CPK have been tested but not compared for CPK effects. These measures were simplified to nonverbal options for young children and tested on a sample of 4‐ to 7‐year‐old North East Chinese children (n = 233). These measures were each tested in relation to the children's age (positive), their skepticism toward advertising (positive), their disbelief of false claims in a TV commercial (TVC) (positive) and their affect toward the TVC (negative). Only two measures of CPK show any expected associated responses with "knowing the source" of advertisements the best measure. Perceived marketer intentions had no expected associations, nor did the age of the child. The implications of these findings are discussed in terms of theory, measurement, and applications for marketers and public policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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17. Music for life: A self-reflective study on childhood experiences formulating music education perspectives and philosophies
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Australian Society for Music Education National Conference (20th: 2015: Adelaide, SA) and Heyworth, John
- Published
- 2015
18. Shopping from a child's perspective: an anxiety-generating experience?
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de La Ville, Valérie-Inés and Nicol, Nathalie
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SHOPPING ,EXPERIENCE in children ,ANXIETY ,SOCIAL impact ,TOY stores ,SIBLINGS ,ZONE of proximal development - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to offer some insight into how siblings aged between 4 and 12, engaged in a collaborative drawing activity at home, recall the shopping trips they have experienced. Design/methodology/approach: Using a Vygotskian perspective, the data collection consisted of engaging 15 pairs of siblings in the production of a joint drawing of a shop of their choice. Drawing in pairs opens a Zone of Proximal Development (Vygotsky, 1978) where the younger child benefits from verbal guidance by the older one to achieve the common task. This situation enables the researcher to gain close access to children's knowledge about stores and to the words they use to describe their personal shopping experiences. Findings: This exploratory research reveals some constitutive elements of children's "shopscapes" (Nicol, 2014), i.e. the imaginary geographies they actively elaborate through their daily practices and experiences with regard to retail environments. In their communicative interactions when elaborating a joint drawing of the shop they have chosen, children demonstrate that they master a considerable body of knowledge about retail environments. Surprisingly, recalling their shopping practices sheds light on various anxiety-generating dimensions. Research limitations/implications: The data collection is based on a remembering exercise performed at home and does not bring information about what children actually do in retail environments. Moreover, the children were asked to focus on buying a present for a friend's birthday, therefore the information gathered essentially relates to toy stores. Practical implications: This research underlines the necessity for retailers to endeavour to reduce some of the anxious feelings depicted and verbalized by children, by improving the welcome for children into their stores. Social implications: There are also opportunities for retailers to invest in the consumption education area by guiding young visitors so that they learn how to behave as apprentice consumers in retail outlets. Originality/value: The child-centric perspective of the study reveals new and surprising insights about the way children report their memorised shopping experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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19. Privileging the Voices of Twice-Exceptional Children: An Exploration of Lived Experiences and Stigma Narratives.
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Ronksley-Pavia, Michelle, Grootenboer, Peter, and Pendergast, Donna
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TWICE special (Special education) ,GIFTED children ,EXPERIENCE in children ,SOCIAL stigma ,DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,CHILDREN - Abstract
This study presents an exploration of the lived experiences of eight twice-exceptional children through their own voices. The narratives reveal a meta-narrative of stigma where identified contextual factors related to discrimination, perceptions of difference, and stigmatized views of disability, giftedness, and subsequently twice-exceptionality. Eight distinct stigma-related themes emerged from the data and each of these is shared. These narratives provide crucial insights into the daily lives of children living with twice-exceptionality in societies where able-bodied and able-minded norms frequently prevail. The study focuses attention on the omnipresent nature of stigma and the importance of cultivating awareness and understanding about twice-exceptionality to address the unique needs of these children. Moreover, policy and practices can be informed by engaging with these children's experiences so that their needs can be adequately recognized and addressed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Sibling Experiences in Middle Childhood Predict Sibling Differences in College Graduation.
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Sun, Xiaoran, McHale, Susan M., and Updegraff, Kimberly A.
