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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1 to 15 of 38 results
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Taylor, Brian J.; McQuillan, Karen – Child Care in Practice, 2014
The potential human and financial costs of foster placement disruption for the children, families, professionals and agencies involved are widely accepted. This service evaluation identified and described perspectives of foster parents and social workers regarding placement disruptions in order to identify the main issues of concern and to derive…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Foster Care, Parent Attitudes, Social Work
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McCrudden, Eunan; Braiden, Hannah Jane; Sloan, Deirdre; McCormack, Patricia; Treacy, Austin – Child Care in Practice, 2014
Children who have a parent in prison are a vulnerable group. Research suggests that such children experience a range of poor outcomes in relation to well-being, education and relationships. These outcomes are mediated by a range of factors including contact with the incarcerated parent. Similarly, prisoners who maintain contact with their families…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Correctional Institutions, Institutionalized Persons, Fathers
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Bohr, Yvonne; BinNoon, Noam – Child Care in Practice, 2014
This community pilot study was designed to evaluate a small group intervention, Right From The Start (RFTS), in terms of the benefits it provides to adolescent mothers specifically. The effectiveness of the programme was examined in the areas of maternal sensitivity, parenting confidence, parenting stress, and postnatal depression. RFTS has been…
Descriptors: Mothers, Early Parenthood, Depression (Psychology), Parenting Skills
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Simonic, Barbara; Poljanec, Andreja – Child Care in Practice, 2014
The primary relationship undermines how a newborn will develop. The first three years of a child's life in particular are fundamental for the development of the child's brain. This is when the "social brain" develops and grows in response to the spontaneous relationships experienced within the environment and when an…
Descriptors: Mothers, Parent Child Relationship, Child Development, Qualitative Research
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Smith, Gabriel Tobin; Shapiro, Valerie B.; Sperry, Rachel Wagner; LeBuffe, Paul A. – Child Care in Practice, 2014
This article describes a strengths-based approach to supervised visitation within the child welfare system of the United States. Supervised visitation gives parents accused of abuse or neglect the opportunity to spend time with children temporarily removed from their care. Although supervised visitation has the potential to be a tool for promoting…
Descriptors: Child Welfare, Child Abuse, Child Neglect, Parent Participation
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Choate, Peter W.; Engstrom, Sandra – Child Care in Practice, 2014
Child protection workers must determine under what conditions a child should be sustained within the family system. A standard that is often referred to is "good enough" parenting or minimal parenting competence. Research and clinical literature fails to offer workers guidance on the practical application of this terminology. Such…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Parenting Skills, Child Welfare, Competence
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Atwool, Nicola – Child Care in Practice, 2013
Irrespective of type of placement, contact with the birth family is one of the more contentious issues in decision-making for children in care. Despite widespread belief that contact with the birth family is beneficial for children and young people in care, this aspect of children's care experience has not received a great deal of attention. In…
Descriptors: Developmental Stages, Foster Care, Cultural Influences, Social Work
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Price, Jayne; Nicholl, Honor – Child Care in Practice, 2013
Parenting a child with complex health/palliative care needs is wide ranging. Family-centred practices place parents at the heart of the ongoing care of these children, and therefore it makes sense that their views and experiences should be central to research within the field. Despite this assertion, little guidance exists as to how best to…
Descriptors: Caregivers, Ethics, Novices, Qualitative Research
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Minniss, Fiona Rowe; Wardrope, Cheryl; Johnston, Donni; Kendall, Elizabeth – Child Care in Practice, 2013
This paper investigates the mechanisms by which a health-promotion intervention might influence the health-promoting behaviours of staff members working in early childhood centres. The intervention was an ecological health-promotion initiative that was implemented within four early childhood centres in South-East Queensland, Australia. In-depth,…
Descriptors: Health Promotion, Intervention, Public Agencies, Foreign Countries
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Lazenbatt, Anne – Child Care in Practice, 2013
Although child maltreatment due to abuse or neglect is pervasive within our society, less is known about fabricated or induced illness by carers (FII), which is considered to be a rare form of child abuse. FII occurs when a caregiver (in 93% of cases, the mother) misrepresents the child as ill either by fabricating, or much more rarely, producing…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Child Care, Medical Services, Mothers
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Angarne-Lindberg, Teresia; Wadsby, Marie – Child Care in Practice, 2013
Studies focusing on mothers' own reports of their experience with intervention programmes are rare, so very little has been known about their evaluations of the programmes and what they have learned. The aim of the present study was to use interviews to evaluate these aspects of an intervention programme. The interviews were designed to capture…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Early Intervention, Mothers, Infants
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Polkki, Pirjo; Vornanen, Riitta; Pursiainen, Merja; Riikonen, Marjo – Child Care in Practice, 2012
Children in foster care often have no means of influencing matters that concern them, and can easily become outsiders in their own lives. The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child enshrines the rights of capable children to express their views freely in matters affecting them and to be heard in any judicial or administrative…
Descriptors: Childrens Rights, Child Welfare, Social Work, Foster Care
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Das, Chaitali – Child Care in Practice, 2012
Divorce or separation is one route towards addressing high conflict in marriages and may be a key route out of situations of significant domestic violence for women and children. However, divorce has been associated with feminisation of poverty and other negative outcomes which can be further exacerbated for victimised women. While there has been…
Descriptors: Divorce, Family Violence, Mothers, Foreign Countries
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Dhar, Rajib – Child Care in Practice, 2012
This study aims at examining the childcare practices and issues experienced by the low-income construction workers in India. It is concerned with understanding varied aspects relating to problems that construction workers, as parents, face while bringing up their children in one of the small construction companies of eastern India, in the state of…
Descriptors: Low Income, Employees, Economically Disadvantaged, Ethnography
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Braiden, Hannah Jane; McDaniel, Benny; McCrudden, Eunan; Janes, Michele; Crozier, Barbara – Child Care in Practice, 2012
This study used a pre-experimental and post-experimental design to evaluate a TEACCH-based Early Intervention Programme. Thirty-one parents of 18 preschool children recently diagnosed with an Autistic Spectrum Disorder attended the eight-week programme delivered by trained facilitators. Parents completed pre-intervention and post-intervention…
Descriptors: Early Intervention, Testing, Preschool Children, Receptive Language
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