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Joice, Lois Sara, I; Sivakami, B. – Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies, 2021
Women make significant decisions during desperate situations and even choose to do odd jobs to care for their families. Particularly Indian women put an end to their true identity to care for their children. India is known for its varied language and cultural practices. Different languages are spoken across the country, their culture differs from…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Cultural Differences, Sexuality
Haddad, Cynthia R.; Nadworny, John – Brookes Publishing Company, 2022
How can families of children with disabilities plan for lasting financial security at every stage of life? Find clear answers in "The Special Needs Planning Guide," a step-by-step companion for parents as they progress through the complexities of planning for the future of their family and their child. Written by two financial planning…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Children, Parents, Long Range Planning
May Helena Plumb – Online Submission, 2025
Approximately one in five undergraduate students, including around a quarter of first-generation students, are parents. These learners are highly motivated in their pursuit of postsecondary education, but face many challenges including time poverty, financial insecurity, and a low sense of belonging with their institution. To better understand the…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Parents, Barriers, Student Responsibility
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Yalda M. Kaveh; Seda Ozbek-Damar; Sara Rodríguez-Martínez; Valencia Clement; Cory Buckband; Ashley R. Coughlin – American Educational Research Journal, 2025
Grounded in the frameworks of motherwork, linguistic motherwork, and Family Language Policy, this critical ethnographic study examined how a group of mothers supported their children's linguistic and educational development amid shifting school conditions during the COVID-19 pandemic. Although online learning increased their access and positioned…
Descriptors: Mothers, Bilingual Education, Kindergarten, Parent Role
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Ofek-Geva, Ella; Vinker-Shuster, Michal; Yeshayahu, Yonatan; Fortus, David – Research in Science Education, 2023
With the transition to distance-learning at the beginning of the COVID-19 outbreak, several countries required parents and their children to remain at home, under lockdown. Many parents found themselves taking on additional responsibilities regarding their children's education. However, children do not always interpret their parents' intentions as…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Distance Education, Parent Child Relationship
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Holmes, Sarah E.; Nikiforidou, Zoi – Higher Education Quarterly, 2023
Anecdotal reports of student parents' challenges during the COVID-19 pandemic prompted this explorative study; investigating the lived experiences of UK student parents and the provision of Higher Education support. Data was derived from 91 online surveys, 20 follow-up interviews, and analysis of 100 university websites. This occurred during the…
Descriptors: College Students, Parents, Parent Role, Student Role
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Van der Mescht, Pauli; Geertsema, Salome; le Roux, Mia; Graham, Marien A.; Johnson, Ensa – South African Journal of Childhood Education, 2023
Background: Physical, financial, social and emotional demands placed on caregivers caring for their children with severe intellectual disabilities (CWSID) could lead to high levels of burden. Aim: This study aimed to evaluate the potential level of burden experienced by South African caregivers and aimed to identify possible contributing risk…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Child Rearing, Severe Intellectual Disability, Caregiver Role
Kunze, Mark – ProQuest LLC, 2021
This is a qualitative study that explored the experience of stress in parents during graduate school and examined how the challenges of balancing parental obligations with academic responsibilities impacted the parent graduate student's ability to satisfactorily meet the demands of the parent and graduate student identities. Eight participants who…
Descriptors: Parents, Graduate Students, Barriers, Parent Responsibility
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Collingwood, Patricia; Mazerolle, Lorraine – Asia-Pacific Education Researcher, 2022
This paper provides an analysis of Australia's legal provisions and policies regarding truancy. We examine how low frequency truants feature in Australia's truancy law and policy and highlight similarities and differences in the cultural-legal context between Australian states and territories. Similarities include requirements to attend school…
Descriptors: Parent Responsibility, Truancy, Federal Legislation, Educational Legislation
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Foley, Sarah; Devine, Rory T.; Hughes, Claire – Developmental Psychology, 2023
This study examined the development of caregiver mind-mindedness--defined as the propensity to see one's child as an agent with an independent mind--across the first 1,000 days of life. At four timepoints (i.e., third trimester of pregnancy, 4, 14, and 24 months postpartum), 384 first-time mothers (M[subscript age] = 32.55, SD = 3.63 years) and…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Mothers, Fathers, Infants
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Klein, Lauren M.; Johnson, Sara B.; Prichett, Laura; Abel, Yolanda; Connor, Katherine; Jones, Vanya C. – Journal of School Health, 2023
Background: School-based health centers (SBHCs) fill critical pediatric health care access gaps but typically require parental consent for enrollment. Families' responses to SBHC consent form outreach efforts may reflect broader school engagement. This study investigated whether SBHC consent form return predicted subsequent chronic absenteeism and…
Descriptors: School Health Services, Elementary School Students, Middle School Students, Parent Participation
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B. W. Masondo; N. P. M. Mabaso – Interchange: A Quarterly Review of Education, 2025
Almost two decades later since the promulgation of the White Paper 6 on inclusive education policy in South Africa, the nation has yet to attain what the policy provided as practical inclusion guidelines within the education fraternity. Parental involvement is one of the guidelines that continue to be highlighted as an area of development in the…
Descriptors: Severe Intellectual Disability, Students with Disabilities, Partnerships in Education, Inclusion
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Garrard, Graeme – History of Education, 2021
Rousseau is among the most influential and important public moralists of the eighteenth century. His popular treatise on education, Emile, argues that parents should ideally rear their own children. It is small wonder, therefore, that his decision to place his own children in a foundling hospital has exposed Rousseau to the charge of hypocrisy and…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Educational Philosophy, Educational History, Child Rearing
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Cancian, Maria; Meyer, Daniel R.; Wood, Robert G. – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2022
Most children in the United States will spend at least part of their childhood living apart from one of their parents; the child support system is designed to ensure that they nonetheless receive financial support. While the system is largely effective when noncustodial parents have substantial regular earnings, many noncustodial parents,…
Descriptors: Children, Financial Support, Legal Responsibility, Compliance (Legal)
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Vereijken, Frances R.; Giesbers, Sanne A. H.; Jahoda, Andrew; Embregts, Petri J. C. M. – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2022
Background: At the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, some parents in the Netherlands decided to bring their offspring with intellectual disabilities, who normally live in residential care, home. The present study explored why the mothers decided to bring their offspring home. Method: Interviews were carried out with seven mothers of adults with…
Descriptors: Mothers, Motivation, Adults, Intellectual Disability
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