• Parents and children receive a light meal and take home a children's book at the end of every class session. (csusb.edu)
  • Child enrichment groups" run concurrent with the parenting classes and provide high-quality, developmentally-appropriate children's programming for parents attending the class. (csusb.edu)
  • Parents have to adapt to their children's changing needs continuously. (frontiersin.org)
  • While the importance and scope of children's sport participation has been a topic of research, to date, few researchers have explored the impact organized youth sport may have on family life. (uwaterloo.ca)
  • The first theme "Understanding Children's Experiences" relates to children's perceptions of their scheduled lives, the impact organized sport has on their relationships with their siblings, and how they perceive their parents' involvement and support. (uwaterloo.ca)
  • The third theme that developed from the analysis, "The Nexus of Family Experiences", illustrates the intersection of the children's and parents' perspectives. (uwaterloo.ca)
  • The core theme, "Upholding Team Family", represents the culmination of the children's and parents' experiences, and helps to capture and integrate the insights gained from the analysis as a whole. (uwaterloo.ca)
  • Lecce said he believes parents will know best how to use the money to enhance their children's learning. (cp24.com)
  • Still, some parents remain shocked that they no longer have automatic access to their children's college academic and health records even though they often are financially supporting them. (latimes.com)
  • Based on a time-lag model, this study tested for changes in young children's (1-6 years) home access and use of digital media in the 2012-2018 period as well as in their parents' views on such media. (degruyter.com)
  • What it found was that in only a few years the digital devices available to children have become more mobile (tablets and smartphones), more accessible, and more numerous in these children's bedrooms, especially in single-parent households. (degruyter.com)
  • Parents' blatant and subtle ethnic prejudice and parenting style are measured together with children's explicit and implicit ethnic prejudice in pupils and parents of preschool and primary schools in the region of Rome, Italy ( N = 318). (frontiersin.org)
  • Results show that parents' subtle prejudice predicts children's implicit prejudice regardless of the parenting style. (frontiersin.org)
  • This study examined the role of multiple children's emotions and parental anxiety during parent-child interactions of anxiety disordered (AD) and nonanxious (NA) children ages 7 to 13 years. (nih.gov)
  • The objective of this study was to investigate different constructs of parents' talk (i.e., general talk, number talk, mathematical language) during math-related activity engagement with young children and examine how parents' talk relates to children's general vocabulary, numeracy skills, and mathematical language knowledge. (purdue.edu)
  • However, many parents remain largely unaware of RWI, and most may underestimate their children's risk of getting sick from swimming ( 9 ). (cdc.gov)
  • The program targets families with young children age 0-3 and offers an 8-session parenting class, follow-up classes, periodic assessments, and a parent helpline. (csusb.edu)
  • After completing the initial 8-session parenting class course, families have the option of participating in quarterly follow-up sessions and our advanced 6-session parenting class. (csusb.edu)
  • Families who participate in our project have access to our Parenting Helpline where their questions about their child are answered by one of our parent educators. (csusb.edu)
  • 2015). Mothers' parenting behaviors in families of school-aged children with autism spectrum disorder: An observational and questionnaire study. (springer.com)
  • A purposive sample of seven families (19 children, 7 mothers, and 6 fathers) participated in the study. (uwaterloo.ca)
  • Further, the gendered nature of organized youth sport involvement and how rurality shapes the families' sport involvement, are also discussed. (uwaterloo.ca)
  • This course explores the precursors, presentations, nature and impacts of mental health concerns and addictions for youth, their families, and within communities. (concordia.ca)
  • When parents have access to proven parenting information and support designed to address problems all families face-from tantrums to encouraging good behavior-key measures of child maltreatment fall, according to a study released in the Jan. 26 online edition of the journal Prevention Science. (cdc.gov)
  • This is the first large-scale study to show that by providing all families, not just families in crisis, with access to parenting information and support, we can reduce the rates of child maltreatment in whole communities. (cdc.gov)
