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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 3,271 to 3,285 of 10,074 results
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Phinney, Jean S.; Ong, Anthony; Madden, Tanya – Child Development, 2000
Examined endorsement of values pertaining to family obligations in adolescents and their parents from immigrant and non-immigrant groups. Found evidence of general developmental processes (family obligations were endorsed more by parents than adolescents in all groups), processes associated with immigration (intergenerational discrepancy increased…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Age Differences, Asian Americans, Black Youth
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Luthar, Suniya S.; Cicchetti, Dante; Becker, Bronwyn – Child Development, 2000
Presents a critical appraisal of resilience, a construct connoting the maintenance of positive adaptation by individuals despite significant adversity. Addresses common criticisms, proposes solutions for those considered legitimate, and clarifies misunderstandings surrounding less valid criticisms. Concludes that work on resilience possesses…
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Children, Competence, Definitions
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von Eye, Alexander; Schuster, Christof – Child Development, 2000
Presents sample research designs for the investigation of questions concerning resilience. Describes hypotheses from specific research designs in the form of odds ratios. (Author)
Descriptors: Children, Cross Sectional Studies, Hypothesis Testing, Longitudinal Studies
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Roosa, Mark W. – Child Development, 2000
Identifies interaction effects as the defining feature of resilience and resilience research. Maintains that interaction effects are responsible for the unique contributions of this field of study to the understanding of human development. Suggests that the methodological and statistical challenges posed by interaction effects do not, by…
Descriptors: Child Development, Children, Definitions, Individual Development
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Robinson, JoAnn L. – Child Development, 2000
Examines whether prevention research can benefit from resilience research in designing interventions. Suggests that although many areas in the investigative interests of prevention and resilience researchers overlap, Luther, Cicchetti, and Becker may have set the bar too high for defining resilience in the context of varying levels of adversity.…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Children, Intervention, Prevention
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Luthar, Suniya S.; Cicchetti, Dante; Becker, Bronwyn – Child Development, 2000
Clarifies two sets of issues raised in preceding commentaries. First, interaction effects are undoubtedly salient in resilience research; yet main effect findings can be equally critical from an intervention perspective. Second, although resilience research and prevention science reflect similar broad objectives, the former involves explicit…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Children, Prevention, Psychopathology
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Wentworth, Naomi; Benson, Janette B.; Haith, Marshall M. – Child Development, 2000
Examined organization of 5.5, 8.5, and 11.5-month-olds' reaching skill for stationary and moving targets. Found that infants of all ages made anticipatory adjustments of hand alignment; effectiveness of these adjustments improved with age. Regardless of age, infants used dynamic information from spinning and oscillating targets to update ongoing…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Age Differences, Infant Behavior, Infants
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Richards, John E.; Cronise, Kim – Child Development, 2000
Examined visual fixation in infants 6 months to 2 years old for fit with theory of attentional inertia. Found that fixations had lognormal distribution, heart rate decreased during a look, and heart rate returned to prestimulus levels immediately before look offset. Older children showed different looking patterns to two types of stimuli; younger…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attention, Attention Control, Attention Span
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Bremner, J. Gavin; Morse, Rachel; Hughes, Sara; Andreasen, Gillian – Child Development, 2000
Four experiments examined links and differences between children's copying line diagrams and drawing solid objects. Findings suggest that emphasis on order of line copying improves copying performance because line-to-line matching is an important element of the skill, whereas this does not aid drawing of the solid object, in which focus is…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Childrens Art, Error Patterns
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Dapretto, Mirella; Bjork, Elizabeth L. – Child Development, 2000
Examined word retrieval in 14- to 24-month-olds. Found that children with limited productive vocabularies were less likely to produce labels of hidden objects than children with larger vocabularies, even though all could name them and did well when asked to find them. Pictorial cues facilitated word retrieval. Naming errors peaked among children…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis, Cues
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Klibanoff, Raquel S.; Waxman, Sandra R. – Child Development, 2000
Examined preschoolers' ability to map novel adjectives to object properties in two experiments. Found that 4-year-olds could extend novel adjectives from target to matching test object whether objects were drawn from same, or different, basic level categories. If 3-year-olds' first extended a novel adjective to objects in the same basic level…
Descriptors: Adjectives, Age Differences, Classification, Cognitive Development
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Thompson, Douglas R.; Siegler, Robert S. – Child Development, 2000
Two experiments examined development of economic understanding among 5-, 7- and 9-year-olds. Found that most 5-year-olds understood the goal of acquiring desired goods, and most 7- and 9-year-olds also understood the goals of seeking profits, acquiring goods inexpensively, and competing successfully with other sellers. Results suggest that older…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development
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Waters, Everett; Hamilton, Claire E.; Weinfield, Nancy S. – Child Development, 2000
Highlights three longitudinal studies examining the hypothesis that attachment security during infancy influences individual differences and adult representations of attachment. Notes that attachment security was significantly stable in two studies, with discontinuity in all three studies related to negative life events and circumstances.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Attachment Behavior, Emotional Development, Individual Differences
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Waters, Everett; Merrick, Susan; Treboux, Dominique; Crowell, Judith; Albersheim, Leah – Child Development, 2000
Assessed attachment security in 60 white middle-class infants at 12 months and conducted Adult Attachment Interview 20 years later. Found that 72 percent of infants received same attachment classification in early adulthood. Forty-four percent of infants whose mothers reported negative life events changed attachment classifications by adulthood,…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Attachment Behavior, Emotional Development, Individual Differences
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Hamilton, Claire E. – Child Development, 2000
Examined relations between infant security of attachment, negative life events, and adolescent attachment classification in sample from the Family Lifestyles Project. Found that stability of attachment classification was 77 percent. Infant attachment classification predicted adolescent attachment classification. Found no differences between…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Attachment Behavior, Comparative Analysis, Emotional Development
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