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Fiorvanti, Christina M.; Brassard, Marla R. – School Psychology Review, 2014
The moral imperative of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, backed by robust empirical findings, leads to the conclusion that the protection of children from violence and neglect and the promotion of their well-being should be major priorities in every society. This article argues that "School Psychology: A Blueprint for…
Descriptors: Childrens Rights, School Psychology, School Psychologists, Violence
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Diehm, Emily A.; Abou-Dahech, Tala – EBP Briefs (Evidence-based Practice Briefs), 2019
Clinical Question: For a school-age child with a language disorder, what therapy strategies are effective to improve the child's "Wh"-question answering abilities? Method: Systematic search and review. Study Sources: Academic Search Complete, ASHAWire, Education Full Text, Education Research Complete, ERIC, Google Scholar, Psychology…
Descriptors: Questioning Techniques, Language Impairments, Intervention, Evidence Based Practice
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Cowie, Helen; Myers, Carrie-Anne; Aziz, Rashid – International Journal of Emotional Education, 2017
Across Europe, and in the context of a post-BREXIT situation, society is having to accommodate to large numbers of people from diverse cultures. There is a reported increase in xenophobic incidents, bullying and social exclusion, indicating that diversity runs the risk of intolerance and prejudice. This is played out in all manner of social…
Descriptors: Stranger Reactions, Children, Adolescents, Foreign Countries
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McGill, Ryan J.; Conoyer, Sarah J.; Fefer, Sarah – School Psychology Forum, 2018
Within the school psychology literature, it is frequently asserted that deficits in cognitive processing are a defining characteristic of children with academic dysfunction, and establishing links between relevant cognitive and academic weaknesses is a core pillar of patterns of strengths and weaknesses assessment models. Accordingly, the present…
Descriptors: Intelligence Tests, Cognitive Ability, Academic Ability, Psychological Evaluation
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Rostami, Farzad; Yousefi, Mohammad Hossein; Amini, Davoud – International Journal of Multicultural Education, 2021
The purpose of this study was to explore multiple facets of the professional identities of Iranian in-service teachers in exceptional schools. The study adopted a qualitative design. The data were collected through in-depth interviews with 14 in-service teachers. The participants were selected through purposeful sampling. Each interview lasted up…
Descriptors: Professional Identity, Self Concept, Elementary School Teachers, Teacher Attitudes
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Oakland, Thomas; Callueng, Carmelo – Canadian Journal of School Psychology, 2015
This cross-national research examined temperament style preferences among children in three sub-Saharan African countries (i.e., Nigeria, South Africa, and Zimbabwe) and possible differences between them on four bipolar temperament styles: extroverted-introverted, practical-imaginative, thinking-feeling, and organized-flexible. Children in these…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Children, Preferences, Personality Traits
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Mastrogiuseppe, Marilina; Gianni, Eugenia; Lee, Sang Ah – Developmental Psychology, 2023
Unlike children's early ability to navigate by continuous boundaries, their ability to extract geometric information from an array of objects emerges gradually over childhood. To investigate children's developing representation of object arrays for navigation and its relation to their mental representation of the global spatial layout,…
Descriptors: Children, Error Patterns, Spatial Ability, Geometric Concepts
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Mandalaywala, Tara M.; Legaspi, Jordan K. – Developmental Psychology, 2023
Many caregivers wonder when to talk to children about social inequality and racism, often expressing the belief that children do not pay attention to race or inequity. Here, across 5-9-year-old American children (n = 159, M[subscript age] = 7.44; 51.6% female, 47.2% male, 1.2% nonconforming or not provided; 59.1% White, 23.3% racial-ethnic…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Racism, Social Justice, Race
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McGrath, Melissa A.; Fletcher, Kathryn L.; Bielski, Lynn M. – Psychology in the Schools, 2023
Children with normal hearing who present with listening difficulties (LiD) are frequently referred for assessment of auditory processing disorder (APD). Complicating diagnosis is the similarities of APD to other neurodevelopmental disorders, especially attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Due to well-documented deficits in executive…
Descriptors: Children, Adolescents, Listening, Listening Skills
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Duan, Ruoyu Jenny; Walker, Graham J.; Orthia, Lindy A. – International Journal of Science Education, Part B: Communication and Public Engagement, 2021
Designing exhibits that catch and hold people's interest -- particularly easily distracted children -- is a key challenge for science centres. Here we apply situational interest (SI), a model from educational psychology and STEM education, to understand characteristics exhibit designers use to trigger and/or maintain interest, evoke emotions and…
Descriptors: Science Teaching Centers, Museums, Exhibits, Design
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Hubbard, Julie A.; Bookhout, Megan K.; Zajac, Lindsay; Moore, Christina C.; Dozier, Mary – Developmental Psychology, 2023
The goal of the current study was to investigate whether children's social information processing (SIP) predicts their conversations with peers, including both their remarks to peers and peers' remarks to them. When children (N = 156; 55% male; United States; Representation by Race: 60% African American, 18% Mixed race, 15% European American, 7%…
Descriptors: Prosocial Behavior, Antisocial Behavior, Social Cognition, Information Processing
French, Jason A.; Menendez, David; Herrmann, Patricia A.; Evans, E. Margaret; Rosengren, Karl S. – Grantee Submission, 2018
We investigated children's (n = 120; 3- to 11-year-olds) and adults' (n = 18) reasoning about life-cycle changes in biological organisms by examining their endorsements of four different patterns of life- span changes. Participants were presented with two separate tasks: (a) judging possible adult versions of a juvenile animal and (b) judging…
Descriptors: Children, Adults, Logical Thinking, Biology
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Deutchman, Paul; McAuliffe, Katherine – Developmental Psychology, 2023
Recent work suggests that common knowledge is an important cognitive mechanism for coordinating prosocial behavior, in part because it reduces uncertainty about others' cooperative behavior. However, it remains unclear whether children also rely on common knowledge to solve coordination problems. Here we examined whether 6- to 9-year-old children…
Descriptors: Knowledge Level, Problem Solving, Children, Cooperation
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Elizabeth A. Shewark; Alexandra Y. Vazquez; Amber L. Pearson; Kelly L. Klump; S. Alexandra Burt – Developmental Psychology, 2024
Neighborhood is a key context where children learn to process social information; however, the field has largely overlooked the ways children's individual characteristics might be moderated by neighborhood effects. We examined 1,030 six- to 11-year-olds (48.7% female; 82% White) twin pairs oversampled for neighborhood disadvantage from the Twin…
Descriptors: Children, Twins, Neighborhoods, Nature Nurture Controversy
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Dudschig, Carolin; Kaup, Barbara; Liu, Mingya; Schwab, Juliane – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2021
Negation is a universal component of human language; polarity sensitivity (i.e., lexical distributional constraints in relation to negation) is arguably so while being pervasive across languages. Negation has long been a field of inquiry in psychological theories and experiments of reasoning, which inspired many follow-up studies of negation and…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Morphemes, Psycholinguistics, Semantics
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