• The present study investigated whether parents' antismoking actions mediated the prospective relationship between parental smoking cessation and children's smoking. (nih.gov)
  • Smoking status of parents (predictor) was assessed when their children were in 3rd grade, parental antismoking actions (mediators) were assessed when their children were in 11th grade, and children's smoking status (outcome) was assessed when they were in 12th grade. (nih.gov)
  • Results showed that children's odds of daily smoking were reduced by 39% (95% CI = 24%-51%) for those whose parents had quit smoking, compared with those whose parents were current smokers. (nih.gov)
  • Many parents remain actively engaged in their children's lives throughout their college years and beyond, often contributing to living expenses, assisting with childcare, and helping them find a first job (Hamilton 2016 ). (springer.com)
  • Parents have so much influence on their children's behavior that if the parents were to actually live the Christian lifestyle, their children would follow suit. (raptureforums.com)
  • Parents' variable schedules require irregular family mealtimes and child bedtimes that interfere with children's healthy development. (epi.org)
  • Findings suggest that the goal of a literacy program in bilingual children's classrooms has to be that students learn not only about biliteracy skills but also about the value and meaning of the human experience in our pluralistic society. (hindawi.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)
  • In addition, children's books and school textbooks can contain mixed messages about ethnic-racial diversity in society, representing and emphasizing human sameness or difference to varying degrees. (paradiso.nl)
  • The parents wanted to provide their children's education because of content in modern German textbooks that violates the family's religious beliefs. (wnd.com)
  • In this context, parents' involvement in children's education is increasingly taken for granted. (lu.se)
  • On the contrary, ethnographic data highlights the complexities of parents' risk management and how they navigate uncertainties with regard to their children's future. (lu.se)
  • Sentiments of fear of regret and guilt are particularly conspicuous in parents' narratives around their children's education. (lu.se)
  • In this paper I propose that the transformation of traditional intergenerational expectations and the emergence of a child-centered relatedness in East Asian societies (Kipnis 2011) are vital to understand parents' sentiments of uncertainty and guilt in relation to their children's future. (lu.se)
  • The COVID-19 pandemic reduced the possibilities of i t e r a t u r e R generating stimulating spaces for children's development, as all the systems with which a child interacts during this phase were affected. (bvsalud.org)
  • Yet it is also a time of freedom from the responsibilities of adult life, a time in which parents , or other responsible adults, take care of the child, fulfilling his or her needs and keeping them safe. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • The role of parents and other caring adults, including both those within the family and those in the wider community such as teachers, is crucial in guiding the child to make good decisions. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • Adults remain the children of their parents , no matter what their age. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • In 1988, adults with a college degree had two surviving parents living together for 1.8 years longer than nongraduates. (springer.com)
  • This five-year increase in disparity was driven predominantly by higher rates of union dissolution among parents of adults with less education. (springer.com)
  • How many years are adults expected to have parents who are both alive and living with each other? (springer.com)
  • Increases in life expectancy (Wilmoth 2000 ) mean that adults are more likely to have two surviving parents for longer (Watkins et al. (springer.com)
  • Adults usually do not have any difficulty communicating with children when it simply involves giving directions (how to use scissors) or explaining things (why cars are dangerous). (umaine.edu)
  • At times, adults may need to stop whatever they are doing and listen to the child. (umaine.edu)
  • If adults would talk to children with as much consideration as they talk to their friends, they could really communicate with children and be on the way to excellent relationships. (umaine.edu)
  • Adults who talk "at" children often use the excuse that a small child cannot converse at the adult level. (umaine.edu)
  • Their brain storming of the individuals with careless and irresponsible Occidental thoughts, ideas and images and dis-allowance by these gentlemen of school children and other youngsters and adults to go through the ancient Indian expressions is deteriorating the situation further. (boloji.com)
  • Focusing on adults at the ages when they are likely to be raising children, at age 29 blacks are about 60 percent more likely to work a non-daytime schedule than whites and Asians, and about 24 percent more likely to have non-standard schedules of all kinds, including non-daytime, rotating shift, or variable schedules. (epi.org)
