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Showing 61 to 75 of 482 results Save | Export
Giesler, Mark A.; Palladino, John M. – Online Submission, 2009
Administering and supervising special education programs and personnel may be daunting tasks for school leaders. Students and families who warrant the access to special education services present unique and complex needs that make administrative decisions anything but universal and simplistic, especially in regards to foster care populations. The…
Descriptors: Student Rights, Federal Legislation, Child Welfare, Disabilities
Santelman, Mary – NAMTA Journal, 2014
Mary Santelman discusses all forms of biting, the labeling of a biter, the biter as victim or victimizer, and record keeping of biting behavior. On the list of toddler behaviors, she also examines tantrums, including insights into the child's emotional needs, calming down, kicking, hugging, throwing things, and hurting people. Mary describes…
Descriptors: Montessori Method, Toddlers, Child Behavior, Behavior Problems
Rodriguez, Jorge – 1997
At-risk students are defined as those who are in danger of not graduating from school. These potential dropouts can be characterized by a variety of factors that lead to educational underachievement. In this study, the outcome explored is "outcast," a combination of student behavioral factors that captures student alienation from school…
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Behavior Patterns, Black Students, Dropouts
Weinraub, Marsha; Ansul, Susan – 1985
Children's responses toward strangers, qualities of mother-child interaction, and maternal stresses were examined in 38 mother-child pairs, with children from single and two-parent families. Responses to female and male strangers were observed in a modified Strange Situation. Mother-child interaction was assessed with a modified version of…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Comparative Analysis, Exploratory Behavior, Family Structure
Ryan, Kathleen; And Others – 1985
In 1981 and 1982, pre- and postnatal medical, financial, demographic, and maternal social support data were collected from 220 lower socioeconomic status (SES), "high risk" mothers and their newborn infants. An analysis of data on the oldest 100 children in the sample found that 14 families had been referred to a children's protective services…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, High Risk Persons, Home Programs, Intellectual Development
Ryan, Kathleen; And Others – 1985
Pre- and post-natal medical, financial, demographic, and maternal social support data were collected from 220 lower socioeconomic status (SES), "high risk" mothers and their newborn infants. Additional data were obtained later from a subsample of 19 boys and 19 girls between 18 and 24 months of age and their mothers. Mothers ranged in age from 15…
Descriptors: Child Development, Family Environment, High Risk Persons, Infants
Clemens, Fred W.; Mullis, H. Thomas – 1981
The author reviews the nature of stress and the individual's response to it and considers ways in which stress affects gifted children. Attempts to categorize or classify types of stressors are reviewed. Gifted children face additional demands of academic stressors (including unchallenging and repetitious curricula) and personal-social stressors…
Descriptors: Coping, Elementary Secondary Education, Gifted, Intervention
Abidin, R. R. – 1979
The Parenting Stress Index (PSI) is a clinical and research self-report instrument designed to identify mother-child systems which are under stress and to indicate the sources of stress. It is based on the research literature in child development, parent functioning, and stress. The normative sample for the PSI consisted of 470 mothers with at…
Descriptors: Children, Diagnostic Tests, Individual Differences, Mothers
Gold, Joshua M. – 1987
Stress is a part of the normal process of growing and developing for children. A stress situation is composed of anxiety and stress. If coping strategies are inadequate, depression can result. Four categories of stress include time, anticipatory, situational, and encounter stress. It is important to recognize unsuccessful defense mechanisms…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Anxiety, Children, Coping
Hiester, Marian; Sapp, Joan – 1991
This study examined the relationship between maternal stress, changes in stress, specific stressors, and social support and quality of mother-infant attachment. Life stress of 132 mothers was assessed prenatally and when the child was 13 months old. The mothers' social support and the quality of infant-mother attachment were also measured at the…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Attachment Behavior, Family Influence, Infant Behavior
Schulz, Marc S. – 1993
This study was designed to enhance understanding of individuals' and couples' emotional regulation processes, and the psychological mechanisms that connect work and family spheres for men and women. Forty-three couples and their eldest child participated in this study. On three consecutive days the parents completed several measures of work stress…
Descriptors: Family Relationship, Job Satisfaction, Kindergarten, Marital Satisfaction
Todis, Bonnie; Singer, George – 1989
Qualitative research methods were used to investigate the sources and methods of dealing with stress in eight families with adopted children who have severe developmental or multiple disabilities. The families, who had each adopted from two to 30 children, included "birth children" and, in some cases, foster children as well. The research methods…
Descriptors: Adoption, Child Rearing, Children, Coping
Longfellow, Cynthia; Szpiro, Susan Zur – 1983
The purpose of this study is twofold: (1) to determine whether a relationship exists between maternal depressive symptomatology and children's emotional well-being, and (2) to determine specifically whether it is the depressed mother's lack of supportiveness that affects her child's well-being. A total of 160 nonclinical population mother/child…
Descriptors: Children, Depression (Psychology), Emotional Development, Locus of Control
Passman, Richard H.; Mulhern, Raymond K. – 1977
Ten mothers and their children (4 to 8 years old) interacted in a situation analogous to that thought to precipitate child abuse. Without directly observing the child, each mother telemetrically monitored her child's performance on a puzzle. Following an error, she selected the intensity of punishment to be delivered. However, the frequency of…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Exceptional Child Research, Mothers, Parent Child Relationship
Nievar, M. Angela; Jacobson, A.; Dier, S. – Online Submission, 2008
The Home Instruction for Parents of Preschool Youngsters (HIPPY) program promotes school readiness by providing services directly to parents through home visitation. This study describes the outcomes of the HIPPY program for Latino immigrant families in a large Southwestern city. A quasi-experimental design compared 48 families on the program…
Descriptors: School Readiness, Intervention, Mothers, Marital Satisfaction
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