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SIBLINGS , *INDIVIDUAL differences , *GRADUATION (Education) , *EXPERIENCE in children , *EDUCATIONAL attainment research , *COGNITIVE ability , *CHILD psychopathology , *PARENT-child relationships & psychology , *LONGITUDINAL method , *PARENT-child relationships , *RESEARCH funding , *EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
To illuminate how within-family differences in achievement may emerge, this study examined sibling experiences in middle childhood as predictors of sibling differences in college graduation. First- and second-borns from 152 families reported on their experiences with siblings and parents at ages 11.80 (SD = 0.56) and 9.22 (SD = 0.90), respectively, and on their educational attainment at about age 26. Significant childhood predictors of sibling differences in college graduation status included low sibling warmth, fathers' differential time spent with siblings, and perceived unfair differential treatment by parents. Findings suggest long-term implications of early sibling dynamics for educational attainment and provided novel insights into families' role in achievement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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21. The effects of adult depression on the recollection of adverse childhood experiences.
- Author
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Frampton, Nina M.A., Poole, Julia C., Dobson, Keith S., and Pusch, Dennis
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MENTAL depression risk factors , *CHILD psychology , *EXPERIENCE in children , *CHILD psychiatry , *PRIMARY care - Abstract
Abstract Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) have been linked to numerous negative physical and mental health outcomes across the lifespan. As such, self-report questionnaires that assess for ACEs are increasingly used in healthcare settings. However, previous research has generated some concern over the reliability of retrospective reports of childhood adversity, and it has been proposed that symptoms of depression may increase recall of negative memories. To investigate the stability of ACE scores over time and whether they are influenced by symptoms of depression, we recruited 284 participants (M age = 40.96, SD = 16.05) from primary care clinics. Participants completed self-report measures of depression and ACEs twice, three months apart. The test-retest reliability of ACEs was very high (r =.91, p <.001). A cross-lagged panel analysis indicated that PHQ-9 scores at Time 1 were not predictive of changes in ACE scores at Time 2 (β = 0.00, p =.96). Results of this study indicate that changes in symptoms of depression do not correspond with changes in ACE scores among adults. This study provides support for the stability and reliability of ACE scores over time, regardless of depression status, and suggests that ACE measures are appropriate for use in healthcare settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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22. Patterns of adversity and pathways to health among White, Black, and Latinx youth.
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Liu, Sabrina R., Kia-Keating, Maryam, and Nylund-Gibson, Karen
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EXPERIENCE in children , *CHILD psychology , *CHILD psychiatry , *MENTAL health of youth , *ETHNICITY - Abstract
Abstract Research has demonstrated the negative impact of Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) on long-term trajectories of mental and physical health. Yet existing literature on this topic is limited in its understanding of outcomes among youth samples, optimal measurement items and methods, and differences in adverse experiences across race/ethnicity. The current study used a person-centered approach to measure ACEs and their impact on youth health outcomes across three different racial/ethnic groups from a large national database. Patterns of exposure to adverse experiences among Black, Latinx, and White youth (N = 30,668, ages 12–17) were determined empirically using latent class analysis (LCA). Significant differences in class membership by demographic indicators (age, household income, sex) and concurrent health outcomes were identified. Different models emerged for Black (2 classes), Latinx (3 classes), and White youth (3 classes). Older and lower-income youth were more likely to have experienced adversities, but there were no differences in adversity likelihood by sex. Additionally, racial/ethnic minority youth were at greater risk of experiencing higher levels of adversity, poverty, and poor health when compared to their White counterparts. Rather than occuring in meaningful clusters, adverse experiences among youth reflected a cumulative risk model such that classes were defined by the overall intensity of adverse experiences (i.e., low, moderate, high). Findings provide greater knowledge regarding the relationship between ACEs and health and future research directions to inform more targeted and culturally-appropriate screening, prevention, and intervention programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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23. Interpersonal violence: identification of associated features in a clinical sample.
