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Michael Levere; Todd Honeycutt; Gina Livermore; Arif Mamun; Karen Katz – Career Development and Transition for Exceptional Individuals, 2025
Families of youth with disabilities often access services to promote youth's transitions to adulthood. Such services can be oriented toward the youth or family. Using descriptive statistics and regression modeling of survey and administrative data, we explored patterns of service use and the association between outcomes for 9,013 U.S. youth with…
Descriptors: Family Programs, Youth, Disabilities, Family Involvement
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A. M. C. Lange; M. Zandbergen; A. M. E. Bijlsma; G. J. Overbeek; L. Boendermaker – Child & Youth Care Forum, 2025
Background: Home-visiting programs often aim to improve parenting skills, parent-child relationships, and children's developmental outcomes for at-risk families. Although research has identified what elements of these interventions are effective when provided by professionals, little is known about effective components of volunteer-based…
Descriptors: Family Programs, Parents, Volunteers, Home Visits
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Justin D. Lane; Gabrielle Lonnemann; Kailee Matthews; Rachel Fosnaught; Katherine Lynch – Journal of Early Intervention, 2025
Families are central to promoting communication in young children with disabilities with complex communication needs. Providing coaching on naturalistic language interventions (NLI) gives parents tools for independently intervening on communication across activities in the home. Both parents and professionals have limited resources, which requires…
Descriptors: Coaching (Performance), Intervention, Family Programs, Telecommunications
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Angela M. Wiseman; Qiana R. Cryer-Coupet; Ashley A. Atkinson – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2025
This paper is based on a trauma-informed family literacy program implemented in a residential treatment facility for fathers with substance-use disorders, with many of their population experiencing homelessness. Informed by a critical approach to family literacy that recognizes the social, cultural, and historical perspectives of families'…
Descriptors: Family Literacy, Family Programs, Fathers, Trauma Informed Approach
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Susan M. Hill; Caroline Barratt-Pugh; Nicola F. Johnson; Lennie Barblett – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2025
The home literacy environment (HLE) plays an important role in children's early literacy learning. Texting programs are an increasing feature of family literacy interventions that support parent engagement in their children's learning. Unlike face-to-face interventions, texting programs can offer sustained parental support at low cost and large…
Descriptors: Parent Attitudes, Telecommunications, Handheld Devices, Emergent Literacy
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Emily L. Winter; Claire Mason; Casey Stillman – Psychology in the Schools, 2025
Eating disorders have substantially risen in school-aged youth, especially in a post-pandemic world. Impacting children and adolescents across races, ethnicities, genders, and sexual orientations, prevalence rates suggest that eating disorders do not discriminate. Interestingly, despite the rising prevalence rates and increase of eating disorders,…
Descriptors: Eating Disorders, School Health Services, Student Needs, Mental Health
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Alannah McGurgan; Charlotte Emma Wilson – Child Care in Practice, 2025
There are a variety of different psychological interventions used to treat recurrent abdominal pain in childhood. Active components in these interventions are unclear. Parents play an important role when it comes to their children's response to pain and management of pain, and are regularly involved in interventions. Four electronic databases were…
Descriptors: Pain, Children, Adolescents, Intervention
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Victoria Hulks; A. Hoose; C. Croke; A. Hendry – Journal of Museum Education, 2025
Experiencing broad play and interaction opportunities is known to support children's learning and development and engagement with museum collections has the potential to stimulate enriching learning opportunities for even the youngest enquiring minds. Here, we describe the development of Toddler Time; a museum-based early years program developed…
Descriptors: Museums, Toddlers, Interaction, Interpersonal Communication
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Karen M. T. Turner; Matthew R. Sanders – Prevention Science, 2025
Prevention science has now encompassed decades of research exploring risk and protective factors and effective programs for the prevention and treatment of childhood behavioral, emotional, and developmental concerns. This paper shares our experience over the last 40 years as program developers and researchers in responding to contemporary needs…
Descriptors: Parent Education, Evidence Based Practice, Family Programs, Capacity Building
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Clare Maria Nee; Declan Fahie – Child Care in Practice, 2025
This paper examines the challenges service providers encounter when supporting children in Direct Provision in Ireland. It focuses particularly on the organisations--both voluntary and statutory--that are charged with providing support for this vulnerable cohort. Specifically, the paper considers the roadblocks these organisations face helping…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Child Caregivers, Barriers, Advocacy
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Miriam Kuhn; Johanna Higgins – Journal of Early Intervention, 2025
Service coordinators (SCs) in Part C early intervention (EI) programs fulfill critical supportive roles assisting families in accessing and successfully navigating services needed for their infants/toddlers identified with delays or disabilities. However, evidence of effective training for SCs is limited. One state scaled up training in the…
Descriptors: Home Visits, Early Intervention, Coordinators, Infants
Adam Jones – Boston Foundation, 2025
Family child-care programs (FCCs) are a unique and vital part of the Massachusetts child-care and education system. FCC owners tend to serve some of the highest-need children and families in the Commonwealth, yet the owners and assistants who run these programs often take home some of the lowest wages among educators. While much research has been…
Descriptors: Child Care, Family Programs, Child Care Centers, Financial Support
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Scott A. Pattison; Smirla Ramos Montañez; Viviana López Burgos; Gina Svarovsky; María Quijano; Amy Corbett; Catherine Wagner; Diana Contreras – Journal of Pre-College Engineering Education Research, 2025
Existing evidence highlights the significance of family STEM learning experiences during early childhood. However, there is a lack of research specific to early childhood family-based learning in the field of engineering, especially with preschool-age children (three to five years old). To address this gap and inform engineering education programs…
Descriptors: Engineering, Preschool Children, Low Income Groups, English
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Emily Ferrell; Jennifer Marshall; Henrietta Bada; Russell S. Kirby – Journal of Early Intervention, 2025
Neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) is a public health issue that affected more than 2% of live births in Kentucky in 2017. We analyzed data from Kentucky's early intervention (EI) program and the mandatory statewide NAS registry to learn more about how families of children with NAS utilize EI services. Out of 1,113 children in the study, 32% were…
Descriptors: Public Health, Neonates, Early Intervention, State Programs
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Munazza Tahir; Virginie Cobigo – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2025
Background: The current literature has established that prejudice in child protection cases with parents with intellectual disabilities continues to persist. However, complexities of these cases are not well-understood from the perspective of child protection workers. This study aimed to identify the needs of child protection workers and their…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Parents with Disabilities, Intellectual Disability, Child Care
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