Publication Date
| In 2026 | 0 |
| Since 2025 | 3 |
| Since 2022 (last 5 years) | 17 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
| Andrea M. Headley | 1 |
| Baines, Ed | 1 |
| Baker, Erin Ruth | 1 |
| Battista, Carmela | 1 |
| Bayly, Benjamin L. | 1 |
| Bierman, Karen L. | 1 |
| Blatchford, Peter | 1 |
| Brianna Tennie | 1 |
| Brito, Gabriel | 1 |
| Catherine P. Bradshaw | 1 |
| Celia C. Lo | 1 |
| More ▼ | |
Publication Type
| Reports - Research | 13 |
| Journal Articles | 12 |
| Dissertations/Theses -… | 2 |
| Reports - Descriptive | 1 |
| Reports - Evaluative | 1 |
Education Level
Audience
Location
| Texas | 2 |
| Afghanistan | 1 |
| Bangladesh | 1 |
| Brazil | 1 |
| China | 1 |
| Liberia | 1 |
| Madagascar | 1 |
| Nepal | 1 |
| New Zealand | 1 |
| United Kingdom (England) | 1 |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
| Head Start | 1 |
Assessments and Surveys
| Classroom Assessment Scoring… | 1 |
| Fragile Families and Child… | 1 |
| Strengths and Difficulties… | 1 |
| Test of Word Reading… | 1 |
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Claudia Annette Esquivel – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The purpose of this quantitative, correlational study was to investigate the extent to which being labeled as an economically disadvantaged student contributed to the number of exclusionary discipline referrals in secondary schools belonging to three neighboring school districts in South Texas. The framework was based upon the Diamond et al.…
Descriptors: Economically Disadvantaged, Discipline, Referral, School Districts
Lucy C. Sorensen; Andrea M. Headley; Stephen B. Holt – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2025
Involvement with the juvenile justice system carries immense consequences both to detained youth and to society more broadly. Extant research on the "school-to-prison pipeline" has often focused on school disciplinary practices such as suspension with less attention on understanding the impact of school referrals to the juvenile justice…
Descriptors: Juvenile Justice, Referral, Student Behavior, Behavior Problems
Paul A. McDermott; Michael J. Rovine; Emily M. Weiss; Jessica N. Gladstone; S. Farwa Fatima; Roland S. Reyes – School Psychology Review, 2023
This research examined growth and co-occurrence of latent developmental patterns of classroom behavior problems among young, economically disadvantaged children. A nationally representative sample (N = 3,827) of children was assessed for overactive and underactive behavior problems through two years of prekindergarten, kindergarten and first…
Descriptors: School Psychology, Student Behavior, Behavior Problems, Economically Disadvantaged
Baker, Erin Ruth; Huang, Rong; Battista, Carmela; Liu, Qingyang – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2023
This short-term longitudinal study examined how economically-impoverished children's moral reasoning predicts specific aggressive subtypes. Children (N = 106, M[subscript age] = 52.78 months, 51% boys, ethnically diverse backgrounds) from urban Head Start programs completed a structured story-interview pertaining to moral reasoning and judgement…
Descriptors: Social Services, Federal Programs, Young Children, Moral Development
Xu, Ji; Yu, Dandan – Education Economics, 2022
This study estimates how students suffering from parental conflicts could affect their classmates in Chinese middle schools. We show that children with quarreling parents are more likely to misbehave. Negative spillovers from these potentially troubled peers concentrate on students from economically disadvantaged families. With greater exposure to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Middle School Students, Parents, Conflict
Baines, Ed; Blatchford, Peter – British Educational Research Journal, 2023
Breaktimes are ubiquitous in English schools. Research suggests they have social value for children, but school staff often have a range of concerns about breaktimes and tend to undervalue them. However, there is little understanding about these times, not least because data are not collected about their organisation and characteristics. This…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Trends, Recess Breaks, Lunch Programs
Ronald J. Prinz; Emilie P. Smith; Brianna Tennie – Prevention Science, 2025
