• It is used also for child rearing practices in different societies, at different economic levels, in different ethnic groups, etc. (curehunter.com)
  • In Israel, child-rearing practices in kibbutzim was studied by Fox. (bartleby.com)
  • Parents' values for their children and their beliefs about appropriate child-rearing practices contribute to the ways in which they try to shape their children's development. (uncg.edu)
  • The association between child-rearing practices and children's development of self-control has been well documented in research. (athealth.com)
  • In addition to asking about matters associated with gender, these new twins were asked about their transition, rearing, and sexual practices. (hawaii.edu)
  • Parenting stress causes physical and psychological problems for mothers during child-rearing and negatively impacts the growth and development of their children. (scirp.org)
  • From July to October 2021, an online, anonymous, self-administered questionnaire was administered to the mothers of children aged 6 months to 5 years, and the data from 93 mothers were statistically analyzed. (scirp.org)
  • Mothers in the study had one (45.2%) or two (45.2%) children in their care, and 23.7% of the mothers' husbands were Japanese. (scirp.org)
  • The average score of total PSI-SF-15 of the mothers in this study was slightly higher than that of mothers raising children in China. (scirp.org)
  • Additionally, "I think it is a shame not to practice Chinese customs", "I feel that Chinese customs are not respected", "the number of children with diagnosed diseases", "Social Support Rating Scale (SSRS) total score" and "father's nationality" influenced the parenting stress of the mothers in this study. (scirp.org)
  • Additionally, it has been reported that the parenting stress of Chinese mothers in Japan is higher than that of Japanese mothers or Chinese mothers raising children in China [5], and it is urgent to consider support measures for Chinese mothers in Japan. (scirp.org)
  • Although there have been few studies focusing on Chinese mothers living in Japan, it has been reported that they are more likely to suffer from the distress of raising their children in a culture different from that of China [10] [11]. (scirp.org)
  • Nevertheless, it is difficult for Chinese mothers to receive social support from their parents when raising children in Japan because Chinese grandparents cannot obtain visas [11]. (scirp.org)
  • A national sample of more than 2,000 mothers and fathers, the Commonwealth Survey of Parents of Young Children provided a snapshot of the condition of families with young children and the pressures and concerns faced by parents in shaping the home environments and lifestyles of those families. (rand.org)
  • Whilst the research predominantly investigates the ways social visions were interpreted by kibbutz planners and users, who would often act in both roles, it also addresses three themes: the professional (architect, educators and politicians), the personal (children, mothers) and material manifestations (plans, buildings, photographs) to provide clarity on the multiple lenses of experience. (brookes.ac.uk)
  • In Germany, even working mothers are rare, children are encouraged to be independent and self-reliant. (bartleby.com)
  • In contrast, significant social class differences, for both mothers and fathers, were found in child-rearing values and beliefs. (uncg.edu)
  • Virtually all the studies that he discusses, with the important exception of those by the distinguished Indian psychoanalyst Sudhir Kakar, were carried out by Western anthropologists-Lynn Bennett's study of high-caste women in Nepal, for instance, Alan Roland's comparison of Indian and Japanese child-rearing, which found more warmth, but less independence in Indian families, Minturn and Lambert's Mothers of Six Cultures , and numerous writings on Hindu goddess myths. (nybooks.com)
  • According to Dr. Coleman's book, working mothers tend to put in twice as many hours into housework as their partners, and 60 percent of these women that make the same or more than their husbands have to take time off to look after their sick children, because their partners will not do it. (beliefnet.com)
  • Both research studies and parents themselves report that the hard-to-manage children are more compliant and agreeable with their fathers than with their mothers. (athealth.com)
  • The aim of this study was to determine the effect of social, psychological and demographic variables on breastfeeding among Kuwaiti mothers. (who.int)
  • Another study concentrated on breastfeeding versus artificial feeding and weaning behaviour of 2833 Kuwaiti mothers with children aged ≤ 1 year (3). (who.int)
  • 60% of mothers breastfed their children on an average of 5.8 months. (who.int)
  • These statistics leave no doubt about the significant impact of a woman's career on the length of time she chooses to breastfeed and on her behavior toward her child in general because of the impact of her absence from home when compared to the traditional stay-at-home mothers. (who.int)
  • Fitzgibbons, however, left out some key information about Sirota's findings: 'The gay and bisexual fathers in Sirota's study were married to the mothers,' Box Turtle Bulletin reports. (advocate.com)
  • Dr. Brooten's study consisted of two groups of pregnant mothers. (nih.gov)