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Talevi, Dalila, Imburgia, Lorenzo, Luperini, Chiara, Zancla, Alessandro, Collazzoni, Alberto, Rossi, Rodolofo, Pacitti, Francesca, and Rossi, Alessandro
- Subjects
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CHILD abuse & psychology , *VIOLENCE & psychology , *EXPERIENCE in children , *CHILD psychology , *CHILD psychiatry , *INTERPERSONAL relations & psychology , *CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) - Abstract
Abstract Violence is a burdensome problem in daily psychiatric practice, even though the diagnosisof a mental disorder is not sufficient to determine a violent behavior; therefore, other factors are involved. We predicted that the participants could be distributed in two groups (e.g. high versus low violence-maltreatment groups) because this grouping would better describe specific patterns of associations in a clinical sample. We aimed to investigate the relation between interpersonal violence and maltreating experiences in childhood. Affective states and personal functioning were also explored as meaningful outcomes. Consecutive patients (N = 101) admitted to a psychiatric unit were evaluated with the Risky Families Questionnaire, the Psychological Maltreatment Review, the Karolinska Interpersonal Violence Scale (KIVS), the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule and the Personal and Social Performance Scale. Single, with average education and unemployed individuals showed significantly higher KIVS scores. High levels of interpersonal violence (IV) in childhood correlated with a harsh family climate in early life. Moreover, IV correlated with perceived parental maltreatment and did not with parental support. The cluster analysis identified two clusters of patients. The first (n = 41) showed negative dysfunctional experiences; the second (n = 60) showed a more positive perception of parental support.The impairment of social functioning and emotions regulation are both involved in this complex relation. The study supports the hypothesis of a clustering of patients that needs tailored management of violence causes and consequences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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24. Peer teasing experiences of fathers and their children: Intergenerational associations and transmission mechanisms.
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Kerr, David C.R., Gini, Gianluca, Owen, Lee D., and Capaldi, Deborah M.
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TEASING , *VICTIMS of abuse , *CHILD abuse & psychology , *PEER relations , *PSYCHOLOGY of fathers , *EXPERIENCE in children , *CHILD psychology , *PARENTING & psychology - Abstract
Abstract Being the victim or perpetrator of peer teasing threatens children's immediate and long-term well-being. Given that many individual and contextual risk factors for peer victimization are transmitted within families, we tested whether fathers' childhood victimization experiences were directly or indirectly (via poor parenting and poor child adjustment) associated with their children's increased risk for similar experiences. Generation two (G2) fathers (n = 130) who had been assessed since age 9 years participated in an intergenerational study with their 268 G3 children and the 163 G2 mothers of these children. Peer teasing ratings were collected annually from G1 mothers, fathers, and teachers across G2 ages 9–16 years, and from the same three informant types across the same ages for G3 children. Also assessed was G2 fathers' poor parenting of G3 at ages 3–7 years and G3 poor adjustment (externalizing and internalizing behaviors, deviant peer association, low social competence) and body mass index (BMI) at ages 7–16 years. Models supported intergenerational stability in being teased that was partially mediated through G2 fathers' poor parenting and G3 poor adjustment. A direct intergenerational path in being teased remained significant, and G3 BMI uniquely predicted being teased. Childhood peer victimization is perpetuated across generations. Prevention aimed at poor parenting, child poor adjustment, and peer victimization itself may disrupt intergenerational stability in these adverse experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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25. Maltreatment in childhood and intimate partner violence: A latent class growth analysis in a South African pregnancy cohort.
- Author
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Barnett, Whitney, Halligan, Sarah, Heron, Jon, Fraser, Abigail, Koen, Nastassja, Zar, Heather J., Donald, Kirsty A., and Stein, Dan J.