  • These adults tend to tell children that all people are the same, avoiding the topic of human ethnic-racial diversity for fear of stimulating prejudice. (paradiso.nl)
  • Our internet filters serve as a first line of defense, guarding children and young adults from the millions of websites promoting Porn and 'Pride' as normal and healthy. (christiannewswire.com)
  • Those with a family dog were also doing better developmentally, particularly with prosocial behaviors, when they interacted with adults and other children. (fatherly.com)
  • Evolution and Human Behavior. (wikipedia.org)
  • 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)
  • We can accept a child without necessarily approving of his behavior. (umaine.edu)
  • If children grow up in a home that is full of iniquity they will pick up this behavior themselves. (raptureforums.com)
  • Includes instruction in management theory, human resources management and behavior, accounting and other quantitative methods, purchasing and logistics, organization and production, marketing, and business decision-making. (myfuture.com)
  • Findings indicate that children might acquire prejudice by means of the parents' implicit cognition and automatic behavior and educational actions. (frontiersin.org)
  • An example is the develop fetus, infant, and child to many po ance of the tumour. (who.int)
  • It features parent-child relationships in a larger context, by examining the help exchange between kin and nonkin and the intergenerational transmission of family characteristics. (taylorfrancis.com)
  • 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)
  • By drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in Singapore, I attempt to shed light on the subjective desires, anxieties and aspirations that shapes contemporary parenting in East Asia, and address its consequences for family life and intergenerational relations. (lu.se)
  • 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)
  • 2015). Mothers' parenting behaviors in families of school-aged children with autism spectrum disorder: An observational and questionnaire study. (springer.com)
  • A study found that although parents did rate their adoptive children higher in negative traits and behaviors like arrogance and stealing, they scored both adopted and biological children similarly when it came to positive traits like conscientiousness and persistence. (wikipedia.org)
  • The importance of two specific child problem behaviors (activity level and the child being a worrier) on maternal mental health changed over time. (nih.gov)
  • ATLANTA, June 7, 2023 / Christian Newswire / -- Christian Internet filtering startup, FreeFiltering.org , is inviting parents nationwide to join the fight against efforts to groom their children into harmful LGBTQ lifestyles during so-called 'Pride Month. (christiannewswire.com)
  • Do parents favor their adoptive or biological children? (wikipedia.org)
  • We're doing everybody a favor by not having children in the first place. (chronicle.com)
  • Although the cases described by Severinghaus and Mitchell were markedly different from the typical cases in infants with CCHS, the term Ondine's curse gained wide acceptance to denote CCHS in infants and children, but the term has recently fallen out of favor. (medscape.com)
  • Historical and international comparison of companionship of married couple and parent-child relation and kinship. (meiji.ac.jp)
  • Hays 1996) is likely heightened in such a competitive education system, parents' efforts and aspirations in raising their young children cannot be understood as purely strategic and calculating. (lu.se)
  • Improving life expectancies and health allows parents to provide for their children longer, but greater union dissolution among parents can weaken the safety net they can create for their adult children. (springer.com)
  • They provide a safety net for their adult children, who are facing greater marital instability and economic uncertainty than previous cohorts (Furstenberg et al. (springer.com)
  • The Freyds were rapidly joined by a group of professionals with expertise in the area of suggestion, and by thousands of parents who had been accused of child abuse by adult children who had no memory of abuse before entering some form of therapy. (solarnavigator.net)
  • Child Development, 67 , 3296-3319. (springer.com)
  • Child Development, 55 (1), 83-96. (springer.com)
  • 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)
  • Childhood (being a child ) is a broad term usually applied to the phase of Human development between infancy and adulthood. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • Physical development is relatively straightforward-if the child receives adequate food , shelter, and exercise, and is protected from harm the body naturally grows to fulfill its physical potential. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • Bureau of Maternal and Child Health and Resources Development. (upenn.edu)