  • These statistics study concentrated on breastfeeding versus artificial leave no doubt about the significant impact of a woman's feeding and weaning behaviour of 2833 Kuwaiti mothers career on the length of time she chooses to breastfeed and with children aged 1 year ( 3 ). (who.int)
  • 60% of mothers breastfed their children on an average the impact of her absence from home when compared to of 5.8 months. (who.int)
  • These studies did were found between old and young mothers. (who.int)
  • This is an observational, analytical, cross-sectional study with a quan- titative approach conducted with children and their mothers in Acarape - CE. (bvsalud.org)
  • It differs from PARENTING in that in child rearing the emphasis is on the act of training or bringing up the child and the interaction between the parent and child, while parenting emphasizes the responsibility and qualities of exemplary behavior of the parent. (curehunter.com)
  • In the second year, when children begin walking and exploring on their own, it is important for parents to set limits for the child's safety and provide guidelines for acceptable behavior. (athealth.com)
  • Thus, poorly modulated behavior in a toddler or preschool child can overwhelm the mother or father, as well as split the parents into disagreement as they argue on how to manage the child. (athealth.com)
  • When parents disagree on behavior management, there is little improvement in the child. (athealth.com)
  • Calm, consistent behavior by adults is the model for teaching self-control in the child. (athealth.com)
  • Field test evidence for this program (Popkin, 1984) was published in The Second Handbook of Parent Education (Fine, 1991) and reported significant positive changes in the behavior of both parents and children. (activeparenting.com)
  • Of the 274 parents in the study, 97% reported positive changes in their own behavior, 84% reported positive changes in their childs behavior, and 97% indicated that they would recommend the program to friends. (activeparenting.com)
  • Results showed that parents did, in fact, perceive their childrens behavior as more favorable following completion of the program, as measured by two child behavior questionnaires (reliability ratings of .78 and .87 for children and teens respectively). (activeparenting.com)
  • In a separate study, Urban (1991) reported that Spanish-speaking parents who completed an Active Parenting group showed improved attitudes towards their childrens behavior and improved parenting methods as compared to a Spanish-speaking control group thus providing evidence of effectiveness across cultures. (activeparenting.com)
  • Due to the fact that the ways that people bring up their children can be very different all over the world as we share different attitudes, values and beliefs etc. (bartleby.com)
  • Kurtz's answer to this is that Western psychiatric studies of Indian culture indicate deep-rooted Hindu cultural principles and child-rearing attitudes that are consistent across the country. (nybooks.com)
  • One study from the 1970s compared children's feeding and parental attitudes towards children's food in Kuwait, Egypt and Bahrain, with a focus on the transition from breastfeeding to regular food (2). (who.int)
  • 1 ). One study from the 1970s compared children's feeding in the last two or three decades of the last century in and parental attitudes towards children's food in Kuwait, Kuwait have revealed significant changes due to the effects of modern life. (who.int)
  • A group of children, all about the same age, shared a children's house and had a nanny who took care of their everyday needs. (wikipedia.org)
  • The founders of the collective education believed that granting the children independence from their family liberated the family from the economic and social burden, which otherwise might distort the children's development. (wikipedia.org)
  • An opportunity to define and promote school readiness indicators was facilitated by collaborative relationships with a strong emphasis on data among First 5 LA, the Children's Planning Council, and the Los Angeles County Public Health Department, and other child-serving organizations. (cdc.gov)
  • This research focuses on the children's housing and particularly the seminal era of communal sleeping arrangements as a specific case study to explore the assumed dialectic relationships between social visions and everyday life through their architectural and spatial representation. (brookes.ac.uk)
  • Although assigning household chores is considered an essential component of child-rearing, it turns out they might not help improve children's self-control, a coveted personality trait that allows people to suppress inappropriate impulses, focus their attention and perform an action when there is strong tendency to avoid it. (uh.edu)
  • Thus, the study aimed to associate the SDH, in the context of socioeconomic conditions, monitoring by the health service and aspects related to children's oral health assisted in Basic Health Units (BHU) of a muni- cipality in Ceará. (bvsalud.org)
  • Part of this unique way of life encompassed a communal education system for its children from birth to the age of 18. (brookes.ac.uk)