- Subjects
- *
INTIMATE partner violence , *PREGNANCY & psychology , *CHILD abuse & psychology , *EXPERIENCE in children , *PSYCHOLOGY of puerperium , *LATENT class analysis (Statistics) - Abstract
Abstract Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a significant global problem, prevalent in low and middle-income countries (LMICs). IPV is particularly problematic during the perinatal and early postnatal period, where it is linked with negative maternal and child health outcomes. There has been little examination of profiles of IPV and early life adversity in LMIC contexts. We aimed to characterize longitudinal IPV and to investigate maternal maltreatment in childhood as a predictor of IPV exposure during pregnancy and postnatally in a low resource setting. This study was nested in the Drakenstein Child Health Study, a longitudinal birth cohort. Maternal IPV (emotional, physical and sexual) was measured at six timepoints from pregnancy to two years postpartum (n = 832); sociodemographic variables and maternal maltreatment in childhood were measured antenatally at 28–32 weeks' gestation. Associations between maternal maltreatment in childhood and IPV latent class membership (to identify patterns of maternal IPV exposure) were estimated using multinomial and logistic regression. We observed high levels of maternal maltreatment during childhood (34%) and IPV during pregnancy (33%). In latent class analysis separating by IPV sub-type, two latent classes of no/low and moderate sexual IPV and three classes of low, moderate, and high emotional and physical IPV (separately) were detected. In combined latent class analysis, including all IPV sub-types together, a low, moderate and high exposure class emerged as well as a high antenatal/decreasing postnatal class. Moderate and high classes for all IPV sub-types and combined analysis showed stable intensity profiles. Maternal childhood sexual abuse, physical abuse and neglect, and emotional abuse predicted membership in high IPV classes, across all domains of IPV (aORs between 1.99 and 5.86). Maternal maltreatment in childhood was associated with increased probability of experiencing high or moderate intensity IPV during and around pregnancy; emotional neglect was associated with decreasing IPV class for combined model. Intervening early to disrupt this cycle of abuse is critical to two generations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Impact of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) on adult alcohol consumption behaviors.
- Author
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Loudermilk, Elaine, Loudermilk, Kevin, Obenauer, Julie, and Quinn, Megan A.
- Subjects
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EXPERIENCE in children , *CHILD psychology , *DRINKING of alcoholic beverages & psychology , *BINGE drinking , *BEHAVIOR disorders in adolescence , *CHILD abuse & psychology - Abstract
Abstract Background Long term negative physical and mental health problems occur from the lack of appropriate interventions targeting the adult population who experienced adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and partake in risky alcohol consumption behaviors. Objective This study aimed to identify the risk for alcohol consumption behaviors, specifically binge drinking (BD) and any drinking (AD), among adults with a history of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs). Methods Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) 2011–2012 data were used. Descriptive statistics were completed followed by simple and multiple logistic regression to determine the strength of association between ACEs and alcohol consumption, controlling for sociodemographic factors. Results The final adjusted sample size was 69,793. Adults who experienced household abuse were 30% more likely to BD (Odds Ratio (OR): 1.30, 95% Confidence Interval (CI): 1.20–1.41) and 21% more likely for AD (OR: 1.21, 95% CI: 1.14–1.28) in the past month. Males were over two times more likely to BD (OR: 2.12, 95% CI: 1.96–2.29) and 60% more likely for AD (OR: 1.60, 95% CI: 1.51–1.69) in the past month compared to females. Individuals who completed some college were at higher risk of BD (OR: 1.51, 95% CI: 1.26–1.82), whereas those who graduated college were nearly two and a half times more likely to report AD in the past month (OR: 2.27, 95% CI: 1.99–2.59) compared to individuals with less than high school education. Conclusion Adults who experienced household abuse, are male, or possess at least some college education are at increased risk for BD and AD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. He Says, She Says: Mothers and Children Remembering the Same Events.
- Author
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Wang, Qi and Song, Qingfang
- Subjects
- *
EPISODIC memory , *MOTHERS , *CHILDREN , *EUROPEAN Americans , *IMMIGRANTS , *AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL memory , *EXPERIENCE , *EXPERIENCE in children , *COMPARATIVE studies , *EMOTIONS , *PSYCHOLOGY of immigrants , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MEMORY , *PSYCHOLOGY of mothers , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *WHITE people , *EVALUATION research , *MULTIDIMENSIONAL Health Locus of Control scales - Abstract
This study examined the consistency of memories for the same events in mothers and children, and how that varied as a function of culture and organizational components of memories. European American (EA) and Chinese immigrant (CI) mothers and their 6-year-old children (N = 127) independently recalled two emotionally salient events. In both cultures, mothers and children agreed more on factual event details and observable behaviors and less on subjective experiences and idiosyncratic interpretations. EA mothers and children told more diverse stories than did CI mothers and children. The findings shed important light on autobiographical memory as a multidimensional construct shaped by cultural beliefs and practices, and have critical implications for the evaluation of memory accuracy in research and real-life settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Safe Schools? Transgender Youth’s School Experiences and Perceptions of School Climate.