  • 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)
  • Scholars@Duke publication: The Effects of Family Functioning on the Development of Posttraumatic Stress in Children and Their Parents Following Admission to the PICU. (duke.edu)
  • Although family function did not emerge as a predictor in this study, further understanding of the influence of the family and the interplay between child and parent posttraumatic stress is needed to improve our understanding of the model of development of posttraumatic stress in this population to inform the intervention strategies. (duke.edu)
  • But the vision of a more humanizing community can become a reality only as these institutions function more fully as human growth and development centers! (religion-online.org)
  • 1 By preventing many parents from adequately caring for their children, such practices adversely affect child and adolescent development. (epi.org)
  • 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)
  • Moscovici, 1961/1976) in children and adolescents was conducted in order to put forward theoretical and methodological proposals on the study and development of SRs, and to highlight future directions. (bvsalud.org)
  • This review offers an overview of the effects on child development in children aged less than 5 years old that were living with their parents during the COVID-19 pandem- ic years, al owing evidencing the need to prioritize care for timely detection and assistance of neurodevelopmental changes. (bvsalud.org)
  • The ev- idence suggests that social distancing can be the main cause for the onset of delays in child development, in its motor, language, cognitive, and socioemotional areas. (bvsalud.org)
  • Intervention planning in the context of psychoeducation and relational child and youth care work is emphasized. (concordia.ca)
  • Parental expressed emotion toward children: Prediction from early family functioning. (springer.com)
  • Adoptive Parents, Adaptive Parents: Evaluating the Importance of Biological Ties for Parental Investment" (PDF). (wikipedia.org)
  • This shift has contributed to a growing share and more diverse set of post-separation parents opting for shared physical custody (SPC), which typically means that children alternate between the parental residences for substantive amounts of time. (mdpi.com)
  • Profiling the case of Germany, where no legal regulations facilitating SPC are implemented to date, we examine the prevalence of SPC families, sociodemographic correlates of SPC, and its associations with parental coparenting and child adjustment. (mdpi.com)
  • RéSuMé La présente étude cas-témoins, conduite à Chiraz, visait à déterminer la relation entre le tabagisme parental et le cancer chez l'enfant. (who.int)
  • Therefore, the types of ious forms of radiation, carcinogen ifested as a higher incidence of the tumours that occur during childhood ic infectious agents, and chemicals same kinds of tumours that occur in in humans, including various embry and chemical mixtures. (who.int)
  • Studies in experimental incidence and multiplicity of tumours to Wilms tumour in humans - in the animals increase and the latency period de adult rat after perinatal exposure to a creases with increasing dose. (who.int)
  • 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)
  • Non-standard schedules are more common among black workers and less-educated workers, and also among mothers who are low-income, younger, and have spent more years as single parents. (epi.org)
  • For young children, mothers with non-standard schedules must make inconsistent and poorer quality child care arrangements. (epi.org)
  • Mothers who are low-income, younger, and have spent more years as single parents are also more likely to have non-standard schedules. (epi.org)
  • Of hourly workers, about half of blacks, half of those with low wages, and one-third of mothers with pre-teen children get one week or less notice of their weekly schedules. (epi.org)
  • For all those years, people had pictured the Barbour family in their own minds, and nobody in our television production fit those pictures," he said of his show which he doesn't categorize as a "soap," but a well-plotted human drama characterized by the relationships of people "dedicated to the mothers and fathers of the younger generation and to their bewildering offspring. (lchr.org)
  • A questionnaire was completed by the mothers of 98 children newly diagnosed with cancer before the age of 14 years and 100 age- and sex-matched controls. (who.int)
  • When socioeconomic differences between two-biological-parent and two-adoptive-parent households are controlled for, the two types of families tend to invest a similar amount of resources. (wikipedia.org)
  • Most children continue to live with their mother after a divorce or separation, yet paternal involvement in post-separation families has increased substantially in many Western nations. (mdpi.com)
  • 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)
  • This course explores the precursors, presentations, nature and impacts of mental health concerns and addictions for youth, their families, and within communities. (concordia.ca)