  • The increasing flow of immigrants in many European countries and the growing presence of children from immigrant families in schools makes it relevant to study the development of prejudice in children. (frontiersin.org)
  • Families (mother, father, child) each discussed three recent and real separate situations in which the child experienced anxiety, anger, and happiness. (nih.gov)
  • Informed by an understanding of these interactions, clinical suggestions for working with anxious children and their families are provided. (cambridge.org)
  • One-parent families in Europe : trends, experiences, implications , proceedings of the CBGS International Worskhop on One-Parent Families, Brussels, October 8-10, 1985 / edited by F. Deven and R. L. Cliquet. (who.int)
  • The Triple P-Positive Parenting Program, which uses a self-regulatory model of intervention, is used as an example to illustrate the robustness and versatility of the self-regulation approach to all phases of the parent consultation process. (nih.gov)
  • Using a multi-level system of parenting support called the Triple P-Positive Parenting Program, nine study counties in South Carolina implemented a wide range of support mechanisms for parents including local media, brief public seminars, and parent consultation by specially trained providers in clinics, schools, churches, and community centers. (cdc.gov)
  • For more information on the Triple P - Positive Parenting Program, visit www.triplep.net. (cdc.gov)
  • This study examined the family emotional climate as assessed by Five Minute Speech Samples and the relation with parenting stress and parenting behaviors among parents of children (6-17 years, 64.7% boys) with autism spectrum disorder, cerebral palsy, Down syndrome, and without any known disability ( n = 447). (springer.com)
  • Therefore, we conclude that parenting stress and child internalizing as well as parenting stress and child externalizing behaviors have transactional associations from child's age 5 to 9 years. (frontiersin.org)
  • Future research examining transactional associations of parenting stress and child behaviors should investigate possible other mediations taking a within-person approach by utilizing the RI-CLPM. (frontiersin.org)
  • While some of these behaviors are normative at certain ages of child development, it is these behaviors, in concert and during adolescence, that serve as the strongest predictors of adjustment problems, including criminal behavior, during adulthood (Kohlberg, Ricks, & Snarey, 1984). (hhs.gov)
  • This study provides the first perceived risk scale for exploring psychosocial factors that may predict or mediate the adoption of behaviors that prevent the spread of infectious diseases contracted by children while swimming. (cdc.gov)
  • Parental expressed emotion toward children: Prediction from early family functioning. (springer.com)
  • As a second aim, we examined parenting as a possible underlying mechanism of the transactional associations by testing whether parental warmth and hostility mediate within-person associations of parenting stress and child behavior across time. (frontiersin.org)
  • Our results did not indicate mediating effects of parental warmth or parental hostility in the associations between parenting stress and child behavior problems. (frontiersin.org)
  • This count represents an increase in the number of children affected by parental incarceration by over 500,000 children since 1990. (hhs.gov)
  • We overview the relationship between parental criminality and incarceration and adolescent antisocial behavior, discuss how these factors might be linked through parenting, place this link within the context of the life course development of antisocial behavior, and then discuss interventions that might make a difference in improving outcomes for the children of incarcerated parents. (hhs.gov)
  • In many cases, orphaned or abandoned children receive parental care from non-parent or non-blood relations. (wikipedia.org)
  • [4] Additionally, research supports that parental history, both in terms of attachments of varying quality and parental psychopathology , particularly in the wake of adverse experiences, can strongly influence parental sensitivity and child outcomes. (wikipedia.org)
  • Working-class children often grow up at a disadvantage with the schooling, communities, and level of parental attention available compared to those from the middle-class or upper-class. (wikipedia.org)
  • Attachment parenting (AP) is a parenting philosophy that proposes methods aiming to promote the attachment of parent and infant not only by maximal parental empathy and responsiveness but also by continuous bodily closeness and touch. (wikipedia.org)