  • The findings suggest that instituting caregiver credits for child-rearing in the absence of the marriage-based Social Security benefits would offset a substantial portion of the motherhood penalty in lifetime labor earnings of married women and increase their retirement benefit adequacy. (ssrn.com)
  • The findings reflect on the way children are brought up. (bartleby.com)
  • According to Preston, "While studies on this population suggest that parental psychiatric disability is itself a significant risk factor for children, many of the additional findings are compromised by over-generalizing about psychiatric disabilities. (ncd.gov)
  • Theodora Sirota, an associate professor of nursing at Seton Hall University in New Jersey, says an adviser to the National Association for Research and Therapy of Homosexuality -- which claims homosexuality is a disorder that can be 'cured' -- has mischaracterized her findings in a parenting study, using them to oppose adoption by gay people, Box Turtle Bulletin reports. (advocate.com)
  • Therefore, no conclusions about gay or lesbian fitness to adopt children or quality of active gay parenting can be drawn from the findings of my research. (advocate.com)
  • No conclusions about the well-being of children who are or were actively raised by gay or lesbian parents can be drawn from the findings of my research. (advocate.com)
  • The responses of our twins relative to their rearing, along with our findings regarding some of their experiences during childhood and adolescence show their identity was much more influenced by their genetics than their rearing. (hawaii.edu)
  • With a background in studying the relationship of twinning and homosexuality (Whitam, Diamond, & Martin, 1993) and uncovering the twins involved in the John/Joan case (M. Diamond & Sigmundson, 1997) as well as having reported on conjoined twins (M. Diamond, 1999) all due to a long term interest in sexual development (M. Diamond, 1965, 2006, 2011a), immediately piqued curiosity and initiated a search as to previous findings. (hawaii.edu)
  • This report presents the findings of this review, which indicate that during January 1993-November 1996, annual increases occurred for both the number of fatal injuries to children resulting from air-bag deployments and the proportion of dual air bag-equipped vehicles ( Table 1 ). (cdc.gov)
  • Fathers were supposed to bond with their children through quality time much more so than in a non-kibbutz environment, where they may be required to spend long hours at work. (wikipedia.org)
  • Yet, fathers have much more to offer than only helping their children learn self- control and social rules, and their role involves much more than punishment. (athealth.com)
  • How can today's fathers provide discipline, in the sense of teaching and training their children? (athealth.com)
  • My study was only about women raised in the context of heterosexually-organized marriages where fathers were identified as gay or bisexual. (advocate.com)
  • The women I studied were not raised in the context of gay or lesbian partnerships or by single gay fathers actively rearing their children. (advocate.com)
  • The study group was determined by maximum diversity sampling method and the interview form developed by the researchers was used with teachers working at different school levels. (journaltocs.ac.uk)
  • A study conducted by researchers at Oregon State University found that cats form 'secure attachments' to their owners, meaning cats feel a sense of security from their owners. (upworthy.com)
  • The researchers studied 108 cats (70 adult cats, 38 kittens) and their owners using a test developed in the 1970s to study bonding between parents and infants. (upworthy.com)
  • The credit goes partly to the researchers whose studies have shown a myriad of benefits to human milk, and partly to activists who have fought admirably for better pumping rights and hospital policies, doggedly working to make breastfeeding the norm. (ucpress.edu)
  • Supporting a woman's abortion decision-making process, addressing the division of labor between women and men regarding pregnancy prevention, abortion and childrearing, and offering nonjudgmental support may guide interventions designed to reduce emotional distress after abortion. (guttmacher.org)
  • In this study, we examine the relational, familial and social factors that make unintended pregnancy and abortion difficult for women. (guttmacher.org)
  • Children exposed to severe adver- trauma among patients with alcohol physical health, employment, and legal sity early in life are at increased use disorders and the positive benefits difficulties (Putnam 2006). (nih.gov)
  • Prevalence hood, and leading causes of morbidity clinical profile, as well as worse treat- and mortality in the United States, ment outcomes when compared with There is little doubt that severe child- including heart disease, diabetes, liver those with either early trauma or alcohol hood adversity may place an individual disease, and emphysema. (nih.gov)
  • Middle class parents in both societies were more likely to value self-direction and believe that children should have freedom in and around the home, whereas working class parents were more likely to believe that children should be expected to conform to rules. (uncg.edu)