  • Families forge a legacy when both parents and children act against type. (firstthings.com)
  • FreeFiltering.org hopes this new initiative to enlist parents in the fight will further empower families to protect their children from harmful online content, reinforcing efforts to foster an internet environment that aligns with traditional Christian values. (christiannewswire.com)
  • It was commonplace for children of what they called good families to fill their imaginations with hopes of serious literary or philosophic careers, as do ours with hopes of careers in entertainment or business. (simonandschuster.com)
  • Secondhand tobacco smoke (SHS) exposure of children and their families causes significant morbidity and mortality. (who.int)
  • 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)
  • Pediatric patients (n = 69) and parents were recruited in the ICU. (duke.edu)
  • Relationships with fathers, in particular, are sensitive to parents' divorce (Curran et al. (springer.com)
  • Fathers [or parents] do not provoke your children to anger, but bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord. (gty.org)
  • Right at the end of our Old Testament, Malachi promises that the Lord will turn the hearts of fathers to children and children to fathers, a promise initially realized in the ministry of John the Baptist (Luke 1:17). (firstthings.com)
  • As fathers turn to their sons and sons to their fathers, the resulting harmony is a human replication of the "cross-generational" faithfulness within the Triune life. (firstthings.com)
  • Young children and adolescents of parents working unpredictable schedules or outside standard daytime working hours are more likely to have inferior cognitive and behavioral outcomes. (epi.org)
  • The large majority of parents (79%) showed low levels of Expressed Emotion, an indicator of a positive family climate. (springer.com)
  • Family Relations. (wikipedia.org)
  • National Council on Family Relations. (wikipedia.org)
  • In some periods of Roman history, parents traditionally brought their newborn to the pater familias, the family patriarch, who would then decide whether the child was to be kept and raised or left to die by exposure. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • I don't really want more categories, and think that parenting/family-related topics ought to fit in Human Relations reasonably well. (metafilter.com)
  • Objectives: To report the rate of acute stress and posttraumatic stress among children and parents following PICU admission and the relation between family function and posttraumatic stress. (duke.edu)
  • Parents completed measures of family functioning during the hospitalization. (duke.edu)
  • Pearson correlations and multiple regression models were used to examine the relations between family functioning and acute stress and posttraumatic stress. (duke.edu)
  • You may talk "at" the family dog, or even a tiny baby, but try to talk "with" a young child. (umaine.edu)
  • So what I want to do for you and for us is to just look in the Word of God and put together an understanding, a framework for understanding marriage and the family, and raising children the way God has designed it. (gty.org)
  • the idea of developing human beings was considered so important and vital that each neighborhood had within walking distance a Family Growth Center which was a center for learning about being human , from birth to death? (religion-online.org)
  • The family said the objectionable material includes explicit lessons on sex, the promotion of the occult and witchcraft and an effort to teach children to disrespect authority figures. (wnd.com)
  • Reality on radio: 'One Man's Family' first to bring human drama on the air. (lchr.org)
  • This was the first attempt on radio to create a real-life American family with down-to-earth human relations between parents and children, wrote creator Morse. (lchr.org)
  • Christian recently concluded an as-yet unpublished study on family dogs and her findings are in line with previous work indicating that children stand to gain from growing up around canine companions. (fatherly.com)
  • The amendments flow from recommendations made in the strategic framework for management of human resources,2 in relation to WHO's work-life policy, which reflects the "work/family" policy agenda adopted in 1995 by the executive heads of the organizations of the United Nations system. (who.int)
  • The proposals include such subjects as special leave related to adoption, parenting and family emergencies. (who.int)
  • Shared maternity leave recognizes the dual and complementary roles of both parents at work and in the family and is current practice in the United Nations system. (who.int)
  • Eder [ 5 ] also claims that preschool children understand racial differences by distinguishing themselves from other racial and ethnic groups. (hindawi.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)
  • Others prefer to discuss and celebrate human difference in the hope of promoting appreciation for ethnic-racial diversity, and prevent prejudice in children. (paradiso.nl)