  • Previous studies have shown that parenting stress is related to child behavior problems, but few studies have investigated the transactional relations across time between parenting stress and child internalizing and externalizing outcomes separately, examining within-person changes. (frontiersin.org)
  • The capacity for a parent to self-regulate their own performance is argued to be a fundamental process underpinning the maintenance of positive, nurturing, non-abusive parenting practices that promote good developmental and health outcomes in children. (nih.gov)
  • Parents' talk factors were not significantly related to their respective child outcomes (i.e., general vocabulary, numeracy skills, and mathematical language knowledge). (purdue.edu)
  • Students undertake an applied research project, relevant to an area of practice or programs of intervention with youth. (concordia.ca)
  • Intervention planning in the context of psychoeducation and relational child and youth care work is emphasized. (concordia.ca)
  • A micro-skills approach is introduced, as well as principles of group leadership and crisis intervention with youth. (concordia.ca)
  • 1, 2] The collaborative care intervention included an initial education and engagement session using developmentally sensitive materials and structured involvement of both the adolescent and their parent, the choice of treatment, and regular follow-up contacts. (medscape.com)
  • In terms of broader implications, the study emphasizes the close connection between organized youth sport, and changing cultural ideals and practices associated with gender and parenting. (uwaterloo.ca)
  • The results offer insights into the experiences, practices, and perspectives of parents, outlining agricultur al ways of life in which safety and relations to risk are shaped by patterns of production, family dynamics, values and habits, and other social and cultural dimensions. (cdc.gov)
  • The first aim of this study was to examine the transactional within-person associations of parenting stress and child internalizing and externalizing behavior problems across childhood from age 9 months to 9 years. (frontiersin.org)
  • Corrections systems have tended to view male and female inmates as neither deserving of nor desiring contact with their children (Jeffries, Menghraj, & Hairston, 2001). (hhs.gov)
  • In 1999, blogger Katie Allison Granju followed with another book, to which William Sears contributed a foreword, before he, together with Martha Sears, published his own work, The Attachment Parenting Book in 2001. (wikipedia.org)
  • Findings indicate that children might acquire prejudice by means of the parents' implicit cognition and automatic behavior and educational actions. (frontiersin.org)
  • Findings indicate that parents' talk was best represented by a general talk, number talk, and mathematical language factor. (purdue.edu)
  • Because parents may not perceive their children to be at risk for RWI, they have little motivation to adopt behavior modifications that can reduce the risk of their children contracting RWI and contaminating recreational water. (cdc.gov)
  • Although previous studies show the health impacts of child-livestock interactions, less is known about the ways in which farm and ranch parents perceive the benefits and risks of these interactions, and how and why they choose to raise children around livestock. (cdc.gov)
  • Parents with children in Kindergarten up to 18 years old can apply for $200, while parents with school-aged children with special education needs, up to 21 years old, can apply for $250. (cp24.com)
  • Data were analyzed from the Growing Up in Ireland longitudinal child cohort study including 7,208 caregiver-child dyads at wave 1 (child's age 9 months), who were followed at child's age three (wave 2), five (wave 3), and 9 years (wave 5). (frontiersin.org)
  • Examines the parent-child relationship from a variety of perspectives, including cross-cultural and social class differences, differences between mothering and fathering, and the parents' influence on the child's psychological development (e.g., sex role). (tufts.edu)
  • [19] Research [20] has found that parenting style is significantly related to a child's subsequent mental health and well-being. (wikipedia.org)
  • Parents are more aware of a child's feelings and capabilities and support the development of a child's autonomy within reasonable limits. (wikipedia.org)
  • The first section contains the main body of the child health questionnaire along with items transferred from the sample child's person record. (cdc.gov)
  • In the last part of the course, programs for altering parent-child interactions are explored. (tufts.edu)
  • Parent perspectives on the benefits and risks of child-livestock interactions. (cdc.gov)
  • Growing up on a farm or ranch often involves interactions with livestock that present both potential risks and benefits to children. (cdc.gov)