- Author
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Day, Jack K., Perez-Brumer, Amaya, and Russell, Stephen T.
- Subjects
- *
TRANSGENDER youth , *GENDER identity , *EXPERIENCE in children , *SENSORY perception , *SCHOOL environment , *PSYCHOLOGY , *ASIANS , *BULLYING , *EXPERIENCE , *HIGH school students , *HISPANIC Americans , *MIDDLE school students , *SCHOOL administration , *SELF-evaluation , *CRIME victims , *STUDENTS - Abstract
The magnitude of gender identity-related disparities in school-based outcomes is unknown because of a lack of representative studies that include measures of gender identity. By utilizing a representative sample generalizable to a broader population, this study elucidates the size of gender identity-related disparities, independent of sexual orientation, in school experiences associated with school connectedness and perceptions of school climate. Additionally, the inclusion of and comparison to results of a large non-representative sample allows for more direct comparisons to previous studies of the school experiences of transgender youth. The analyses in this study primarily draw on a sample of 31,896 youth representative of the middle and high school population in California who participated in the 2013-2015 California Student Survey (a subsample of the California Healthy Kids Survey, which includes the largest known sample of transgender youth). Over half the sample identified their sex as female (51.3%), and 398 identified as transgender (1.0%). The sample was racially and ethnically diverse: 30.7% identified as multiracial, 33.0% as White, 11.1% as Asian, 7.4% as Black, and 52.9% as Hispanic. Findings from multilevel analyses show that relative to non-transgender youth, transgender youth were more likely to be truant from school, to experience victimization and bias-based bullying, and to report more negative perceptions of school climate, though did not differ in self-reported grades. The findings have implications for improving school policies and practices to create safer and more supportive school climates for all youth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The Influence of First-Hand Testimony and Hearsay on Children's Belief in the Improbable.
- Author
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Lane, Jonathan D., Ronfard, Samuel, El‐Sherif, Diana, and El-Sherif, Diana
- Subjects
- *
HEARSAY evidence , *LEGAL testimony , *EXPERIENCE in children , *BELIEF & doubt , *PSYCHOLOGY of preschool children , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *CHILD psychology , *COMPARATIVE studies , *JUDGMENT (Psychology) , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *DISCLOSURE , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
Children (3.5-8.5 years; n = 105) heard claims about the occurrence of improbable or impossible events, then were asked whether the events could really happen. Some claims were based on informants' first-hand observations and others were hearsay. A baseline group (n = 56) reported their beliefs about these events without hearing testimony. Neither first-hand claims nor hearsay influenced beliefs about impossible events, which remained low across the age range. Hearsay (but not first-hand claims) did influence beliefs about improbable events. Preschoolers expressed greater belief following hearsay, compared to their beliefs following first-hand claims and compared to the baseline group's beliefs. By contrast, older children expressed less belief following hearsay, compared to their beliefs following first-hand claims and compared to the baseline group's beliefs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Career choice among academically excellent students: Choosing teaching career as a corrective experience.
- Author
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Kass, Efrat and Miller, Erez C.
- Subjects
- *
VOCATIONAL guidance , *TEACHING , *STUDENT attitudes , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *IMPLICIT attitudes , *EXPERIENCE in children - Abstract
The present study examined implicit motivations of academically excellent students' choice of teaching careers rather than more prestigious occupations. Open, in-depth interviews were conducted with twelve students. Findings indicate that choosing a career in teaching served as a corrective experience for painful past experiences, and revealed four types of implicit motivations: (1) The experience of helplessness and the need to strengthen the sense of self-efficacy (2) The search for interpersonal boundaries as markers of identity (3) The need to belong: Warmth, caring, and individual attention and (4) Compensation for an unjust and humiliating experience in childhood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Children’s Experiences and Awareness about Impact of Digital Media on Health.
- Author
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Cernikova, Martina, Smahel, David, and Wright, Michelle F.