  • Anthropologists now tend to feel, understandably, that psychoanalytical studies of societies, particularly of non-Western societies, apply unproven theories and a Western bias to cultures with quite different assumptions. (nybooks.com)
  • Anthropology, which had from its birth proclaimed that at least part of its charter was to improve the lot of humankind, was challenged to come to the aid of the Micronesian island societies it had been studying ever since World War II. (micsem.org)
  • As incidents of youth misbehavior multiplied, it seemed as if a generation of young males were rootless and increasingly alienated from the values of their island societies. (micsem.org)
  • To understand how parents/caregivers and children describe child discipline, abuse, and neglect and what factors influence each, in order to inform the adaptation of a positive parenting/caregiving intervention in Chitungwiza, Zimbabwe. (nih.gov)
  • Because this demographic difference exists, additional factors of child-rearing change also. (diabeteshealth.com)
  • We conducted this study to determine whether women in KwaZulu-Natal with drug-resistant TB were more likely than men to have XDR TB, even after we controlled for HIV and other factors. (cdc.gov)
  • concluded that there is a range of economic, social and educational factors associated with reproductive behaviour, breastfeeding and child nutrition (1). (who.int)
  • During the 1970s there was a great concern about what was perceived as a growing problem of drinking and disorder among Micronesian youth. (micsem.org)
  • Everywhere in Micronesia there were gloomy reports of wanton violence by drunken youth, public disorder on payday weekends, senseless suicides, and general dismay among communities that did not know what to do about this chaos. (micsem.org)
  • Now, for the first time, she felt she had found an organizing principle that would give form to the scattered observations coming out of diffusionist research and comparative studies of folklore. (encyclopedia.com)
  • Previous research has investigated the cause of injury for children restrained in child safety systems, booster seats, and seat belts in side impact motor vehicle crashes. (chop.edu)
  • Dr. Stanley Kurtz, a University of Chicago anthropologist who has done ethnological research in India, argues that in studying non-Western cultures there is no need for the customary stand-off between anthropology and psychoanalysis. (nybooks.com)
  • Later, as anthropology began showing a new emphasis on the study of culture change and a shift in priorities towards problem-oriented research, much more came to be expected of the discipline. (micsem.org)
  • Her research examines the commodification of child rearing through a case study of private nursery, preschool and kindergarten admissions in New York City. (princeton.edu)
  • Ora Prilleltensky, professor at the University of Miami and a person with a disability, says, "Despite the growing numbers of disabled adults who are having children, parents with disabilities continue to be primarily ignored by research and social policy. (ncd.gov)
  • The pathologizing assumptions framing such research presuppose negative effects of the parents' disabilities on their children. (ncd.gov)
  • Research reveals the widespread belief among professionals that disability severely limits parenting ability and often leads to maladjustment in children. (ncd.gov)
  • You may copy under some circumstances, for example you may copy a portion for research or study. (nla.gov.au)
  • Fitzgibbons used the research to support his claim that 'children raised by same sex couples fare less well than children raised in stable homes with a mother and a father. (advocate.com)
  • Nutrition Research Newsletter (2003) reported on a study done by the Department of Nutrition and Food Sciences at the University of Vermont (Berino, 2003), in which Active Parenting was used as part of an obesity prevention program with Native American children in a home visitation intervention with their parents. (activeparenting.com)
  • During her month-long fellowship, Quinn studied at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. (uh.edu)
  • The study examined research on the mentoring of undergraduate and graduate students in STEMM fields, with a focus on individuals from underrepresented backgrounds. (uh.edu)
  • That's the finding of a new study published in the Journal of Research in Personality by University of Houston assistant professor of psychology, Rodica Damian in collaboration with Olivia Atherton, Katherine Lawson and Richard Robins from the University of California, Davis. (uh.edu)
  • By comparison, similar research found that 65% of children and 58% of dogs demonstrated secure attachment to their caregivers. (upworthy.com)
  • The goal of this qualitative research study was to gain insight into the dynamic nature of being a mutation carrier during the reproductive years. (nih.gov)
  • In Japan, one of the top priorities in the Sukoyaka Oyako 21 (Healthy Parenting 21) is to provide close support for parents experiencing difficulties in raising their children [1]. (scirp.org)
  • Parents were not involved economically in the upbringing of their children. (wikipedia.org)
  • Kibbutz people believed that as the necessary demands and requirements that are an essential part of every education process were eliminated from family life, the relationships between parents and their children got a chance to become much more moderate and harmonious. (wikipedia.org)
