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Crystal S. Williams; Kim Fisher; Claire Stelter – Journal of Early Intervention, 2025
Early intervention (EI) sessions are intended to occur in a child's natural environment. Part of a child's natural environment includes the materials they typically can access. Recommended practices in the field suggest that EI providers should use materials in children's homes rather than bringing a toy bag to address the child and family goals.…
Descriptors: Early Intervention, Child Development Specialists, Child Development, Media Selection
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Tony Eaude – Journal of Religious Education, 2025
In exploring how ritualized activities can help to nurture children's spiritual growth, this article encourages a re-thinking of what ritual involves. The link between ritual and routine is explored. Distinctions are drawn between personal and collective and between 'everyday' and 'special occasion' rituals, with neither the sole preserve of…
Descriptors: Repetition, Child Development, Models, Spiritual Development
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Mindy Blaise; Veronica Pacini-Ketchabaw – Teachers College Record, 2025
Expanding the important body of work that addresses child development's limitations and responding to the ecological crisis that threatens the future of life on Earth, this article proposes a living feminist postdevelopmental lexicon. The lexicon introduces 26 concepts that together challenge the theory/practice divide, disrupt Cartesian modes of…
Descriptors: Child Development, Feminism, Early Childhood Education, Dictionaries
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Natalie Kirby; Camilla Biggs; Megan Garside; Gloria Cheung; Philip Wilson; Matt Forde; Manuela Deidda; Dennis Ougrin; Fiona Turner; Karen Crawford; Helen Minnis – JCPP Advances, 2025
Background: Children in foster care are at high risk of future mental health and developmental difficulties. A number of interventions may be helpful; however, the effectiveness of interventions specifically for pre-school children in foster care is not well established. This is an important omission, since infancy and early childhood may be the…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Foster Care, Intervention, Social Emotional Learning
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Courtney A. Filippi; Elizabeth Smith; Elizabeth Redcay; Heather Hazlett; Lauren Thompson; Stacy S. Manwaring; Precilla D'Souza; Audrey Thurm – Infant and Child Development, 2025
While studies have documented neural correlates of language delay in toddlers with developmental conditions, those at genetic risk for language delay, and those born premature, no studies have examined neural correlates in toddlers exhibiting early language delay without known aetiology. This study examines brain morphometry in toddlers with and…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Delayed Speech, Brain, Child Development
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Stef van Buuren; Iris Eekhout; Gareth McCray; Gillian A. Lancaster; Marcus R. Waldman; Dana C. McCoy; Melissa Gladstone; Vanessa Cavallera; Tarun Dua; Maureen M. Black; GSED Team – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2025
The lack of a valid and interpretable score to track early child development over time is a primary reason for neglecting child development in policymaking. Many instruments exist, but there is no accepted method for comparing their scores across different ages, samples, and instruments. This paper aims (1) to enhance the Development Score…
Descriptors: Child Development, Measures (Individuals), Children, Longitudinal Studies
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Ashley J. Emmerton – International Review of Education, 2025
Despite communities in emergency situations expressing the desire and need for education beyond schooling to support the learning needs of adults and youth, the focus tends to remain on providing conventional, school-based education for school-aged children. Taking a decolonial approach to interrogating this prioritisation of schooling in…
Descriptors: Emergency Programs, Child Development, Lifelong Learning, Decolonization
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Marta Armesto Arias; M. del Rosario Neira-Piñeiro; Tania Pasarín-Lavín; Celestino Rodríguez – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2025
Emotional intelligence and drama-based intervention open up an innovative field in education. The current study describes the effectiveness of an innovative project based on the development of emotional intelligence through dramatization in Early Childhood Education. A total of 82 children range from 4 to 5 years old were divided into two groups:…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Emotional Intelligence, Intervention, Drama
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Rahel L. van Eickels; Magdalena Siegel; Alice J. Juhasz; Martina Zemp – Child Development, 2025
Empirical findings on the associations of positive and dysfunctional parent--child relationship (PPCR/DPCR) characteristics with child shame, adaptive guilt, and maladaptive guilt were synthesized in six meta-analyses. The 65 included samples yielded 633 effect sizes (N[subscript total] = 19,144; M[subscript age] = 15.24 years; 59.0% female; 67.7%…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Psychological Patterns, Child Development, Meta Analysis
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Aurélien Frick – Child Development Perspectives, 2025
The development of executive function (EF) has been linked to various life outcomes, motivating intense research on the topic. While much of this research has focused on more thoroughly understanding age-related changes of the underlying neurocognitive mechanisms involved, recent theoretical and empirical works have stressed how the immediate…
Descriptors: Executive Function, Cognitive Development, Child Development, Social Environment
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Keisuke Wada; Yuki Kawashima-Sonoyama; Hiroto Abe; Akihiro Toya; Hironori Kobayashi; Takeshi Taketani – Journal of School Health, 2026
Background: In Japan, school health examinations frequently utilize growth curves. This study aimed to develop and validate a custom-designed program that enables the rapid and accurate detection of growth abnormalities in children and adolescents. Methods: We created a novel screening tool named the Growth Assessment Program for Schools (GAPS),…
Descriptors: School Health Services, Foreign Countries, Physical Health, Human Body
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Helen Milojevich; Lana Beasley; Stormie Fuller; Olivia Lane; David Bard – Prevention Science, 2025
Developmental monitoring and promotion efforts are keys to identifying potential developmental concerns and connecting young children to intervention services. Evidence-based home visiting programs are one avenue for developmental monitoring and promotion, particularly for families with young children who may need extra support (e.g., families…
Descriptors: Home Visits, Young Children, Identification, Child Development
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Carolyn Baer; Jan M. Engelmann; Celeste Kidd – Developmental Science, 2025
We provide evidence that children sensibly integrate the judgments of different people who disagree according to their confidence. We asked children (ages 5-10 years, N = 92) to make judgments about what happened during unobserved events by relying on two informants who sometimes disagreed. Children integrated the reports of informants and formed…
Descriptors: Childrens Attitudes, Beliefs, Perspective Taking, Evaluative Thinking
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Jessica M. Cassidy; Michael T. Willoughby – Child Development Perspectives, 2025
Early childhood is characterized by rapid increases in both motor skills and executive function skills. Rather than simply codeveloping, the development of motor and executive function skills may be linked causally. In this article, we introduce corticomuscular coherence as a paradigm for psychologists interested in testing mechanistic questions…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Psychomotor Skills, Executive Function, Skill Development
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Tristan J. Mahr; Paul J. Rathouz; Katherine C. Hustad – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2025
Purpose: Earlier work has established developmental benchmarks for intelligibility and articulation rate, but the intersection of these two variables, especially within individual children, has received limited attention. This study examines the interaction between intelligibility and speaking rate in typically developing children between the ages…
Descriptors: Intelligibility, Articulation (Speech), Language Rhythm, Speech Habits
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