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Nelson, Jo Ann N. – 1986
This study examined the relationship between level of ego development and parents' self reports of the subjective experience of parenthood. Subjects were 30 mother/father pairs of middle class parents, 10 from each of three phases of the family: families whose oldest children were attending preschool or middle school, or had graduated from high…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Developmental Stages, Fathers, Individual Development
Kreger, Linda R.; Kreger, Robert D. – 1984
The Kreger Model is a developmental approach to the identification and assessment of, and intervention with, emotionally disturbed children. Principles fundamental to a developmental paradigm are outlined, and assumptions fundamental to the Kreger Model pointed out. It is explained that the Kreger Model is a direct response to criteria which…
Descriptors: Developmental Stages, Elementary Secondary Education, Emotional Disturbances, Intervention
Giblin, Nan; Ryan, Frances – 1989
This paper asserts that the most common mistake that adults make when relating to children who are grieving is to assume that children think like adults. It presents an outline of children's perceptions of death for children between the ages of 1 and 3, and for 4-year-olds, 5-year-olds, 6-year-olds, 7-year-olds, 8-year-olds, and 10-year-olds. The…
Descriptors: Child Development, Childhood Attitudes, Cognitive Development, Death
Henry, Carolyn S.; Ceglian, Cindi Penor – 1988
Over the past few decades, the complex nature of transitions into stepfamilies has been the focus of considerable attention. Previous scholars have established developmental tasks for remarriage, stepfamilies, and stepsibling relations. A parallel, but unique, set of developmental stages and tasks for the adjustment to stepgrandparenting occur.…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Developmental Stages, Extended Family, Family Relationship
Bloom, Darrell; Jorde-Bloom, Paula – 1987
If the teaching profession is to attract the most promising teacher candidates and retain those who are exemplary in practice, it is imperative that teachers' personal needs be attended to throughout their professional careers. In order to adequately address these needs, those designing preservice and inservice professional development must…
Descriptors: Adult Development, Career Development, Developmental Stages, Higher Education
Lamb, Marilyn – 1982
Stages in the development of art expression in infants and toddlers are briefly described and illustrated in this paper. Following this overview, suggestions are made about ways to introduce infants and toddlers to various developmentally appropriate media and how to support the artistic efforts of very young children. Materials recommended…
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Education, Art Materials, Developmental Stages
Halford, Graeme S. – 1982
Concepts important to cognitive development in children can be classified according to several levels. At level 1, concepts are equivalent in structural complexity to binary relations and univariate functions. At level 2, concepts are equivalent to compositions of binary relations, binary operations, and bivariate functions. At level 3, concepts…
Descriptors: Child Development, Children, Classification, Cognitive Ability
Formanek, Ruth – 1977
The author briefly surveys early psychomotor development in children, the process of separation-individualization during the first three years of life, and the effect that early experience may have on subsequent actual physical movement. The studies of Jean Piaget and Margaret Mahler provide a framework for examining the notions of space…
Descriptors: Developmental Stages, Early Experience, Motor Development, Parent Influence
Haars, Venant – 1981
Fifty-six Dutch school children (aged 6-0 to 14-4 years) participated in a study designed to investigate their ability to reason with logical implication. They answered a total of 32 reasoning problems. Before or after each question they were asked a class inclusion question. A high degree of correspondence was found between class inclusion and…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Classification, Developmental Stages, Elementary Education
Jordan, Valerie Barnes; Brownlee, Linda – 1981
The relationship between Piagetian and school achievement tests was examined through a meta-analysis of correlational data between tests in these domains. Highlighted is the extent to which performance on Piagetian tasks was related to achievement in these areas. The average age for the subjects used in the analysis was 88 months, the average IQ…
Descriptors: Achievement Tests, Correlation, Developmental Stages, Elementary School Mathematics
Lawrence, Jeanette A. – 1977
Fourteen moral judgment intervention studies, representing all those presently known to the author, were reviewed and evaluated. All used Rest's Defining Issues Test (DIT) to evaluate Kolhberg's stage theory of moral development. The DIT had been administered in programs for social studies and civics, general psychological development, and moral…
Descriptors: Developmental Stages, Intervention, Moral Development, Research Design
Nichols, Irene A.; Shauffer, Carole B. – 1976
The ethical codes for experimentation adopted by most professional organizations include references to the requirement that subjects be given at least minimal information about their involvement in research, but are generally silent on the necessity of ascertaining whether or not subjects sufficiently comprehend the information given. For moral,…
Descriptors: Children, Codes of Ethics, Cognitive Ability, Developmental Stages
Elmer, Elizabeth – 1980
This pamphlet for prospective parents provides very brief discussions of the parent child relationship, the realities of being a parent, parenting techniques, parents' responsibilities, and parenting as a developmental process. Guidelines for parents of infants, toddlers, school age and adolescent children are suggested. (Author/SS)
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Developmental Stages, Parent Child Relationship, Parent Education
PDF pending restorationMarkman, Ellen M. – 1979
This paper discusses research on how concepts differ in their internal organization and how these differences interact with and affect cognitive processing in children. Two types of natural concepts are focused on: classes (nouns with class-inclusion organization, such as "trees,""students,""soldiers" and collections…
Descriptors: Children, Classification, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
Gerson, Richard F.; Thomas, Jerry R. – Journal of Motor Behavior, 1978
Children's serial motor skill acquisition was studied within a neo-Piagetian framework. High and low M-processors (a designation of a child's ability to produce problem solutions) performed on a curvilinear repositioning task. A primacy-recency effect was evidenced for both groups on the age-related task, while a recency effect occurred for only…
Descriptors: Child Development, Developmental Stages, Educational Theories, Learning Processes

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