Cogent indicated prevention with young children at risk for early onset conduct problems needs to address multiple domains of influence in school and home settings. A multicontextual preventive intervention (MPI) spanning grades one and two was conducted in schools serving economically disadvantaged communities and evaluated separately for boys…
Descriptors: Prevention, Intervention, Young Children, Elementary School Students
Wright-McAllister, Saedra – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Managing behavior is a challenge at home and school for many families in disadvantaged areas. When students get to school, it can become an increased or heightened problem due to the school managing hundreds and in many cases thousands of students per day and teachers managing on average between 25-30 students during every part of their day. The…
Descriptors: Student Behavior, Behavior Problems, Economically Disadvantaged, Disadvantaged Schools
Tyrone C. Cheng; Celia C. Lo – Child & Youth Care Forum, 2025
Background: Many children in the United States are victims of bullying; many of the victimized retaliate, aggressively bullying those who have bullied them. Objective: Applying the multiple disadvantage model, this U.S.-based secondary study of data describing bullied children's own perpetration of bullying examined this behavior's relationship to…
Descriptors: Risk, Bullying, Victims, Child Behavior
Brito, Gabriel; Leon, Camila; Ribeiro, Camila; Trevisan, Bruna; Dias, Natália; Seabra, Alessandra – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2022
Evidence points to the possibility of promoting executive functions (EF) through school interventions. Little is known, however, about the effectiveness of this type of intervention in situations of social vulnerability. This study investigated the effectiveness of an EF intervention program applied with a sample of preschool children, in a…
Descriptors: Evidence Based Practice, Executive Function, Preschool Children, Foreign Countries
Moffat, Thecla K. – Kairaranga, 2022
This article seeks to highlight the importance of consciously implementing universal design for learning principles in practice in early childhood intervention. Universal design for learning (UDL) is based on three principles: (1) providing multiple means of engagement; (2) providing multiple means of representation; and (3) providing multiple…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Access to Education, Learner Engagement, Early Childhood Education
Jeonghyeok Kim – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
Each year, over a thousand public schools in the US close due to declining enrollments and chronic low performance, displacing hundreds of thousands of students. Using Texas administrative data and empirical strategies that use within-student across-time and within-school across-cohort variation, I explore the impact of school closures on…
Descriptors: Public Schools, School Closing, Outcomes of Education, Academic Achievement
Choi, Jeong-Kyun; Hatton-Bowers, Holly; Shin, Jiwon – Early Child Development and Care, 2022
Our study extends the understanding of how three distinct environments including home, childcare, and neighbourhood may influence young children's problematic behaviours among a sample of predominantly unmarried mothers residing in urban communities in the United States. With a sample of 791 mothers we examined whether neighbourhood disadvantage…
Descriptors: Predictor Variables, Toddlers, Behavior Problems, Poverty
Bayly, Benjamin L.; Bierman, Karen L. – Early Education and Development, 2022
Research Findings: Children's readiness to handle the expectations of elementary school depends heavily on their self-regulation skills. Self-regulation includes both cognitive and behavioral elements; however, past studies have typically looked at cognitive and behavioral self-regulation in isolation or as a composite score rather than examining…
Descriptors: Preschool Teachers, Preschool Children, Teacher Student Relationship, Self Control
Valenza, Marco; Dreesen, Thomas – UNICEF Office of Research - Innocenti, 2022
Learning remains largely out of reach for many of the most vulnerable children around the world. In low- and middle-income countries, an estimated 56% of children cannot read a simple text by the age of 10. This share is projected to rise to 70% after the pandemic. The school closures imposed by the COVID-19 outbreak, coupled with an enduring…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Economically Disadvantaged, Access to Education, Low Income Groups
Previous Page | Next Page »
Pages: 1 | 2
Direct link
Peer reviewed
