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Sautter, Rachael A.; LeBlanc, Linda A.; Gillett, Jill N. – Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders, 2008
Stimulus properties of toys may impact the type and amount of play observed between children with autism and their playmates. Six children with autism and their siblings participated in an evaluation of toy characteristics on type of play, problem behavior, social initiations, and responses to social initiations. Separate free operant preference…
Descriptors: Siblings, Play, Autism, Toys
Percy, Andrew – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2008
This article presents a re-conceptualization of moderate adolescent drug use. It is argued that experimentation with alcohol and other drugs during the teenage years may play an important role in the development of regulatory competency in relation to drug consumption in adulthood. When such regulatory skills fail to emerge in young people, during…
Descriptors: Drug Use, Substance Abuse, Self Control, Adolescents
Adolph, Karen E.; Robinson, Scott R.; Young, Jesse W.; Gill-Alvarez, Felix – Psychological Review, 2008
Developmental trajectories provide the empirical foundation for theories about change processes during development. However, the ability to distinguish among alternative trajectories depends on how frequently observations are sampled. This study used real behavioral data, with real patterns of variability, to examine the effects of sampling at…
Descriptors: Intervals, Child Development, Sampling, Infant Behavior
Hill, Heather D.; Morris, Pamela – Developmental Psychology, 2008
The authors examined the effects of welfare programs that increased maternal employment and family income on the development of very young children using data from 5 random-assignment experiments. The children were 6 months to 3 years old when their mothers entered the programs; cognitive and behavioral outcomes were measured 2-5 years later.…
Descriptors: Age, Family Income, Social Behavior, Academic Achievement
Wilcox, Teresa; Woods, Rebecca; Chapa, Catherine – Cognitive Psychology, 2008
There is evidence for developmental hierarchies in the type of information to which infants attend when reasoning about objects. Investigators have questioned the origin of these hierarchies and how infants come to identify new sources of information when reasoning about objects. The goal of the present experiments was to shed light on this debate…
Descriptors: Infants, Cognitive Development, Attention, Color
Kannass, Kathleen N.; Oakes, Lisa M. – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2008
We investigated longitudinally the development of attention in two free-play tasks and the relation between attention in those tasks and language ability in toddlerhood. We observed developmental differences in attention from 9 and 31 months both as children investigated a single object and as they investigated multiple objects. Attention in these…
Descriptors: Infants, Language Aptitude, Familiarity, Attention
Williams, Kristie; Lent, Jonathan – Journal of Creativity in Mental Health, 2008
This article describes scrapbooking in the context of bereavement counseling. For the purposes of this article, scrapbooking combines many different types of art-related therapy interventions into one concrete format to utilize in counseling with children who are working to overcome grief or trauma related to the loss of a parent. A case…
Descriptors: Grief, Coping, Stress Management, Children
Mendes, Natacha; Rakoczy, Hannes; Call, Josep – Cognition, 2008
Developmental research suggests that whereas very young infants individuate objects purely on spatiotemporal grounds, from (at latest) around 1 year of age children are capable of individuating objects according to the kind they belong to and the properties they instantiate. As the latter ability has been found to correlate with language, some…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Infants, Primatology, Developmental Stages
McHenry, Jolie D.; Buerk, Kathy J. – Young Children, 2008
Children observe, listen, feel, taste, and take apart while exploring everything in their environment. Teachers can cultivate nature investigations with very young children by offering infants natural objects they can explore and investigate. When adults introduce nature in the earliest stages of development, children will be open to new ideas and…
Descriptors: Play, Investigations, Infants, Physical Environment
Eaves, Lindon J.; Silberg, Judy L. – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2008
Background: If the adaptive significance of specific fears changes with age, the genetic contribution to individual differences may be lowest at the age of greatest salience. The roles of genes and environment in the developmental-genetic trajectory of five common childhood fears are explored in 1094 like-sex pairs of male and female monozygotic…
Descriptors: Twins, Markov Processes, Adolescents, Genetics
Harlin, Rebecca P. – Journal of Research in Childhood Education, 2008
The assumptions about children's development are challenged by recent research findings that show learning begins at an earlier age and proceeds at a different pace than expected. Sometimes researchers find that they have misunderstood children's cognitive, social, and physical development due to errors in measurement (faulty tests or tools),…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Child Development, Family Environment, Mathematics Education
Gorvine, Benjamin; Karam, Eli; Eovaldi, Marina – Middle School Journal (J3), 2008
The struggles and often compelling social dramas of middle school may be either long-forgotten or intentionally blocked by adulthood, but many middle schoolers could benefit from guidance during this difficult period of their lives. This article presents the rationale, along with the basic contours, of a six-session program that has been developed…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Middle School Students, Developmental Stages, Identification
Kim, Amy M.; Yeary, Julia – Young Children, 2008
The authors explore the importance of early attachments; the effects of separation on infants, toddlers, and 3-year-olds; and ways teachers can support children and families during separations. They discuss the predictable stages of the Emotional Cycle of Deployment, a model used with military families, and strategies teachers can use to help…
Descriptors: Caregivers, Coping, Young Children, Developmental Stages
Masataka, Nobuo – Developmental Science, 2007
Darwin (1871) noted that the human musical faculty "must be ranked amongst the most mysterious with which he is endowed". Indeed, previous research with human infants and young children has revealed that we are born with variable musical capabilities. Here, the adaptive purpose served by these differing capabilities is discussed with reference to…
Descriptors: Evolution, Music, Infants, Child Development
Whitman, Julie L. – Prevention Researcher, 2007
Adolescents experience victimization differently than either younger children or adults. This article explores how victimization impacts adolescents using a developmental framework, discusses barriers to help-seeking that youth may experience, and provides practical suggestions for supporting those youth who have been victimized. (Contains 2…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Victims of Crime, Help Seeking, Adolescent Development

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