  • Adopted siblings have, on average, an IQ score 4.4 points higher than the siblings who are reared by their biological parents and 3.18 point increase for half-siblings reared by their biological parents. (wikipedia.org)
  • We recognize the vital role parents play in this endeavor, and we value their active participation in identifying and reporting harmful websites that can influence their children adversely. (christiannewswire.com)
  • One of the findings was that the children exhibited resistance to black characters, and their resistance was shaped within their larger social and cultural surroundings such as the parents' racial views towards black people and the dominant racial discourse of Korean community. (hindawi.com)
  • There are so many AskMe posts related to children, parenting, babies, etc - that I really think there should be some kind of all encompassing category for it. (metafilter.com)
  • I just posted an AskMe in the Grab Bag category because I did not find a Parenting/Grandparenting or Children category. (metafilter.com)
  • Factors that affect maternal mental health were studied when the children were 30 and 50 months old, and changes in the importance of these factors over time were analyzed. (nih.gov)
  • This study follows up previous work on the influence of social class, strain and social support on maternal mental distress when the children were 18 months old. (nih.gov)
  • Chronic strain related to children and child care-taking consistently predicted maternal mental distress. (nih.gov)
  • Among the specific child related strains, problems with child care-taking were significantly associated with maternal symptom levels at all time points. (nih.gov)
  • Problems with child care arrangements and combining work and child care-taking are predictive of maternal mental health when the children are 18, 30 and 50 months old. (nih.gov)
  • Parents are increasingly supporting their children well into adulthood and often serve as a safety net during periods of economic and marital instability. (springer.com)
  • Principles of reflexive youth work, including developmentally-informed group leadership, are also covered. (concordia.ca)
  • It is well documented in previous research that Singaporean (middle-class) parents invest substantial resources, time and emotion in supporting their children academically and developmentally. (lu.se)
  • To find some quiet corner of the hospital that had nothing to do with pregnancy, labor, or children. (chronicle.com)
  • Taking L. acidophilus by mouth during pregnancy, while breastfeeding, or giving it to newborns doesn't seem to prevent allergies in children. (medlineplus.gov)
  • Engaging parents is an important step in our ongoing efforts to prevent child maltreatment and promote safe, stable, nurturing, relationships for children in all communities," said Rodney Hammond, Ph.D., director of the CDC's Division of Violence Prevention. (cdc.gov)
  • When a child grows up under difficult situations, whether they are physically challenging such as poverty , famine , or war , so that physical needs are not met, or mentally, emotionally , and socially lacking, such that the child fails to develop healthy relationships with others or to develop cognitive skills, the resulting adult does not achieve their potential and they and society as a whole suffer. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • Robson considers how strongly the the individual wants relationships - and how many, whether he/she will marry early or late - or not at all, the likelihood of children, the possibility of divorce. (astroamerica.com)
  • 3. Parent child relationships, 4. (astroamerica.com)
  • In addition to love & marriage, this book also covers parent/child relationships, friendships & professional relationships, areas rarely covered in other relationship books. (astroamerica.com)
  • Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar told reporters on Thursday that they are using DNA testing to verify relationships between parents and children. (thedailybeast.com)
  • The Didache prescribed, "You shall not murder a child by abortion nor kill that which is born. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • abortion, millions of children being killed in their mother's womb. (gty.org)
  • Given those experiences - mostly positive - and the sheer amount of research on the psychological and health effects - also mostly positive - of growing up around a dog, I wonder whether I'm doing my children a disservice by holding off on a hound. (fatherly.com)
  • The New York Times reported that some of the records used to authenticate familial relations have "disappeared" or were "destroyed. (thedailybeast.com)
  • No school is effectively inculcating human traits and relations and bonds and aesthetic learning. (boloji.com)
  • In all groups, more Emotional Over-involvement, more Criticism and fewer expressions of Warmth were associated with higher levels of parenting stress. (springer.com)
  • Measurements and Main Results: All children endorsed acute stress during their PICU admission, with 51% meeting criteria for acute stress disorder. (duke.edu)