  • This, so they claimed, is how strong emotional ties with toddlers, friendship in childhood, and comradeship in youth facilitate strong family attachment and healthy influence of parents on their children. (wikipedia.org)
  • The training or bringing-up of children by parents or parent-substitutes. (curehunter.com)
  • children lived separately from their parents in the 'children housing' and would only meet with their biological families for a couple of hours a day. (brookes.ac.uk)
  • A total of eight focus groups were conducted, four with parents/caregivers (N = 40) and four with their children ages 10-14 (N = 40), separately, between June-July 2016. (nih.gov)
  • The results of this study underscore the role of within-society heterogeneity, as a function of social class, in parents' values and beliefs about child-rearing. (uncg.edu)
  • Parents completed the Diagnostic Interview Schedule for Children to determine whether their children met criteria of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders , 4th edition ( DSM-IV ) for CD. (nih.gov)
  • The perennial pairing of parents with disabilities and problems in children perpetuates the belief in deleterious effects of parental disability on children. (ncd.gov)
  • However, high-quality studies indicate that disability alone is not a predictor of problems or difficulties in children and that predictors of problem parenting are often found to be the same for disabled and nondisabled parents. (ncd.gov)
  • Thus, although the data are far from clear, it seems safe to conclude that many parents with disabilities previously thought unable to raise a child at all may actually be able to do so, and that many more parents with disabilities may succeed in raising their children if provided appropriate support services. (ncd.gov)
  • 953 ] Echoing Shade, Paul Preston, director of the National Center for Parents with Disabilities at TLG, says, "The implications of being raised by a disabled parent have been the source of numerous studies, public conjectures and professional scrutiny - all of which touch upon the fundamental rights of disabled people to be parents as well as the fundamental rights of children to be raised in an environment conducive to maximal development. (ncd.gov)
  • Despite the lack of appropriate resources for most disabled parents and their children as well as persistent negative assumptions about these families, the vast majority of children of disabled parents have been shown to have typical development and functioning and often enhanced life perspectives and skills. (ncd.gov)
  • An additional positive finding in this study reported that there were no significant differences attributed to the income or educational levels of the parents. (activeparenting.com)
  • This evidence that the Active Parenting model is effective across a broad spectrum of parents was also found in an earlier Baltimore County Schools study (Brown, 1988). (activeparenting.com)
  • It should be noted that since the Urban study was completed, the program has been translated into Spanish under the name Padres Activos de Hoy , complete with Spanish-speaking actors in the video, making the program even more accessible to Spanish-speaking parents. (activeparenting.com)
  • The Spanish program was evaluated by CLAS (Culturally and Linguistically Appropriate Services), which recommended it because of its cultural sensitiveness, support and focus on strengths of the child and parents. (activeparenting.com)
  • The CLAS reviewer added that the program provides a positive view of what parents, caregivers and other adults can do to maximize the development of children through a proactive parenting style (2001). (activeparenting.com)
  • Manya was the eighth child of this conflictual marriage. (lilith.org)
  • They believe marriage will be good for them and their children, just as it is for other people. (americanbar.org)
  • Among the 1,049 federal rights and obligations tied to marriage, according to a 1996 General Accounting Office study, are pension survivorship rights, social security protections, and family immigration policies. (americanbar.org)
  • These obstacles-created by the child welfare system, the family law system, adoption agencies, assisted reproductive technology providers, and society as a whole-are the result of perceptions concerning the child-rearing abilities of people with disabilities. (ncd.gov)
  • The primary purpose of this study is to evaluate the COVID-19 fear levels, COVID-19 infectability perceptions, and intention to get vaccinated of university undergraduate students during the period when new variations of the COVID-19 virus are seen in Turkey. (journaltocs.ac.uk)
  • Specifically, this study examined the evolution of risk perceptions, risk management, and family planning decisions over a three-year period. (nih.gov)
  • She cites studies showing that women who work are "consistently healthier, less depressed, and less frustrated than women who do not," and says that a woman's satisfaction with her role, whether as worker, homemaker or spouse, "is one of the best predictors both of a good relationship with her child and of the child's own well-being. (salon.com)
