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Maddux, James E.; And Others – Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1986
Argues that health psychology for children is not given proper attention. Proposes applying a developmental perspective to health psychology, highlighting children's problems and the fact that children need to be viewed as more than potential consumers of adult health psychology services or as agents for the prevention of adult health problems.…
Descriptors: Children, Counselor Role, Developmental Continuity, Elementary Education
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Harel, Guershon – Research in Mathematics Education, 2019
This commentary reviews each of the three content chapters in the integers section and offers questions to promote further discussion. In addition to the themes raised in the three chapters, I introduce the role of formal mathematical structure in generalizing systems of number, from natural numbers to integers, and analogously, from real numbers…
Descriptors: Number Concepts, Algebra, Children, Abstract Reasoning
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De Smedt, Bert – Research in Mathematics Education, 2019
In this commentary, I reflect from a neurocognitive perspective on the four chapters on natural number development included in this section. These chapters show that the development of seemingly basic number processing is much more complex than is often portrayed in neurocognitive research. The chapters collectively illustrate that children's…
Descriptors: Numbers, Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Cognitive Development
Webb, James T. – 1984
The emotional needs of gifted children are seldom considered by psychologists either during their training or in their subsequent professional practices. Most psychology trainees appear to be exposed only to the Terman (1925) studies which concluded that gifted children have significantly fewer social and emotional problems than does the general…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Children, Counseling Services, Counselor Training
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Theron, Linda C.; Donald, David R. – School Psychology International, 2013
If educational psychologists wish to make a meaningful difference as practitioners, both to the children they work with and the ecologies these children come from, then, knowledge and application of resilience theory is crucial. Toland and Carrigan (2011) underscore this relationship in their 2011 article in this Journal. In our contribution…
Descriptors: Educational Psychology, Resilience (Psychology), Psychological Studies, Developing Nations
Hartup, Willard W. – 1981
It has long been recognized that childhood socialization occurs mainly through relationships with others, but only within the last decade or so can it be said that the study of relationships has become central to developmental psychology. As young children grow older, their sphere of relationships extends beyond the primary caretakers, and perhaps…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Development, Children, Elementary School Students
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Spence, Ruth; Kagan, Lisa; Kljakovic, Moja; Bifulco, Antonia – Educational & Child Psychology, 2021
Aim: Educational practitioners are increasingly aware of trauma experiences in students as a factor in child disturbance and schooling problems. This discussion paper aims to clarify definitions of trauma and differentiate them from other adverse childhood experiences (ACE), describe trauma impact in terms of clinical outcomes (PTSD, emotional and…
Descriptors: Trauma, Children, Adolescents, Educational Environment
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Millei, Zsuzsa – Journal of Early Childhood Research, 2012
This article critiques guidance approaches to discipline, that are employed in early childhood environments with an aim to create democratic environments for children, and as part of "good" practices. Advocates of guidance claim that this is a more humane or democratic approach to discipline that empowers children, and therefore, power…
Descriptors: Children, Student Behavior, Discipline, Classroom Environment
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Olson, David R. – Educational Psychology Review, 2012
As a summary of current advances in developmental psychology, the above article makes some useful contributions. As a contribution to educational policy and practice, it is limited if not a failure for two reasons. It fails to come to grips with the real demands of living classrooms, and second, it fails to grasp the actual subjective lives of the…
Descriptors: Developmental Psychology, Educational Policy, Models, Psychology
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Keeley, Jared – Teaching of Psychology, 2010
A year after receiving his PhD in psychology from the University of Rochester, Tim Kasser accepted a position at Knox College, in Galesburg, Illinois, where he is currently professor of psychology. He regularly teaches psychology classes on personality, clinical and abnormal psychology, dreaming, and research methods, as well as an…
Descriptors: Quality of Life, Motivation, Social Psychology, Interviews
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Sommer, Simon – Journal of Research on Adolescence, 2013
This commentary was written while the author was visiting the 30th International Congress of Psychology in Cape Town, South Africa. Looking at the program, he could see that psychological research on non-Western populations and internationally comparative research seems to be much "en vogue"! However, much of the research he has seen…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Psychological Studies, Non Western Civilization, Comparative Analysis
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Brodzinsky, David; Smith, Susan Livingston – Research on Social Work Practice, 2019
Our commentary highlights the authors' conceptual and empirical contributions for understanding the incidence and dynamics of varying types of adoption breakdowns and their impact on adopted youth and their families. Important distinctions are made between legal, residential, and psychological/relational permanence for children. To date, most…
Descriptors: Adoption, Failure, Family Problems, Incidence
Rosengren, Karl S.; Jiang, Matthew J.; Kalish, Charles W.; Menendez, David; Hernandez, Iseli G. – Grantee Submission, 2018
Lockhart and Keil have written an interesting monograph focusing on the development of reasoning about medicine, a relatively underexplored area of research with potentially broad implications with respect to the design of more effective medical interventions. In a set of fifteen studies with well over 2200 participants they examine how children…
Descriptors: Medicine, Developmental Stages, Logical Thinking, Medical Services
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Obsiye, Mohamed; Cook, Rachel – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2016
Susan Harper's study centres on "funds of knowledge" as a pedagogical resource for the development of a science curriculum, drawing on Karen refugee parents' cultural knowledge and identity. She argues that engagement in this process helps the parent generation of this community to "rebuild their cultural resilience" and cope…
Descriptors: Refugees, Resilience (Psychology), Cultural Influences, Foreign Countries
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Rogers, Leoandra Onnie – Developmental Psychology, 2019
A focal goal of development science in recent years has been to document and understand the psychological processes that underlie inequality toward the goal of promoting equity and justice (e.g., Killen, Rutland, & Yip, 2016). This timely special section on economic inequality broadens the empirical conversation, which has centered mostly on…
Descriptors: Children, Adolescents, Poverty, Disadvantaged
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