- Subjects
- *
EXPERIENCE in children , *AWARENESS , *DIGITAL media , *CHILDREN'S health , *TECHNOLOGY & children , *COGNITION , *COMPUTERS , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *FOCUS groups , *INTERNET , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *SENSORY perception , *QUALITATIVE research , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Previous research has focused on the associations between technology use and children’s health, using mainly quantitative designs. This qualitative study describes technology’s impact on physical and mental health from children’s perspectives. The differences between children’s experiences and awareness of the health-related consequences associated with digital media use were examined. Focus groups and interviews were conducted with children between the ages of 9 and 16 in nine European countries (
N = 368). Results of this study indicate that children’s experiences of health-related technology impacts are different from their awareness of these impacts. Children’s direct experiences with media were less extreme in contrast to their awareness of health problems, which typically involved extreme examples of possible consequences, such as killing people, kidnapping, blindness, and developing learning or psychological disorders. The results are discussed in the context of the “media panic” and “third person effect” theories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Development of preferences for differently aged faces of different races.
- Author
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Heron‐Delaney, Michelle, Quinn, Paul C., Damon, Fabrice, Lee, Kang, and Pascalis, Olivier
- Subjects
- *
LIKES & dislikes , *CHILDHOOD attitudes , *AGING , *FACE , *RACIAL differences , *EXPERIENCE in children , *PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Abstract: Children's experiences with differently aged faces changes in the course of development. During infancy, most faces encountered are adult, however as children mature, exposure to child faces becomes more extensive. Does this change in experience influence preference for differently aged faces? The preferences of children for adult vs. child, and adult vs. infant faces were investigated. Caucasian 3‐ to 6‐year‐olds and adults were presented with adult/child and adult/infant face pairs which were either Caucasian or Asian (race consistent within pairs). Younger children (3–4 years) preferred adults over children whereas older children (5–6 years) preferred children over adults. This preference was only detected for Caucasian faces. These data support a ‘here and now’ model of the development of face age processing from infancy to childhood. In particular, the findings suggest that growing experience with peers influences age preferences and that race impacts on these preferences. In contrast, adults preferred infants and children over adults when the faces were Caucasian or Asian, suggesting an increasing influence of a baby schema, and a decreasing influence of race. The different preferences of younger children, older children, and adults also suggest discontinuity and the possibility of different mechanisms at work during different developmental periods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Traumatic Childhood Memories as a Self-Discovery Tool in Margret Laurence's "The Diviners" and Margaret Atwood's "Cat's Eye".
- Author
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Khaleel, Intisar R.
- Subjects
EARLY memories ,EXPERIENCE in children ,CHILD psychology ,INFANT psychology ,STANDARD language - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Al-Frahids Arts is the property of Republic of Iraq Ministry of Higher Education & Scientific Research (MOHESR) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2018
34. Lost in translation: exploring childhood identity using photo-elicitation.
- Author
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Cooper, Victoria L.
- Subjects
- *
IDENTITY (Psychology) in children , *EXPERIENCE in children , *ELICITATION technique , *BEHAVIORAL assessment of children , *CHILD behavior - Abstract
Photo-elicitation is recognised as a visual method which can enhance children’s participation in research and is responsive to childhood experiences. This paper reports on a participatory study which employed photo-elicitation and examines what this method can reveal about research designed to explore children’s identity. Twenty children (6–10 years) were given a digital camera to take pictures ‘all about me’ at home and an after-school club. In addition, parents and practitioners participated in semi-structured interviews. This paper considers the materiality of photo-elicitation and describes the different ways in which children build narratives using photographs as interview prompts. Despite the capacity for photo-elicitation to enable children to take pictures of material things which forge connections to embodied, affective and routine identity processes, this paper critically examines how photographs as material things are made sense of and potentially translated within social practices bounded by power dynamics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Trauma-Informed Teaching Strategies.
- Author
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Minahan, Jessica
- Subjects
- *
EXPERIENCE in children , *STUDENTS , *TEACHERS , *LEARNING , *TEACHING - Abstract
The article focuses on caring out trauma-informed educational practice for helping traumatized students in schools. Topics discussed include teachers should employ thoughtful interactions traumatized students in ways that may interfere with teaching and learning; building relationship; and promoting predictability and consistency.