  • Use developmental knowledge to create learning environments and classroom procedures that promote positive social interaction, active engagement, high expectations for learning, mutual respect, and self-regulation through individually appropriate expectations and positive guidance techniques for each child to meet the child's optimum potential regardless of proficiency. (nctq.org)
  • Previous studies found that affluent women are more likely to breast-feed. (diabeteshealth.com)
  • Fluoride was found more often in the teeth of children who were breastfed compared with those who were not. (who.int)
  • it was found that, 43 master's theses and 3 doctoral theses has been made, the studies quantitively increased between the years of 2016 and 2020, the most common problems in theses were grammar and writing skills and, the largest sample group were composed of Arab students. (journaltocs.ac.uk)
  • A significant association was found between the child eating sweet/stuffed biscuits, not consuming soft drink, and using a toothbrush and dentifrice for oral hygiene. (bvsalud.org)
  • every child got 12 years of study, they took no tests whatsoever, and no grades were recorded. (wikipedia.org)
  • A California cigarette tax ballot initiative (Proposition 10) created new resources for children aged 0 to 5 years and their families statewide through county-level First 5 commissions, including First 5 LA in Los Angeles County. (cdc.gov)
  • This paper studies how career interruptions during child-rearing years affect the labor market trajectory, lifetime earnings, and Social Security benefits of married women in the United States. (ssrn.com)
  • Utilizing the estimated model, I evaluate the effects of revenue-neutral introduction of the Social Security Caregiver Credits that cover lost earnings during early child-rearing years through change in retirement benefits. (ssrn.com)
  • We examined the association of prenatal tobacco, postnatal tobacco, and environmental lead exposure with CD in children 8-15 years of age ( n = 3,081). (nih.gov)
  • Overall, 2.06% of children met DSM-IV criteria for CD in the past year, equivalent to 560,000 U.S. children 8-15 years of age. (nih.gov)
  • Survey data from 247 regular female employees whose youngest child was less than 16 years old were used. (nii.ac.jp)
  • The plaintiffs-some of whom have been together for as long as thirty-two years, and the majority of whom are raising young children-seek the same right to marry the person of their choice as is enjoyed by their heterosexual relatives, friends, and neighbors. (americanbar.org)
  • Zimbabwe has a high prevalence of children who have experienced abuse according to national data. (nih.gov)
  • We hear from married couples and watch reality TV shows about how expensive it is to raise kids in terms of education costs and everything, and all these worries translate to fewer marriages and babies," said Lim. (medscape.com)
  • A recent NIDDK study of Pima Indians in Arizona showed that babies who were breast fed were less likely to develop type 2 diabetes. (diabeteshealth.com)
  • Despite consensus in the psychological literature about what constitutes regret, 19 its sources and those of other negative emotions regarding abortion have not been thoroughly studied. (guttmacher.org)
  • In 2009, we conducted a study using open-ended, semistructured interviews with women who had had an abortion. (guttmacher.org)
  • The concept of discipline as teaching a set of behaviors to the child "not just punishment" becomes a reality only when there is consistency. (athealth.com)
  • We also advertised our desire to study relevant twins by posting our request for subjects on different Internet websites (see Appendix). (hawaii.edu)
  • Observational studies of MDR TB and XDR TB in South Africa report higher proportions of female patients with MDR TB or XDR TB ( 6 - 9 ). (cdc.gov)
  • But in South Korea, which has the dubious distinction of having one of the world's lowest fertility rates, the dramatic jump in women using CHA's services throws into sharp relief the economic burdens and social constraints leading to decisions to delay or even forgo having children. (medscape.com)
  • That needs to change, argues Jung Jae-hoon, a social welfare studies professor at Seoul Women's University, noting marriages in South Korea dropped to a record low of 192,500 last year. (medscape.com)
  • A workgroup developed school readiness goals and indicators based on recommendations of the National Education Goals Panel and five key domains of child well-being: 1) good health, 2) safety and survival, 3) economic well-being, 4) social and emotional well-being, and 5) education/workforce readiness. (cdc.gov)
  • The model predicts that introducing the provision of earning credits for child care in the Social Security system would lead to a sizeable reduction in gender gap in average career earnings at the Social Security Early Retirement Age. (ssrn.com)
  • Das, Debasmita, Child-Rearing, Social Security and Married Women's Labor Supply Over the Life Cycle (September 12, 2022). (ssrn.com)
  • Exposed to a whole range of radical political groups- from Bundists to socialist Zionists to terrorist Social Democrats-Manya chose to get involved in the clandestine establishment of evening study clubs where workers were taught basic literacy, history, economics and socialism. (lilith.org)
  • The study of social values. (iccv.ro)
