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Bugra Akay; Mehmet Ceylan; Sinan Ayan; Hakan Dündar; Atilla Altun – International Electronic Journal of Elementary Education, 2025
The concept of play has long been recognized as a fundamental aspect of child development because it promotes learning and cognitive development, and is useful for social skills and motivation. Thus, it has attracted the attention of researchers in many scientific fields such as maths, physical education, artificial intelligence and…
Descriptors: Children, Play, Research, Games
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Natalia Kucirkova; Marta Ciesielska – Reading Psychology, 2025
Familiarity is a crucial element in narrative fiction reading for children, playing a significant role in social learning from storybooks. Nevertheless, distinct studies greatly vary in their interpretation of what renders a storybook familiar to a child, researchers' methods for measuring familiarity, and how researchers link familiarity to…
Descriptors: Children, Books, Childrens Literature, Novels
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Sylvia H. M. Wong; Emily Zhang; Cindy H. Liu; Stephen Chen – Social Development, 2024
Compared to studies of ethnic identity development in adolescence, fewer investigations have examined the development of ethnic identity during middle childhood, a developmental period of dynamic social and cognitive changes that have direct implications for social identity and group membership. Moreover, research on the developmental processes of…
Descriptors: Chinese Americans, Immigrants, Ethnicity, Socialization
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Sylvia Perry; Deborah J. Wu; Jamie L. Abaied; Allison L. Skinner-Dorkenoo; Sirenia Sanchez; Sara F. Waters; Adilene Osnaya – Developmental Psychology, 2024
Although parent-child conversations about race are recommended to curb White U.S. children's racial biases, little work has tested their influence. We designed a guided racism discussion task for U.S. White parents and their 8-12-year-old White children. We explored whether children's and parents' (a) pro-White implicit biases changed pre to…
Descriptors: Socialization, Whites, Racism, Parent Child Relationship
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Fong, Frankie T. K.; Nielsen, Mark; Corriveau, Kathleen H. – Infant and Child Development, 2023
Empirical findings and theorizations of both imitation and selective trust offer different views on and interpretations of children's social learning mechanisms. The imitation literature provides ample documentation of children's behavioural patterns in the acquisition of socially appropriate norms and practices. The selective trust literature…
Descriptors: Imitation, Trust (Psychology), Cognitive Processes, Children
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Lalli, Gurpinder Singh – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2022
This paper presents a theoretically influenced discussion of methodological issues in carrying out ethnographic work at "Peartree Academy." Food is central to our sense of identity. It draws on notions of the school "restaurant" and presents an account of the complexities surrounding the disorderliness of fieldwork in…
Descriptors: Food, Self Concept, Dining Facilities, Socialization
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Yaqing Chen; Lan Ni – Language Policy, 2024
As the first study addressing family language policy (FLP) in d/Deaf-parented families in China, the current research explores language ideologies, practices and management held by different members within the families. Children of d/Deaf adults (Codas) form an unusual bimodal bilingual group, and the study concerning this group prompts us to…
Descriptors: Deafness, Parents, Chinese, Language Usage
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Raval, Vaishali V. – Child Development Perspectives, 2023
As in other fields of developmental science, emotion socialization research in Asia, where nearly 60% of the world's population lives, has emerged on the margins. Contextualizing this marginalization within colonial foundations of our science, in this article, I discuss the historic dominance of the Global North frameworks of emotion…
Descriptors: Emotional Development, Socialization, Cultural Influences, Decolonization
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Saglietti, Marzia; Zucchermaglio, Cristina – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2022
This paper analyzes the impact of adults' interactive moves and strategies on children's participation and agency at dinnertime in two Italian residential care facilities, one of the most widely used alternative care life-context for children and youth coming from vulnerable families. Participants are 14 children and 11 educators living in two…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Residential Care, Children, Participation
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Sherif Adel Gaber – Journal of Education and e-Learning Research, 2024
Augmented reality (AR) has been shown to have a positive impact on children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) because it can effectively simulate the real environment through interactive experiences created by the integration of digital elements with the outside world. This research aimed to verify the effectiveness of a training program based…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Simulated Environment, Behavior Modification, Educational Technology
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Deepika Jain; Kawaljit Singh Multani; Anjali Dodiya; Urva Benani; Anand Iyer – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2025
Adaptive behavior is paramount for independent living and is varyingly impaired in different neurodevelopmental disorders. This study aimed to investigate differences in adaptive behavior between children with autism spectrum disorder and social communication disorder, two conditions characterized by deficits in social communication. Data from 232…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Children, Communication Disorders, Interpersonal Communication
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Yue Liang; Nan Zhou; Hongjian Cao; Jonathan R. H. Tudge; Ruoyue Qin; Qinglu Wu – Social Development, 2025
Extant research on parents' understanding of gratitude and the socialization of gratitude in children has primarily been conducted in Western cultural contexts. To address this gap, this interview-based qualitative study explored the perspectives of 50 Chinese parents (25 mothers and 25 fathers) regarding their understanding of gratitude, their…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Parent Attitudes, Knowledge Level, Socialization
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Curenton, Stephanie M.; Harris, Keshia; Rochester, Shana E.; Sims, Jacqueline; Ibekwe-Okafor, Nneka – Child Development Perspectives, 2022
Racial literacy as defined by Stevenson (2014) is an important cultural resistance strategy (e.g., positive coping strategy) for Black children and youth because it gives them the skills needed to survive in a racist society. Stevenson's work, along with the work of several of his colleagues, focuses on adolescents and those in middle childhood,…
Descriptors: Racial Attitudes, Racial Bias, Literacy, Story Reading
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Jones, Phil – Pastoral Care in Education, 2022
The article will consider the challenges that pastoral care in education faces to ensure that it continues to make a positive contribution to the learning experience of children and young people living in the 21st century. It will discuss how in recent years the purpose of education has been questioned by writers and the implications this may have…
Descriptors: Clergy, Counseling, Academic Achievement, Individual Development
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Lindsey C. Partington; Meital Mashash; Paul D. Hastings – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2025
The COVID-19 pandemic and associated "lockdown" measures spurred adverse employment changes and economic insecurity in U.S. families. Paradoxically, there was a surge in prosocial behavior. Chronically lower socioeconomic status has been associated with adults' greater prosociality, a counterintuitive phenomenon attributed to heightened…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Stress Variables, Prosocial Behavior
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