  • While these "child-livestock interactions" contribute to the burden of agricultur ally related injuries to youth in the United States, they may also result in improved immunological health and other benefits. (cdc.gov)
  • This research is part of a larger anthropological study of the benefits and risks of child-livestock interactions involving parents on beef and dairy operations in multiple states, along with agricultur al safety and health professionals. (cdc.gov)
  • Mothers' expressed emotion towards children with and without intellectual disabilities. (springer.com)
  • Assessing expressed emotion in mothers of children with autism: The autism-specific five minute speech sample. (springer.com)
  • Semi-structured interviews and on-line participant journals (10 days duration) were used to discover divergent experiences of mothers, fathers, and children. (uwaterloo.ca)
  • Mothers of AD children displayed greater intrusive involvement than mothers of NA children in those situations in which the child was experiencing negative affect. (nih.gov)
  • In all groups, more Emotional Over-involvement, more Criticism and fewer expressions of Warmth were associated with higher levels of parenting stress. (springer.com)
  • Across groups, Emotional Over-involvement was related to more autonomy-supportive parenting, Criticism to more psychologically controlling and overreactive parenting, and Warmth was associated with more responsive and less psychologically controlling and overreactive parenting. (springer.com)
  • The Cal State L.A. Parent Academy, part of the widening parent involvement trend, began about six years ago and is offered three times during the school year on a campus whose students mainly commute from home. (latimes.com)
  • The Acts provide for law enforcement involvement in child abuse investigations, require each county to reform a child abuse committee and a child fatality subcommittee, and allow access to child abuse reports by child abuse committees, law enforcement personnel, school counselors, medical examiners, and certain state officials. (gsu.edu)
  • Changing parenting ideologies and their implications for gender relations are also addressed. (uwaterloo.ca)
  • Over the years parents have tended more and more to use digital media as 'babysitters', while they also found it increasingly difficult to stop their children from using such media, which may have major implications for parenting support activities. (degruyter.com)
  • 1951) Evidence held sufficient to support finding of unfitness of parent to have custody of child. (justia.com)
  • 1953) Where juvenile court found six-week-old child neglected and took custody from parents, contention in adoption proceedings begun over year later, that neglect did not continue for year overruled. (justia.com)
  • Data analysis was guided by a constructivist grounded theory approach to facilitate understanding of participants' perceptions and meanings of youth sport participation. (uwaterloo.ca)
  • These insights deepen our understanding of parents' perceptions of both benefits and risks of agricultur al childhoods. (cdc.gov)
  • Parenthood can be experienced as a pleasant but challenging period for parents, possibly accompanied by parenting stress. (frontiersin.org)
  • Early parenthood in particular is a vulnerable period as many parents experience biological and psychosocial changes related to new parenthood. (frontiersin.org)
  • Parenthood is often experienced as a pleasant but challenging period for parents. (frontiersin.org)
  • Described by Baumrind as the "just right" style, it combines medium level demands on the child and a medium level responsiveness from the parents. (wikipedia.org)
  • Attachment parenting is just one of many responsiveness and love-oriented parenting philosophies that entered the pedagogical mainstream after World War II, and it owes many of its ideas to older teachings, such as Benjamin Spock's influential handbook Baby and Child Care (1946). (wikipedia.org)
  • The themes that emerged from this study reflect the contradictory nature of organized youth sport, including the strengthening of familial relationships, as well as the tensions and disagreements arising out of divergent perspectives. (uwaterloo.ca)
  • The parenting curriculum is based on the most current research on brain development, child development, school readiness, attachment, early mental health, and positive child guidance which have as their centerpiece the critical importance of warm, attuned, responsive caregiving for the optimal development and well-being of children. (csusb.edu)
  • The focus of the curriculum is to help parents create a language-rich, stimulating, and nurturing environment to promote healthy development and school readiness in their young children. (csusb.edu)
  • Parents learn how "parent talk" and reading books aloud foster the development of the brain, language, and later reading skills, and why play contributes to learning concepts that are vital to later school success. (csusb.edu)
