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Alicia K. Jones; Shalini Gautam; Jonathan Redshaw – Child Development, 2025
Counterfactual emotions such as regret may aid future decision-making by encouraging people to focus on controllable features of personal past events. However, it remains unclear when children begin to preferentially focus on controllable features of such events. Across two studies, Australian 4-9-year-olds (N = 336, 168 females; data collected…
Descriptors: Childrens Attitudes, Psychological Patterns, Decision Making, Emotional Response
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Price, Gwendolyn F.; Ogren, Marissa; Sandhofer, Catherine M. – Developmental Psychology, 2022
The ability to categorize emotions has long-term implications for children's social and emotional development. Therefore, identifying factors that influence early emotion categorization is of great importance. Yet, whether and how language impacts emotion category development is still widely debated. The present study aimed to assess how labels…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Labeling (of Persons), Classification, Preschool Children
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Ying Li; Talia Q. Halleck; Laura Evans; Paras Bhagwat Bassuk; Leiana Paz; Ö. Ece Demir-Lira – Developmental Science, 2024
In this study, we aimed to determine the role of parental praise and child affect in the neural processes underlying parent-child interactions, utilizing functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) hyperscanning. We characterized the dynamic changes in interpersonal neural synchrony (INS) between parents and children (4-6 years old, n = 40…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Psychological Patterns, Affective Behavior, Child Behavior
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Melike Acar; Ozce Sivis; Vincent H. Sienkiewicz – European Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2024
This study examined children's emotion attributions and moral judgements to hypothetical procedural justice outcomes when the candidates were equal in merit but different in need. Children (7 to 11 years old, N = 88) were presented with four vignettes depicting resource-rich and resource-poor candidates losing educational materials and…
Descriptors: Social Class, Social Differences, Child Development, Cognitive Development
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Reyhan Aslan; Nilüfer Güler – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2025
Purpose: This study aims to explore how Global Englishes (GE)-oriented coursework and study abroad (SA) experiences influence pre-service English language teachers' (PELTs) awareness, emotional engagement and readiness to implement GE-informed practices in their future classrooms. Design/methodology/approach: Using a mixed-methods design, the…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Preservice Teachers, English (Second Language), Second Language Instruction
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Iordanou, Christiana; Mattock, Karen – Education 3-13, 2022
Maurice Sendak's picture book Where the "Wild Things Are" was investigated as a means of emotion recognition in preschool children. Sixty-six children and 60 adults participated in two tasks. The first was a book task, requiring identification of emotions in three target pictures, in three conditions. The visual condition presented the…
Descriptors: Picture Books, Emotional Response, Preschool Children, Adults
Syrine A. Reese-Gaines – ProQuest LLC, 2022
In 1968, Paul Freire brought to the world, "Pedagogy of the Oppressed." The way he categorized "the haves and have nots" still resonates with the wealth disparity in the United States. The need to create a level of equity in education by providing equal access was fundamental in his philosophy (Freire, 1968). Similarly,…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Mental Health, Psychological Patterns, Cognitive Development
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Kumar, A. Ananda; Chellamani, K. – Shanlax International Journal of Education, 2020
The meaningful learning process of an individual is understood separately with his emotional aspect or cognitive aspect. Cognition and emotions are interrelated, and hence in the learning process it requires functions of both the domains. Cognition can be a basis for emotion and the emotional process can have cognitive outcome. Therefore the aim…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Emotional Response, Teaching Methods, Preservice Teachers
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Roberson, Sam – Education, 2017
Thinking and learning are corresponding and interdependent processes in every classroom. To improve learning, teachers must be open to new ideas, particularly ideas that locate conditions for maximum learning. This paper presents four overlooked but critical ideas that identify a common area, a GAP experience within which maximum learning is…
Descriptors: Learning Strategies, Problem Solving, Ability, Cognitive Development
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Djambazova-Popordanoska, Snezhana – Educational Review, 2016
Effective regulation of both positive and negative emotions plays a pivotal role in young children's emotional and cognitive development and later academic achievement. A compelling body of evidence has highlighted the symbiotic relationship between emotion regulation competencies and young children's emotional health, in particular their mood and…
Descriptors: Self Control, Academic Achievement, Emotional Response, Emotional Development
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Mondloch, Catherine J.; Horner, Matthew; Mian, Jasmine – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2013
Adults' and 8-year-old children's perception of emotional faces is disrupted when faces are presented in the context of incongruent body postures (e.g., when a sad face is displayed on a fearful body) if the two emotions are highly similar (e.g., sad/fear) but not if they are highly dissimilar (e.g., sad/happy). The current research investigated…
Descriptors: Fear, Cognitive Development, Human Posture, Children
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Kim, Minkang – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2013
Teachers are expected to act ethically and provide moral role models in performing their duties, even though teacher education has often relegated the cultivation of teachers' ethical awareness and moral development to the margins. When it is addressed, the main theoretical assumptions have relied heavily on the cognitivist developmental theories…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Teacher Attitudes, Ethics, Moral Development
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Freitag, Claudia; Schwarzer, Gudrun – Cognitive Development, 2011
Three experiments examined 3- and 5-year-olds' recognition of faces in constant and varied emotional expressions. Children were asked to identify repeatedly presented target faces, distinguishing them from distractor faces, during an immediate recognition test and during delayed assessments after 10 min and one week. Emotional facial expression…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Nonverbal Communication, Psychological Patterns, Young Children
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Muris, Peter; Mayer, Birgit; Freher, Nancy Kramer; Duncan, Sylvana; van den Hout, Annemiek – Child Psychiatry and Human Development, 2010
The present study examined age-related patterns in children's anxiety-related interpretations and internal attributions of physical symptoms. A large sample of 388 children aged between 4 and 13 years completed a vignette paradigm during which they had to explain the emotional response of the main character who experienced anxiety-related physical…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Anxiety, Cognitive Development, Symptoms (Individual Disorders)
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Williams, Brenda – Clearing House: A Journal of Educational Strategies, Issues and Ideas, 2013
Middle school students from military families face unique challenges, especially when their parents are deployed. Among the challenges they experience are frequent relocations; issues that affect academic achievement; uncertainty; and changes in roles, responsibilities, and relationships at home. Reunification involves issues of the returning…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Student Needs, Military Personnel, Early Adolescents
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