  • At 3-month follow-up, 53% of the children continued to endorse posttraumatic stress with 13% meeting criteria for posttraumatic stress disorder. (duke.edu)
  • Among parents, 78% endorsed acute stress during admission with 30% meeting criteria for acute stress disorder, and at follow-up, 35% endorsed posttraumatic stress with 10% meeting criteria for posttraumatic stress disorder. (duke.edu)
  • Conclusions: Both children and parents have alarmingly high rates of acute stress and posttraumatic stress following the child's PICU admission. (duke.edu)
  • Tests and Measurements for the Parent, Teacher, Advocate and Attorney - Your child has received three years of special education for reading problems. (wrightslaw.com)
  • But no one-including the young child-likes to be talked "at. (umaine.edu)
  • There's a generation of young people, even Christian young people today, who are afraid of the prospect of bringing children into the world. (gty.org)
  • According to Van Ausdale and Feagin [ 4 ], "Children as young as three and four employ racial and ethnic concepts as important integrative and symbolically creative tools in the daily construction of their social lives" (page 26). (hindawi.com)
  • As a young classics student, I'd learned from Sophocles that "children are the anchors of a mother's life. (chronicle.com)
  • It was not imply or primarily that these European schoolchildren had a vastly more sophisticated knowledge of the human heart than we were accustomed to in the young or, for that matter, the old. (simonandschuster.com)
  • Childhood is the time during which human beings develop their physical bodies and their mental abilities. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • HG consists of 23 pairs of chromosomes existing in all diploid cells of human beings, where DNA is found and all genetic features of an individual is stored 6 . (bvsalud.org)
  • It focuses on creating opportunities for youth to engage with individuals, organizations and institutions at the community level. (concordia.ca)
  • Parents with non-standard schedules can engage in fewer pre-academic activities with children, such as reading books, telling stories, and practicing reading, writing, or math skills. (epi.org)
  • One of the most significant health impacts, however, is that children with dogs engage in more physical activity . (fatherly.com)
  • This course reviews approaches to applied research that are applicable to youth work practice. (concordia.ca)
  • Students undertake an applied research project, relevant to an area of practice or programs of intervention with youth. (concordia.ca)
  • 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)
  • This course explores the fundamental concepts and theories of case management and supervision as applied to youth work practice. (concordia.ca)
  • The practice of infanticide , found in a number of cultures, took many forms, such as child sacrifice to supernatural figures or forces, as allegedly practiced in ancient Carthage . (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • Provides students with their first practical experience in the field of social work and introduces them to basic theoretical models used in social work practice, including generalist approach, ecosystems, cultural competence, and human diversity. (bemidjistate.edu)
  • 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)
  • 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)
  • If teachers, administrators, school boards, and parents catch a vision of schools as lifelong growth centers, the humanizing impact of this vast network of schools can be immense. (religion-online.org)
  • The size and 'quality' of the population are issues of major concern in contemporary East Asia, as fertility rates are falling and competitiveness increasingly centers on 'a fitting' human capital. (lu.se)
  • Despite of the extraordinary importance that all new knowledge on human genetics will have in dental clinics, little efforts have been made to prepare undergraduates in relation to this new information and technology. (bvsalud.org)
  • HHS also reportedly asked for volunteers to work the weekend to sift through the records of 12,000 children to find out which ones were forcibly separated from their parents at the border. (thedailybeast.com)
  • WND reported several years ago about the day police knocked on the door of the Romeikes and forcibly escorted their children to public school. (wnd.com)
  • Our children are taught to embrace deviant lifestyles. (raptureforums.com)
  • Parents are invited to use the company's site-wide 'Live Chat' button to report websites they've found targeting children with deviant sexual propaganda, transgender ideology, and other dangerous content. (christiannewswire.com)
  • A 2004 study found that after gaining a child (whether through birth or adoption), respondents reported less depressed affect, more disagreements with their spouse, and more support from their own parents, but it appeared the experience of becoming an adoptive parent or a stepparent was less stressful than the adjustment to biological parenthood. (wikipedia.org)