- Published
- 2019
36. Part 1: Debates and Questions Last Week: Evidence-based Early Years Intervention.
- Subjects
- *
EARLY intervention (Education) , *EDUCATION policy , *EXPERIENCE in children , *SUBSTANCE abuse - Abstract
The article informs that in an education debate chairman of the Science and Technology Committee, Norman Lamb of Great Britain House of Commons shed light on the use of early-intervention approaches for preventing childhood adversity and trauma. He argued that adverse childhood experience such as substance abuse or domestic violence have negative impact of children's mental health, thus as part of the criminal justice process, such children should be provided enhanced support.
- Published
- 2019
37. Feelings: Opening the Heart
- Author
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Sherwood, Patricia
- Published
- 2008
38. Using Personal Capital to Find Your Own Path to Successful University Study
- Author
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Dawson, Jeanne
- Published
- 2007
39. Researching Children's Experiences
- Author
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Melissa Freeman, Sandra Mathison, Melissa Freeman, and Sandra Mathison
- Subjects
- Child psychology, Child psychology--Research, Experience in children
- Abstract
This accessible book presents approaches to planning, carrying out, and analyzing research projects with children and youth from a social constructivist perspective. Rich, contextualized examples illustrate how to elicit and understand the lived experiences of diverse young people. Data-collection methods discussed in depth include drawing, photography, the Internet, games, interviewing, focus groups, journaling, and observation. Also covered are strategies for fostering the active contributions of children in the research process; navigating consent and ethical issues; enlisting the support of parents, school personnel, and other gatekeepers; and interpreting data. Throughout, the authors emphasize the need to attend to the social setting in which research with children is done. End-of-chapter questions and exercises encourage readers to reflect on taken-for-granted conceptions of children and childhood and to try out the book's ideas in their own research projects.
- Published
- 2009
40. Nutcote now
- Author
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Spindler, Graham
- Published
- 1991
41. Reading as displacement and time travel
- Author
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Reid, Ian
- Published
- 2013
42. Developing a Sense of Community and Place in Different Cultural Settings and Environments
- Author
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Gerber, Rod
- Published
- 2001
43. Architecture, Body and Wilderness
- Author
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Blythe, Richard
- Published
- 2001
44. Child-centred Pedagogies: A Final Comment
- Author
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Robertson, Margaret and Gerber, Rod
- Published
- 2001
45. Brooke's day: One child's experience in an early childcare and education centre in New Zealand
- Author
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Prince, Cynthia Margaret
- Published
- 2012
46. The Fluid Construction of Spatial Concepts in Infancy: Commentary on Alessandroni and Rodríguez.
- Author
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Wang, Su-hua
- Subjects
- *
COGNITION in children , *COGNITIVE development , *SOCIOCULTURAL factors , *EXPERIENCE in children , *CHILD psychology - Abstract
In this article, the authors discusess concept of infant cognition. Topics dicussed include analysis of cognitive development using conceptual metaphor theory and the sociocultural perspective; examining of children's everyday lived experiences situated in their cultural community; and evaluation of their experiences of action and language.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Tanzanian and Canadian children's valued school experiences: a cross case comparison.
- Author
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Streelasky, Jodi
- Subjects
- *
EXPERIENCE in children , *CHILD psychology , *SCHOOLS , *OUTDOOR education , *AUTONOMY (Philosophy) - Abstract
This study investigates children's multimodal perspectives on their school experiences in two diverse, international contexts. The research shares data from 45 Canadian and Tanzanian children, and focused on the children's use of multimodal methods to share what mattered to them at school. The children's significant interest in their outdoor school spaces was revealed, as well as culturally specific narratives linked to the participants' local environments and families. In both settings, the majority of the children valued their outdoor experiences at school where they felt a strong sense of autonomy as they engaged in child-initiated play and collaborative games outdoors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Exploring students’ perceptions and experiences of the transition between GCSE and AS Level mathematics.