  • They also learn effective positive child guidance skills which simultaneously promote brain development, language skills, and reasoning abilities in children. (csusb.edu)
  • Child Development, 67 , 3296-3319. (springer.com)
  • Child Development, 55 (1), 83-96. (springer.com)
  • These needs entail actual skills that parents require for raising children and the need to be emotionally involved in their development. (frontiersin.org)
  • Packed with advice and powerful tips, using the latest research on child development and parenting techniques, it offers a mine of information on how to let children flourish, take the frustration out of parenting and develop happy family relations. (iiit.org)
  • Several staff members have recently joined the team or have changed responsibilities in the newly named Office of Development, Alumni and Parent Relations. (mckendree.edu)
  • Kimberly Mayden , Associate Vice President for Development, Alumni and Parent Relations, works directly with the Senior Vice President on the University's comprehensive fundraising campaign, with special emphasis on its featured construction objectives. (mckendree.edu)
  • This course explores both historical and contemporary foundations of non-formal, community-based youth development in Canada and internationally. (concordia.ca)
  • Various community youth development models are explored in-depth with practical applications for community-based youth programs, including life skills, assets, resiliency, and ecological models. (concordia.ca)
  • Emphasis is placed on research, theory and practice applied in community youth development environments. (concordia.ca)
  • Parenting or child rearing promotes and supports the physical , emotional , social , spiritual and cognitive development of a child from infancy to adulthood . (wikipedia.org)
  • Agricultur al upbringings are also widely perceived to improve physical, cognitive, and skill development of children, contributing to a combination of potential benefits and risks known as the " farm kid paradox. (cdc.gov)
  • Most colleges and universities these days offer summer informational sessions for parents and increasingly conduct Spanish-language versions, according to Amy Swank, who is president of Family Engagement in Higher Education, a national organization of 540 schools that provides parent programs. (latimes.com)
  • The first attachment parenting organization, Attachment Parenting International, formed in 1994 in Alpharetta, Georgia, and was founded by Lysa Parker and Barbara Nicholson. (wikipedia.org)
  • He contributed new research about the capacity of newborn infants to express themselves and their emotions, sensitized parents for these signals, and encouraged them - just like Spock - to follow their own judgment. (wikipedia.org)
  • The parenting scale: A measure of dysfunctional parenting in discipline situations. (springer.com)
  • The majority of these children live in situations where it is highly likely that their parent's incarceration has a direct impact on family functioning: almost 50% of incarcerated parents lived with their children prior to their prison admission, and over 80% report that their children currently live with the other parent or with a relative (U.S. DOJ, 2000). (hhs.gov)
  • Though Father presented testimony that the petitioner-Mother had frustrated his attempts to contact Alice and that he had contributed to gifts his parents gave to Alice, the trial court found Mother's evidence of abandonment more credible. (nclawyersweekly.com)
  • 1962) Evidence failed to establish willful abandonment or neglect of illegitimate child by mother who placed child with family when she was ill and unable to care for child and offered to pay money for support of child. (justia.com)
  • Raising children is an ongoing process as, when children grow older, their needs will develop and change ( Sanders and Turner, 2018 ). (frontiersin.org)
  • Consistent with the founders of attachment theory, especially Mary Ainsworth, William Sears teaches that a strong mother-child-attachment emerges from contingency, that is, when mother and child are attuned to each other, which in turn is based on the mother's sensitivity. (wikipedia.org)
  • An interpretive approach was used to discover behavioural, relational, and emotional aspects of youth sport and family life. (uwaterloo.ca)
  • The large majority of parents (79%) showed low levels of Expressed Emotion, an indicator of a positive family climate. (springer.com)
  • The Infant-Toddler Success Parenting Project is a research-based initiative designed to increase the school readiness of young children by increasing parents' ability to provide early enrichment experiences, improving the quality of caregiving (i.e., attachment security), and teaching parents positive child guidance skills. (csusb.edu)