  • Three main causes of delinquency emerged in Kenney's study: breakdown of the traditional family, lack of structured activities for youth, and diminished social control. (micsem.org)
  • Alexander Adames joins the Department of Sociology, studying social stratification and inequality, with a focus on educational inequality and racial inequality in the U.S. Adames holds a Ph.D. and M.A. in sociology from the University of Pennsylvania, an M.A. in statistics from the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, a nd a B.A in sociology from the University of Virginia. (princeton.edu)
  • Many studies have discussed the relationship between breastfeeding and certain social, psychological and demographic variables. (who.int)
  • Some 52% of South Koreans in their 20s don't plan to have children when they get married, a massive jump from 29% in 2015, according to a survey conducted in 2020 by the country's gender and family ministry. (medscape.com)
  • Of the 32 fatal injuries during January 1993-November 1996, a total of 21 occurred among children who were unrestrained or incorrectly restrained. (cdc.gov)
  • Two reports of incidents in 1996 suggest that children who are restrained by lap and shoulder belts also may be at risk for severe injury and death associated with air-bag deployment: in separate incidents, two 5-year-old children who were using lap and shoulder belts died as a result of air-bag deployment. (cdc.gov)
  • Furthermore, optimal health development in children is achieved through nurturing, safe interactions and experiences with families and caregivers in the context of health-sustaining community environments. (cdc.gov)
  • In 1998, both Active Parenting Today and Active Parenting of Teens were evaluated in an independent national study that included 42 groups (n=287) for AP Today and 15 groups (n=98) for AP of Teens . (activeparenting.com)
  • The fertility rate - the average number of children born to a woman over her reproductive life - in South Korea was just 0.81 last year. (medscape.com)
  • That's also despite enormous sums spent by South Korean authorities on subsidies and perks for families with children. (medscape.com)
  • In their introduction and overview, the authors set the stage for the book's discussion of families with very young children. (rand.org)
  • Indicators are powerful tools to support planning, community engagement, policy, and advocacy on behalf of children and families. (cdc.gov)
  • In "The Way We Really Are," a statistics-drenched analysis that defends American families against the doomsaying of "family values" propagandists, she argues that women who work do better than those who don't -- and that their children, by and large, don't suffer, either. (salon.com)
  • Courses offered by other delivery methods may vary from their individualized study counterparts. (athabascau.ca)
  • The purpose of this study was to examine the association of tobacco smoke and environmental lead exposure with conduct disorder (CD). (nih.gov)
  • The aim of this study is to examine the master's theses carried out between 1998 and 2022 on the problems encountered in the teaching of Turkish as a foreign language. (journaltocs.ac.uk)
  • The aim of this study is to examine the guidance and psychological counseling services at secondary schools from students' perspective. (journaltocs.ac.uk)
  • These cover stories, particularly the U.S. News & World Report one," she says, "are aimed right at the hearts of working women and implicitly endorse a stop-gap, short-term solution that is not family-friendly, one that will not help kids. (salon.com)
  • Coursework standards for birth-grade 3 and PreK-3 preparation programs require that candidates are able to: "Understand the nature of child growth and development for infants and toddlers (birth-age 2), preprimary (age 3-age 5) and primary school children (age 6-age 8). (nctq.org)
  • Variables examined included maternal nutrition and education, parental age, monthly income, and age of the children when they were weaned. (who.int)
  • Maternal and Child Health Bur, Health Resources and Svcs Administration. (cdc.gov)
  • SEOUL (Reuters) - In South Korea, fewer women are having children and those who do are in no rush. (medscape.com)
  • These data advance the current understanding of injury patterns and causation in frontal crashes involving restrained, rear row occupants and can be used to develop solutions to eventually lessen the incidence and severity of injuries sustained. (chop.edu)
  • The USDA Time-Use Studies used several tools for data collection. (usda.gov)
  • The following items show the data collection tools used in these studies. (usda.gov)
  • Within the field of early child development, a movement has emerged to track the dynamics of multiple influences on early childhood health and developmental trajectories through the evolved concept of school readiness. (cdc.gov)
  • On a six-week study tour of Palestine by horseback to help conduct a survey of the geography and natural resources in order to lay a foundation for industrial development, Manya was transformed into a Zionist. (lilith.org)
  • Much of the blame for South Korean reticence to have children is laid on a highly competitive and expensive education system that makes cram schools and private tutoring a fact of life for most kids from a young age. (medscape.com)