- Author
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Rigby, Chloe
- Subjects
- *
EXPERIENCE in children , *GENERAL Certificate of Secondary Education , *MATHEMATICS education , *MATHEMATICAL ability , *TEENAGERS , *SECONDARY education ,EDUCATIONAL quality standards - Abstract
Children experience numerous types of learning transitions throughout their educational lives physically (changing schools) and substantively (moving through different key stages in school), and daily (in moving between subjects). One transition that is frequently overlooked within the British education system is that from the General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) usually completed at the age of 16 to Advanced Subsidiary Level (AS Level) usually completed at the age of 17. This case study addresses this issue by focusing on students’ perceptions and experiences of the transition between GCSE and AS Level mathematics. It involves a small qualitative study of 28 students from a post-16 college in the UK and uses questionnaires and semi-structured interviews to ascertain students’ views of their transition in studying mathematics at a higher level. The evidence suggests that many students struggle with the transition from GCSE to A Level making AS Level Mathematics inaccessible for many students. Ways of addressing the difficulties experienced by students are discussed with implications for teachers, students and policy-makers in the hope of supporting smoother learning transitions to advanced level study for all. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Children’s experience of sport in Australia.
- Author
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McPherson, Lynne, Long, Maureen, Nicholson, Matthew, Cameron, Nadine, Atkins, Prue, and Morris, Meg E.
- Subjects
- *
EXPERIENCE in children , *CHILDREN in sports , *SEXUAL harassment in sports , *SAFETY , *CHILD abuse - Abstract
Australia is known as a ‘sporting nation’ and sport is central to its cultural identity. Children’s participation in leisure activities, including sport, is considered to be of such importance that it is enshrined as an international human right. There is a growing awareness, however, that children’s experience of sport is not always positive and that abuse and harm may occur in organised sport. This paper reports on a study designed to explore children’s experiences of organised sport, as recounted by young adults between the ages of 18 and 25 years. A mixed methods study design was implemented, which resulted in 107 survey responses and 10 follow-up interviews with young adults. Overwhelmingly, young people reported the lasting developmental benefits of participation in organised sport as children. More than 50% also reported negative experiences, including emotional and physical harm and sexual harassment. The reasons for these apparently contradictory findings are explored. The role of coaches, peers, parents and the wider sporting association ethos are investigated and suggestions made for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A 10-year experience of a novel and safe modified environmental rush immunotherapy protocol.
- Author
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Fajt, Merritt L., Rosenberg, Stacy L., Yecies, Emmanuelle, Traister, Russell S., and Petrov, Andrej A.
- Subjects
IMMUNOTHERAPY ,RHINITIS ,EXPERIENCE in children ,CLINICAL immunology ,IMMUNOPATHOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Allergen immunotherapy (AIT) is an effective treatment option for allergic rhinitis. Although conventional AIT takes 6 months to reach maintenance dosing, rush AIT accelerates the build-up period and reaches the maintenance dose months earlier. However, accelerated schedules of AIT carry an increased risk of systemic reactions (SR). Objective: We aimed to describe a novel 1-day, eight-step modified environmental rush immunotherapy (MERIT) protocol, characteristics of the patients who underwent this therapy, and the safety of this procedure. We also compared distinguishing features of those patients with SRs. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed demographic and clinical data of 362 adult patients seen in an outpatient university allergy clinic, from January 2005 to January 2015, and who underwent MERIT protocol treatment for allergic rhinitis. Results: In a univariate analysis, the factors significantly associated with SR were lower body mass index (BMI); younger age; a higher number of allergens in the extracts; and the presence of cat, dust mite, and certain weed pollens. In a multivariate analysis, cat, dust mite, and mugwort were significantly associated with SRs. Over the 10-year period, 50 patients experienced SRs (13.81%), with a total number of 68 SRs. Only 4.7% of the SRs occurred on the MERIT day. Most SRs occurred >30 minutes and were mild. Our MERIT protocol continuation rate for all the patients was 49.2% and did not seem to be influenced by having an SR versus no SR. Conclusion: We present a modified rush AIT protocol that seems to be effective and safe. Most patients tolerated therapy, and only a minority of patients developed SRs, which generally were mild. We identified novel risk factors for SRs that may help determine optimal dosing to decrease the risk of SRs. Ultimately, future studies will be needed to compare the safety of our MERIT protocol with traditional AIT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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