  • Authors provide guidance on developing character, knowledge, values, and skills, as well as a faith-based outlook in children, benefitting parents with kids of all ages. (iiit.org)
  • Periodic assessments will occur at the follow-up sessions until the child starts kindergarten. (csusb.edu)
  • This study seeks to address this gap in the literature and the social and cultural context in which youth sport participation occurs. (uwaterloo.ca)
  • The term attachment parenting was coined by the American pediatrician William Sears. (wikipedia.org)
  • William Sears came upon the term "attachment parenting" in 1982 by reading Liedloff. (wikipedia.org)
  • The first book that carried the term attachment parenting in the title was written by Tammy Frissell-Deppe, a mother who gave an account of her personal experiences and of those of her friends and acquaintances. (wikipedia.org)
  • In the same year as Sears and Sears' Attachment Parenting Book, Jan Hunt published her essay collection The Natural Child. (wikipedia.org)
  • Hunt who sees herself as a child advocate, campaigned in this book not only for attachment parenting, but also for unschooling. (wikipedia.org)
  • CBN.com -- The desire of every parent and child is to find happiness in life and to live in a loving, happy family relationship. (cbn.com)
  • Christopher Johnson, the university's director of new student and parent programs, said the seminars try to let such parents know that they can still help but that they should "walk away a little and allow the students to be advocates for themselves. (latimes.com)
  • As you intercede for your children (or parents), be reminded of God's promises to bring about salvation within every member of the family. (cbn.com)
  • Besides these needs, parents often have to adapt to the changing social role in the family system. (frontiersin.org)
  • The family court's temporary order specifically required the children to finish the remainder of the school year in Richland School District Two and noted that the case was to be "fast-tracked" to determine future school enrollment. (sclawyersweekly.com)
  • This theme reveals the complexity of the decision-making processes and the positive and negative experiences of youth sport for different family members. (uwaterloo.ca)
  • This theme focuses on the centrality of organized youth sport in the construction of a sense of "team family", as well as the sacrifices and contradictory aspects of maintaining this ideal. (uwaterloo.ca)
  • I trust the parent to spend money on their family more than a politician or bureaucrat or a union leader to do so. (cp24.com)
  • This paper illustrates how the self-regulatory principles can be applied to parenting and family-based interventions at the level of the child, parent, practitioner and organisation. (nih.gov)
  • They and 160 others who showed up for this "Parent Academy" are part of an effort to improve graduation rates, especially among students who are the first in their family to attend college. (latimes.com)
  • Bijna 1 op de 6 kinderen woont in een eenouderhuishouden [Almost 1 in 6 children grow up in a single-parent family]. (degruyter.com)
  • From parent and family orientation, to family weekends and days throughout the academic year, you have many opportunities to stay engaged with your student and see first-hand the strength of the Red Raider family. (ttu.edu)
  • You can also get connected with our Parent and Family Relations Office here on campus, or join the optional membership-based Texas Tech Parent's Association. (ttu.edu)
  • Parents and family members can stay up to date on campus news, support their students and connect with other parents. (ttu.edu)
  • It's here to help incrementally support their children with their learning loss, get them back on track, and I think anything the government can do and our premier can do is a positive thing," he said. (cp24.com)
  • 1962) Evidence in proceedings by stepfather to adopt child supported finding that conduct of father constituted such willful failure to support and maintain child that his consent to adoption was not required. (justia.com)
  • There is a give-and-take atmosphere involved in parent-child communication, and both control and support are balanced. (wikipedia.org)
  • The study, which was funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), found lower rates of confirmed abuse cases, child out-of-home placements, and hospitalizations and emergency room visits for child injuries in counties where parenting support was implemented. (cdc.gov)
  • Parenting refers to the intricacies of raising a child and not exclusively for a biological relationship. (wikipedia.org)
  • The most common caretakers in parenting are the biological parents of the child in question. (wikipedia.org)
