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Clive Hedges; Ewan Ingleby; Mervyn Martin – Prism: Casting New Light on Learning, Theory & Practice, 2023
An examination into the origins of rights' discourse and contemporary debates around child labour in developing countries, illustrates some of the problems with the discursive uses that children's rights is put to, and its weakness as a means of addressing issues of social justice. Addressing the discourse around child labour, and how this is…
Descriptors: Childrens Rights, Child Labor, Social Change, Social Problems
Yakar, Halide Gamze Ince – Journal of Education and Training Studies, 2018
Seeking the solution to the problems of contemporary man and approaching the social events through mythology is the other way to use the healing power of literature education. Having served as a guide for people in the past, mythology is the mirror of the past, which indicates the reasons and possible results of the events that have experienced…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Child Development, Asian History, Literature Appreciation
Martin, Christopher – Democracy & Education, 2019
Erickson and Thompson articulate and defend reasonableness as an important civic educational aim for early childhood education. In this response, I argue that further clarity regarding the nature and scope of "reasonableness" as an educational concept or idea is needed. Is such a concept fundamentally political, or does it capture a…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Democracy, Early Childhood Education, Moral Values
Erickson, Joy D.; Thompson, Winston C. – Democracy & Education, 2019
Traits of reasonableness are necessary characteristics of successfully engaged citizens within pluralistic liberal democratic societies. Given the evident unlikelihood of the spontaneous development of these critical characteristics, pedagogical effort ought to be exerted towards ensuring that this goal is realized. In what follows, we argue that…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Democracy, Early Childhood Education, Moral Values
Maclear, Kyo – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2018
Literary scholar Clare Bradford gives voice to a pervasive anxiety that arises when a child audience meets unsettling ecological narratives. She remarks: "to explain to young children that pygmy hippos are under serious threat or that elephants are still being killed for their tusks or that wilderness areas are disappearing is to construct a…
Descriptors: Children, Climate, Ecology, Conservation (Environment)
Boston, Jonathan – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2014
A combination of policy changes and wider socio-economic trends led to a dramatic increase in child poverty in New Zealand during the late 1980s and early 1990s. Higher rates of child poverty have now become embedded in the system and show little sign of resolving themselves. For a country which once took pride in being comparatively egalitarian…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Poverty, Children, Public Policy
Supplee, Lauren H.; Metz, Allison – Society for Research in Child Development, 2014
Despite a robust body of evidence of effectiveness of social programs, few evidence-based programs have been scaled for population-level improvement in social problems. Since 2010 the federal government has invested in evidence-based social policy by supporting a number of new evidence-based programs and grant initiatives. These initiatives…
Descriptors: Public Policy, Social Problems, Evidence Based Practice, Intervention
Simpson, Donald – International Journal of Early Years Education, 2013
Within developed countries child poverty is a social problem with significant negative effects. With a backdrop of austerity, the UK's first child poverty strategy was released in 2011. Pervaded by neo-liberal ideology this strategy identifies preschool services as key to remediating the negative effects of child poverty on children and families…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Developed Nations, Foreign Countries, Neoliberalism
Cummings, E. Mark; Schatz, Julie N. – Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review, 2012
The social problem posed by family conflict to the physical and psychological health and well-being of children, parents, and underlying family relationships is a cause for concern. Inter-parental and parent-child conflict are linked with children's behavioral, emotional, social, academic, and health problems, with children's risk particularly…
Descriptors: Evidence, Social Problems, Security (Psychology), Prevention
Beaudet, Arthur L. – Child Development, 2013
Chromosomal microarray analysis (CMA) has emerged as a powerful new tool to identify genomic abnormalities associated with a wide range of developmental disabilities including congenital malformations, cognitive impairment, and behavioral abnormalities. CMA includes array comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) and single nucleotide polymorphism…
Descriptors: Genetics, Genetic Disorders, Developmental Disabilities, Identification
Shonkoff, Jack P.; Bales, Susan Nall – Child Development, 2011
Science has an important role to play in advising policymakers on crafting effective responses to social problems that affect the development of children. This article describes lessons learned from a multiyear, working collaboration among neuroscientists, developmental psychologists, pediatricians, economists, and communications researchers who…
Descriptors: Social Problems, Psychologists, Scientific Concepts, Developmental Psychology
Friedman-Krauss, Allison; Barnett, W. Steven – National Institute for Early Education Research, 2013
The potential health benefits of early childhood education programs are quite large, especially for children living in poverty. In this report, authors Allison Friedman-Krauss and Steve Barnett set out the evidence regarding the short and long term health benefits to children from early childhood education programs, identify the features of…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Preschool Education, Child Health, Health Promotion
Manuel, Tiffany – New Directions for Youth Development, 2009
This article details the experimental research on frame effects that provides quantitative evidence that some types of frames have a greater ability to move and affect policy support than others. This method is particularly useful in showing the magnitude by which exposure to alternative ways of thinking about social issues alters the public's…
Descriptors: Social Science Research, Cognitive Structures, Statistical Data, Evidence
Lyne, Isaac – Education, Knowledge & Economy: A Journal for Education and Social Enterprise, 2008
Social enterprise is being increasingly encouraged as a solution to social problems concerning social exclusion, child development and family welfare within both developed and developing countries. This article considers these policy contexts and two case studies of social enterprises that provide children's services in the United Kingdom and…
Descriptors: Social Problems, Foreign Countries, Social Isolation, Comparative Analysis
Peer reviewedMoore, Kristin A.; Driscoll, Anne K. – Future of Children, 1997
Presents results of a study using national survey data that indicates that maternal employment in families that had previously received welfare does not hurt children's social or cognitive development and may improve their situations. Outcomes were better for those whose mothers earned higher wages. (SLD)
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Welfare, Children, Employment Patterns
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