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Peer reviewedBradley, Robert H.; Caldwell, Bettye M. – Child Development, 1981
Results indicate that the Home Observation for Measurement of the Environment (HOME) Inventory might be useful for screening Black children in order to identify those at risk for school failure. (Author/RH)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Black Youth, Elementary School Students, Environmental Influences
Peer reviewedHolmberg, Margaret C. – Child Development, 1980
The dyadic controls of the social interchange patterns of 12- to 42-month-olds (N=27) with their different social partners is the focus of this study. (Author/MP)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Behavior Patterns, Day Care, Early Childhood Education
Peer reviewedBornstein, Marc H.; Haynes, O. Maurice – Child Development, 1998
Examined relations among measures of child language derived from observations of 20-month-olds' speech with mothers, experimenter assessments, and maternal reports. Found that structural equation modeling supported strong relations among the three sources, the loading of multiple measures on a single latent construct of vocabulary competence, and…
Descriptors: Construct Validity, Intelligence Quotient, Intelligence Tests, Mother Attitudes
Peer reviewedHarwood, Robin L.; Schoelmerich, Axel; Schulze, Pamela A.; Gonzalez, Zenaida – Child Development, 1999
Examined cultural patterning in situational variability in mother-infant interactions among middle-class Anglo and Puerto Rican mothers and 12- to 15-month-old firstborns. Found that the emphasized socialization goals and childrearing strategies were consonant with individualistic orientations for Anglo mothers and sociocentric orientations for…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Child Rearing, Cultural Differences, Hispanic Americans
Peer reviewedDunn, Judy; Munn, Penny – Child Development, 1985
Two-year-old children's participation in family interaction was examined in two longitudinal observational studies of family conflict that focused on three developmental issues: children's understanding of the feelings and intentions of other family members, their understanding of social rules within the family, and the relation of emotional…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Childhood Attitudes, Conflict, Early Childhood Education
Peer reviewedHarkness, Sara; Super, Charles M. – Child Development, 1985
Reveals no gender segregation in peer groups until age six, through observations of 152 rural Kenyan children, 18 months to nine years of age. Developmental trends in gender segregation of children's peers are correlated with systematic changes in their environments. (Author/AS)
Descriptors: Cultural Influences, Developmental Stages, Environmental Influences, Expectation
Peer reviewedDunn, Judy; Kendrick, Carol – Child Development, 1981
Individual differences in the social behavior of young siblings were studied in 40 sibling pairs observed at home, when the second child was 8 months old and 14 months old. Differences between same-sex and different-sex sibling pairs were marked by the second observation. More positive social behavior characterized same-sex pairs; more negative…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Family (Sociological Unit), Foreign Countries, Individual Differences
Multiple Sources of Data on Social Behavior and Social Status in the School: A Cross-Age Comparison.
Peer reviewedCoie, John D.; Dodge, Kenneth A. – Child Development, 1988
Results generated by peers, teachers, and unbiased observers converged in some behavioral domains and diverged in others. All three sources provided similar pictures of the relation between aggression and status, although observations of third grade boys did not yield sufficient frequencies of aggression to allow meaningful conclusions. (RH)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Aggression, Check Lists, Child Neglect
Peer reviewedNucci, Larry P.; Nucci, Maria Santiago – Child Development, 1982
Observations were made in 10 schools at the second-, fifth-, and seventh-grade levels of the forms of responses teachers and children provided to moral and social conventional transgressions. It was found that the responses of both teachers and children to social conventional events differed from their responses to moral events. (Author/RH)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Interviews
Peer reviewedAragona, John A.; Eyberg, Sheila M. – Child Development, 1981
Evaluated differences among neglectful, behavior-problem, and normal mothers in their reports of child behavior problems and observed verbal behavior with children in situations requiring differing degrees of maternal control. Relative to normal mothers, behavior-problem mothers were most negative and were as controlling as neglectful mothers…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Child Neglect, Children, Comparative Analysis
Tudge, Jonathan R. H.; Doucet, Fabienne; Odero, Dolphine; Sperb, Tania M.; Piccinini, Cesar A.; Lopes, Rita S. – Child Development, 2006
A powerful means to understand young children's normative development in context is to examine their everyday activities. The daily activities of 79 children (3 years old) were observed, for 20 hr each, in their usual settings. Children were selected from 4 cultural groups: European American and African American (Greensboro, United States), Luo…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Young Children, Social Development, Observation
Peer reviewedLeMare, Lucy J.; Rubin, Kenneth H. – Child Development, 1987
Primary aim: to test Edelstein, Keller, and Wahlen's model of sequential operations in perspective taking on 93 children in the third grade and 69 children in kindergarten, who were tested again when in the first grade. Secondary aim: to examine the relationship between social experience and perspective taking. (Author/BN)
Descriptors: Classroom Observation Techniques, Elementary School Students, Grade 1, Grade 3
Peer reviewedVlietstra, Alice G. – Child Development, 1981
Observations indicated that, in contrast to children attending preschool half-days, preschool children attending full-days spent significantly more time on tasks directed and guided by teachers, interacted more positively with peers, and engaged in more physical activity. Teachers rated full-time students, especially boys, as more aggressive and…
Descriptors: Aggression, Classroom Observation Techniques, Comparative Analysis, Peer Relationship
Peer reviewedVaughn, Brian E.; Waters, Everett – Child Development, 1990
Infants' home-based Q-sort scores of security, dependency, and sociability were compared to laboratory Strange Situation classifications of secure, anxious-resistant, and anxious-avoidant. Secure classification was associated with Q-sort security and sociability, but not dependency. (BC)
Descriptors: Anxiety, Attachment Behavior, Dependency (Personality), Exploratory Behavior
Peer reviewedDeater-Deckard, Kirby – Child Development, 2000
Examined environmental and gene-environment processes linking parenting (affect, control, responsiveness) and preschoolers' behavioral adjustment difficulties (noncompliance, conduct problems). Found that estimates of shared environmental variance and mediation were greatest for observational data, and estimates of child genetic variance and…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Behavior Problems, Child Behavior, Compliance (Psychology)

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