  • Justia US Law US Codes and Statutes Missouri Revised Statutes 2005 Missouri Revised Statutes Title XXX - DOMESTIC RELATIONS Chapter 453 - Adoption and Foster Care § 453.040. (justia.com)
  • The multiethnic character of increasingly large parts of urban and rural communities in western societies makes the topic of interethnic contact more and more relevant in order to improve the quality of life and personal relations in daily life contexts, and to foster social inclusion. (frontiersin.org)
  • Parents (N = 263) completed a self-administered questionnaire with scale items based on 4 constructs of the Protection Motivation Theory: perceived vulnerability, perceived severity, response efficacy, and self-efficacy. (cdc.gov)
  • The Infant-Toddler Success parenting classes are offered for free throughout the San Bernardino and Rialto school districts. (csusb.edu)
  • All three books stood - with their opposition against a crude behavioristic infant anthropology - in the tradition of Spock, but radicalized the concept of a contingency-oriented parenting on the one hand, and incorporated Liedloff's idea of an instinct-guided resp. (wikipedia.org)
  • Principles of reflexive youth work, including developmentally-informed group leadership, are also covered. (concordia.ca)
  • Principles of Pediatric Environmental Health: How Can Parents' Preconception Exposures and In Utero Exposures Affect a Developing Child? (cdc.gov)
  • The Ministry of Education announced on Thursday that the government will be offering parents $200 or $250 per child to help offset the cost of catching up in school after two years of disrupted learning due to the COVID-19 pandemic. (cp24.com)
  • This is the fourth time the government has issued payments to parents in the past two years to relieve pressures brought on from the pandemic. (cp24.com)
  • These parents had an estimated 1,498,800 children under the age of 18 years (U.S. DOJ, 2000). (hhs.gov)
  • This is especially true for both younger children (3 years or less, plus 30 minutes) and children in middle to highly educated households (plus 25 minutes). (degruyter.com)
  • While the presence of ethnic prejudice is manifest in children as young as 3 years old in terms of ingroup favoritism and outgroup discrimination ( Dweck, 2009 ), the identification of the environmental sources of ethnic prejudice in children still needs to be studied. (frontiersin.org)
  • For example, 6 years old children are equally biased for both implicit and explicit levels ( Baron and Banaji, 2006 ), while 10 years old children show a dissociation between the two measures (i.e., the level of implicit ethnic attitudes stays constant while self-reported preferences for the own ingroup decrease). (frontiersin.org)
  • Sean Taylor, Database Administrator, helps run the University's database of alumni, parents and friends by pulling together lists, generating reports and updating records daily. (mckendree.edu)
  • The cloned function object has a __proto__ that is parented by the XBL compilation scope. (mozilla.org)
  • that is parented by the XBL compilation scope. (mozilla.org)
  • This course provides students with an understanding of the scope and status of child and youth care work, sensitizes them to the necessary competencies and daily challenges of this work in a range of settings, and reviews relevant theory. (concordia.ca)
  • This course reviews approaches to applied research that are applicable to youth work practice. (concordia.ca)
  • Some research has shown that this style of parenting is more beneficial than the too-hard authoritarian style or the too-soft permissive style. (wikipedia.org)
  • For information on CDC's prevention research in child maltreatment, visit www.cdc.gov/injury. (cdc.gov)
  • Our research addresses this gap by analyzing data from semi-structured interviews with 30 parents of children between the ages of 10-18 who produce beef cattle in Kansas. (cdc.gov)
  • The "7 Baby-Bs" were not explicitly presented as a canon yet, but as basic elements of a new parenting philosophy, they were distinctly clear even at that early point. (wikipedia.org)
  • However, little work is focused on understanding how children are exposed to mathematical language within their early learning environments (e.g., while interacting with parents). (purdue.edu)
  • And yes, we are going to be, for the first time in Ontario for young kids out there…doing a literacy assessment to understand if your child has regressed in reading and give them the right interventions and supports to get them on track," he said. (cp24.com)
  • Parenting styles vary by historical period, race/ethnicity, social class, preference, and a few other social features. (wikipedia.org)
  • It also reviews the policy, legislative and organizational contexts of the practice of psychoeducation and youth work, and considers the ways in which models of ethical decision making inform practice. (concordia.ca)