  • Staff Rule 650 has been amended expressly to provide more flexibility within the current special leave provisions to allow staff members to request special leave in the event of death of a close relative or adoption of a child. (who.int)
  • Normally such leave shall not be granted other valid reasons , including the death of a close relative or until all accrued annual leave has been exhausted and normally the adoption of a child under conditions determined by the shall not exceed one year in duration. (who.int)
  • Co-occurring conditions in children with Down syndrome and autism: a retrospective study. (cdc.gov)
  • In addition, language minority children often experience racism "on a daily basis in the form of jokes and/or derogatory gestures and comments … based on their physical appearances" [ 20 , page 133]. (hindawi.com)
  • Science & Cocktails: How do prejudices and racism develop in children? (paradiso.nl)
  • How can parents promote inclusive attitudes and prevent prejudice and racism in children? (paradiso.nl)
  • Children start to understand racial differences from an early age [ 1 - 3 ]. (hindawi.com)
  • Approximately eight mongths after I first presented betrayal trauma theory, my parents, in conjunction with Ralph Underwager and others, formed the False Memory Syndrome Foundation (FMSF). (solarnavigator.net)
  • If a child is brought up in the admonition of the Lord and if Dad and Mom are devoted to the Lord Jesus as well as to each other, in all likelihood that child will follow that example in their adult life. (raptureforums.com)
  • A micro-skills approach is introduced, as well as principles of group leadership and crisis intervention with youth. (concordia.ca)
  • 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)
  • 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)
  • I explained that God is the primary source of happiness and the secondary sources are our parents and siblings, our spouse and children, our neighbors and also nature. (tparents.org)
  • A specific aim was to elucidate the role of chronic strain related to children and child care-taking. (nih.gov)
  • 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)
  • Concurrent with these academic views has been greater societal awareness of children as in need of care, attention, and protection. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • Policy changes should create disincentives to schedule work in ways that impede employees' ability to care for their children. (epi.org)
  • That's why we're asking moms and dads who care about their kids to help us make sure we're blocking every single website they don't want their kids to see. (christiannewswire.com)
  • As employers strive to increase their labor pool, and workers seek off- farm child care, there is mutual interest in improving access to child care services in agricultur al regions dependent on large numbers of full-time and seasonal workers. (cdc.gov)
  • Primary motivators for offering child care as an employment benefit were improved employee morale, enhanced company reputation, and a more stable workforce. (cdc.gov)
  • In 20 Washington state school districts, data were collected from 1,600 children (49% female, 91% White) and from their parents. (nih.gov)
  • Female parents, human or animal. (bvsalud.org)
  • Then, using the company's user-friendly self-help guides, parents simply make an adjustment to the 'DNS servers' used by their Wi-Fi router. (christiannewswire.com)
  • In their personal and professional roles, pediatricians have many opportunities to advocate for elimination of SHS exposure of children, to counsel tobacco users to quit, and to counsel children never to start. (who.int)
  • 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)
  • This course provides an introduction to applied ethics in youth work with a focus on the Code of Ethics of the Ordre des psychoéducateurs et psychoéducatrices du Québec. (concordia.ca)
  • The goal of this project was to protect children while parents work in agricultur e by improving off- farm services for children of migrant and seasonal farm workers. (cdc.gov)
  • Survey results are being used to facilitate collaboration among employers, farm workers, and childcare providers to offer a safe, nurturing environment for children while their parents work in agricultur e. (cdc.gov)
  • These professionals argue that multicultural literature provides children with opportunities to understand the ethnic and cultural diversity that they meet as a part of their daily experiences. (hindawi.com)
  • He focused on the role of speech in maintaining and repairing human relations. (firstthings.com)
  • As a pedagogical tool for teaching children racial, ethnic, and cultural diversity, many teachers and researchers highlight the significant role of multicultural literature [ 6 - 11 ]. (hindawi.com)
  • What is the role of education and books in nurturing positive relations between people with different ethnicities or race? (paradiso.nl)
  • For information on CDC's prevention research in child maltreatment, visit www.cdc.gov/injury. (cdc.gov)
  • Introduction: The Human Genome Project (HGP) has allowed for advances in diagnosis and prevention of diseases. (bvsalud.org)