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Evans, Brad – Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, 2022
This paper addresses the pedagogical challenges when dealing with the education of violence for young children. Drawing upon personal teaching experience and wider critical engagements, it makes the case for a broader understanding of critical interventions that recognizes the political importance of the arts and humanities. Key here is to account…
Descriptors: Violence, Teaching Methods, Children, Early Adolescents
Fad, Kathleen McConnell; Campos, David – Ancora Publishing, 2021
"Lonely Kids in a Connected World: What Teachers Can Do" offers a comprehensive look at childhood loneliness and provides classroom teachers and specialized school professionals a toolkit of research-based intervention strategies. Because children who experience loneliness often feel alone, isolated, disconnected, and alienated, early…
Descriptors: Children, Social Isolation, Alienation, Early Intervention
Varga, Bretton A., Ed.; Monreal, Timothy, Ed.; Christ, Rebecca C., Ed. – Teachers College Press, 2023
Posthumanism has seen a surge across the humanities and offers a unique perspective, seeking to illuminate the role that more-than-human actors (e.g., affect, artifacts, objects, flora, fauna, other materials) play in the human experience . This book challenges the field of social studies education to think differently about the precarious status…
Descriptors: Humanism, World Views, Social Change, Social Studies
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Stevenson, Sandra Maria – Montessori Life: A Publication of the American Montessori Society, 2020
As an assistant editor in the Photography department at the New York Times, the author manages a team of seven visual editors who assign photographers to stories all over the globe. Recently, one of her team members approached her to let her know that the amount of violence he was subjected to was having an effect on his mental state. It made the…
Descriptors: Trauma, Violence, Coping, Montessori Schools
Harding, Blake – Online Submission, 2017
In "The Field Guide to ADHD: What They Don't Want You to Know," Harding confronts with unusual candor and painstaking effort one of the most alarming and perilous crises of our time: ADHD. In confronting this crisis, Harding forces us to reconsider the assumptions underlying ADHD and how we think about medical diagnoses, disability,…
Descriptors: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, Children, Adolescents, Adults
Swanson, Sarah – Online Submission, 2017
The purpose of this study is to measure the effects of fostering resilience through art education for students with severe physical disabilities ages 7-21. Recent trends of fostering resilience through art education were explored. Current attitudes towards art education for severely disables individuals were also explored. Of particular interest…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Art Education, Teaching Methods, Severe Disabilities
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Mercieca, Daniela; Mercieca, Duncan P. – Ethics and Education, 2014
This paper draws upon Deleuze and Guattari's ideas to suggest a different kind of reading of a narrative of a mother of a child with severe disability, and thus a different kind of ethical response to them. This reading gives readers the possibility of opening up experiences of parents and children with disability, rather than…
Descriptors: Personal Narratives, Mothers, Children, Cerebral Palsy
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Otto, Stacy – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2013
In this article, the author offers Manet's last paintings as metaphors for a bygone, psychically healthy conception of loss and mourning, what is called the pre-Freudian, Victorian notion of loss (Otto 2008), which contrasts with the post-Freudian, Modern notion of loss and mourning (Otto 2008). Otto argues this liminal, transitional moment…
Descriptors: Painting (Visual Arts), Grief, Social Attitudes, Children
Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University, 2016
Adults need certain capabilities to get and keep a job, provide responsive care for children, manage a household, and contribute productively to the community. When these skills have not developed as they should, or are compromised by the stresses of poverty or other ongoing adversity, our communities pay the price. But where do these capabilities…
Descriptors: Adults, Skill Development, Job Skills, Parenting Skills
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Serekoane, Motsaathebe; Sharp, Carla; Skinner, Donald; Marais, Lochner – Journal of Ethnographic & Qualitative Research, 2014
Working in unfamiliar contexts and often alone, fieldworkers may face challenges for which their training and previous experience has not prepared them. While there is literature about the technical, ethical and moral aspects of fieldwork, there is little focusing on fieldworkers' actual experiences. Additionally, there is little constructive…
Descriptors: Coping, Deception, Emotional Response, Field Studies
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Medley, Michael – TESOL Journal, 2012
Because English language teachers should take into account the social-psychological situation of the students they teach, they must be sensitive to the effects of traumatic stress among learners. Refugee and immigrant children are frequently survivors of trauma, along with their peers in crisis-torn English as a foreign language settings around…
Descriptors: Teacher Role, Language Arts, Language Teachers, English (Second Language)
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Crawford, Patricia A.; Roberts, Sherron Killingsworth – Childhood Education, 2009
At the height of the Vietnam War, Down by the Riverside was transformed from a traditional folk song to a popular anti-war anthem. The raucous and repetitive chorus, "I ain't gonna study war no more ...," became a rallying cry for those who wanted nothing to do with the war and the pain and controversy that surrounded it. Although it seems…
Descriptors: Picture Books, War, Foreign Countries, Social Responsibility
Brown, Nicole E. – ProQuest LLC, 2010
Current information pertaining to families with a child diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorders indicates a need for parent interventions that target social skills training, culturally responsive treatments for ethnic minorities, and stress and coping. In response to these needs, a culturally responsive program was designed to teach parents of…
Descriptors: Autism, Parent Education, Skill Development, Ethnic Diversity
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Smilan, Cathy – Childhood Education, 2009
Natural disasters are among the numerous events known to have a significant probability of producing trauma in school-age children, given the critical mental, physical, social, and emotional development that occurs during childhood. Studies involving children who have experienced natural disasters point to a significant increase in psychological…
Descriptors: Natural Disasters, Learning Activities, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Children
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Essa, Eva L.; Murray, Colleen I. – Young Children, 1994
Explains how young children's understanding of death develops and how they react emotionally to death. Offers practical suggestions for discussing death with children and helping them cope with the death of someone they know. Includes a list of books for teachers and children on the subject. (MDM)
Descriptors: Bibliographies, Childhood Attitudes, Children, Coping
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