  • Cho So-Young, a 32-year-old nurse at CHA who plans to freeze her eggs this coming July, is also keen to get to a better place financially before having a child. (medscape.com)
  • These experiences lead young children to show less anxiety about separation and be classed as avoidant. (bartleby.com)
  • The temperament of each young child affects each parent's approach to discipline. (athealth.com)
  • The real villain of the piece, lurking backstage, was the upper-middle-class mother who dumps her young kids in child care so she can buy a swimming pool. (salon.com)
  • Children with CD display aggression toward people and animals, intentionally destroy others' property, and chronically steal or deceive. (nih.gov)
  • Is it respectable to make any generalizations about national character, about styles of childrearing, and about the connection between the two-especially for a nation of some 900 million people? (nybooks.com)
  • The objective of this study was to delineate the cause and effect of head injury scenarios for rear-seated, restrained children in frontal crashes and to create a contact map of the vehicle interior. (chop.edu)
  • The father's role in these family interactions involves both the support of the mother and direct interactions with the child. (athealth.com)
  • Nine other fatalities occurred among children who had been seated in rear-facing child-safety seats in the front passenger seat. (cdc.gov)
  • This association needs further study. (cdc.gov)
  • Although the type of unpatterned diffusion study in which single traits or trait complexes could be traced in great variety and without integrative consistency fitted her sense of the irony and capriciousness of human life and history, it failed to satisfy her disciplined appreciation of creative holistic constructs. (encyclopedia.com)
  • Using a large, community-based sample from Sardinia, Italy (n=5614), this study examined how trait antagonism (low agreeableness) and its facets are associated with carotid artery intima-media thickness, a measure of arterial thickening. (nih.gov)
  • Sermons and Bible studies critiqued below were sent to ESN by a trusted PCG source, former member, or anonymous. (exitsupportnetwork.com)
  • Wik Heerma, in a recent Bible study, told members to "remove vanity" so they can prepare for the Days of Unleavened Bread. (exitsupportnetwork.com)
  • Bible study critiqued by L. S. (exitsupportnetwork.com)
  • Before his transfer to Edstone, England Wayne Turgeon gave a Bible study where he kept quoting HWA and told how HWA in a 1984 sermon said (and I quote): "We are becoming God teachers. (exitsupportnetwork.com)
  • Unlike a lecture, a small-group meeting, or a mid-week Bible study, all of which might be regarded as optional, Sunday services are not. (9marks.org)
  • He is co-advised by Yu Xie, the Bert G. Kerstetter '66 University Professor of Sociology and the Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies, Professor of Sociology Tod Hamilton, and Assistant Professor of Sociology John Robinson. (princeton.edu)
  • He is advised by Monica Huerta, assistant professor of English and American studies and the Donald A. Stauffer Bicentennial Preceptor. (princeton.edu)
  • The damage hits particularly close to home for Alessandro Carrera , Ph.D., University of Houston Moores Professor in the Department of Modern and Classical Languages and director of Italian Studies. (uh.edu)
  • Assistant Professor of Cultural Studies Rachel Afi Quinn received $4,000 as part of a New York Public Library short-term fellowship. (uh.edu)
  • Professor of Psychology Christiane Spitzmueller served as a committee member on a National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine (NASEM) study involving mentoring in STEMM (science, technology, engineering, mathematics, and manufacturing). (uh.edu)
  • This article emphasized the uses to which our understanding of human culture can be put, rather than the study of culture as a science. (encyclopedia.com)
  • Aspects of the twinning relation and rearing were also investigated. (hawaii.edu)
  • This project utilized this methodology and examined the experience of restrained children in frontal crashes who sustained injuries to the head/face. (chop.edu)
  • In a majority of the cases, injury to the head/face was the most severe type of injury sustained by the child, with serious injuries to other body regions uncommon. (chop.edu)
  • This finding suggests that efforts to mitigate head injuries for child occupants would greatly improve their overall safety. (chop.edu)
  • However, passenger-side air bags have been associated with injuries to children who, in almost all cases, were unrestrained or incorrectly restrained in the front seat (1-4). (cdc.gov)
  • 1 Department of Child Health Care Nursing, Division of Health Innovation and Nursing, Faculty of Medicine, University of Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan . (scirp.org)
  • J. Felix Gallion joins the Department of English, with a focus on interdisciplinary approaches to the study of media, race, labor and migration. (princeton.edu)
  • Laura Gasca JimĂ©nez, a former doctoral student in the Department of Hispanic Studies, received the prestigious 2019 ASELE-Routledge international award for best dissertation and book contract. (uh.edu)