  • Topics include confidentiality and information sharing in inter-professional contexts, balancing issues of control, empowerment and education, developing critical reflexivity, and appreciating the complexities and dilemmas inherent in youth work practice. (concordia.ca)
  • The determinants of parenting: A process model. (springer.com)
  • Raising God conscious, moral, successful children, with a sense of civic responsibility in today's world is not easy. (iiit.org)
  • She argued that infants, speaking in terms of evolution, have not arrived in the modernity yet, so that today's way of child care - with bottle feeding, use of cribs and baby carriages, etc. - does not meet their needs. (wikipedia.org)
  • Throughout the history of women's institutions, the parenting role of incarcerated women simply could not be ignored because of inmate pregnancy (Jeffries et al. (hhs.gov)
  • Predicting media use in very young children: The role of demographics and parent attitudes. (degruyter.com)
  • [2] Governments and society may also have a role in child-rearing or upbringing. (wikipedia.org)
  • [8] Cultural values play a major role in how a parent raises their child. (wikipedia.org)
  • A family's social class plays a large role in the opportunities and resources that will be available to a child. (wikipedia.org)
  • Researchers estimate the results of this study could translate annually into 688 fewer cases of child maltreatment, 240 fewer out-of-home placements, and 60 fewer children with injuries requiring hospitalization or emergency room treatment for every 100,000 children under age 8. (cdc.gov)
  • The workshops are seen as especially beneficial for the growing number of California students whose parents did not attend college. (latimes.com)
  • There are provinces and territories that are describing a bigger broader vision for education and then figuring out not just one-off kind of things, but what do we need to do to ensure that kids have the wide range of skills they need to be able to collaborate, solve difficult problems, understand what's real information and what's not real information," she said. (cp24.com)
  • A main focus of this course is to develop skills in relationship building and communication with youth. (concordia.ca)
  • Parenting skills vary, and a parent or surrogate with good parenting skills may be referred to as a good parent . (wikipedia.org)
  • However, parents used more general language when their children had higher numeracy skills but used more mathematical language when they had lower numeracy skills. (purdue.edu)
  • Children are particularly vulnerable to RWI because of their developing immune systems and high exposure to recreational water. (cdc.gov)
  • The present study aims to investigate the intergenerational transmission of ethnic prejudice in 3- to 9- year-old children and its relations to parenting styles. (frontiersin.org)
  • U.S. DOJ, 2000), the children of incarcerated parents per se have not been considered the responsibility of any traditional governmental entity, such as child welfare, mental health, or the juvenile court. (hhs.gov)
  • In particular, authoritative parenting is positively related to mental health and satisfaction with life, and authoritarian parenting is negatively related to these variables. (wikipedia.org)
  • Child maltreatment harms people and society, contributing to costly long-term health problems ranging from heart disease and obesity to depression and anxiety, making this type of prevention study critical. (cdc.gov)
  • DSN: CC37.NHIS88.CHLDHLTH GENERAL INFORMATION The data tape for the 1988 National Health Interview Survey on child health is made up of three major sections. (cdc.gov)
  • No detailed study has tracked the college success of students whose parents participate in these types of programs around California and the nation, but experts say they think such sessions help, particularly in reducing risky behavior. (latimes.com)
  • This study provides initial evidence that parents' number talk and mathematical language use are distinct constructs of parents' talk that may expose children to different aspects of mathematical understanding. (purdue.edu)
  • One study noted that children fathered by men exposed to dioxin after the Seveso, Italy accident showed a decrease in the expected male:female ratio [Mocarelli et al. (cdc.gov)
  • Provision of consent for self and child to participate in the study. (who.int)
  • Whitney (Pankey) Strang '05 , Director of Major and Planned Giving, meets alumni, parents and friends near and far who want to give back to help the University accomplish its goals. (mckendree.edu)
  • Singapore parents' use of digital devices with young children: Motivations and uses. (degruyter.com)
  • Also, on average children have strongly increased their daily media use-up to 102 minutes. (degruyter.com)