Spelling suggestions: "subject:"[een] CHILD DEVELOPMENT"" "subject:"[enn] CHILD DEVELOPMENT""
741 |
Gestaltspelterapeutiese riglyne om die kind wat angs ervaar vir skooltoetrede voor te bereiLouw, Marita 06 1900 (has links)
Social Work / M.Diac. (Play Therapy)
|
742 |
The design of a performance-based assessment tool to evaluate the emotional intelligence of children in middle childhoodBallard, Emma Bernadette 30 June 2005 (has links)
no abstract available / Teacher Education / M.Ed. (Specialisation in Guidance and Counselling)
|
743 |
An exploration of children in middle childhood`s homeschooling experienceMills, Kathryn Jean 11 1900 (has links)
The study explores children in middle childhood’s experiences of homeschooling.
The researcher makes use of a qualitative research design in the form of a case study,
studying the participants’ experiences of homeschooling in their natural setting. The
sample consisted of children in middle childhood who participated in semi-structured
interviews exploring their individual experiences pertaining to learning at home, their
familial relationships and their social learning in the homeschooling environment.
Developmental aspects relating specifically to middle childhood are discussed and
utilised along with the views of the participants in this study, those of experts, and
literature reviews in order to gain a genuine understanding of the child’s experience of
homeschooling. / Sociology / M. Diac. (Play Therapy)
|
744 |
The cognitive processing potential of infants: a study of the effect of early infant exposure to numbers, shapes and coloursVan Vuuren, Jacqueline 02 1900 (has links)
Intellectual stimulation of young children is crucial, because it helps to break the cycle of poverty by giving each child the skills needed to reach his or her maximum potential. There is a growing need for more extensive early childhood development programmes in South Africa. Several studies in early childhood development have been shown to directly draw a parallel with enhanced student achievement at school and in life (Ackerman, 2005; Bueno, Darling-Hammond, & Gonzales 2010; Frede, Jung, Barnett, & Figueras, 2009). This study therefore explored the effects of an intervention programme introducing numbers, shapes and colours to infants between the ages of three months and 12 months.
The sample consisted of 63 infants, with a control group of 34 and an experimental group of 29. The participants were selected from the middle-income group and consisted of infants from three different ethnic groups (black, white and coloured). Nine participants from the experimental group formed part of the focus group, which met every two weeks to give feedback and discuss the development of the infants and experiences of the parents involved in the intervention programme.
In this study quantitative and qualitative data was collected. This data was assessed and analysed in order to achieve the four aims of the research study. The Bayley Scales of Infant Development (III) was used to assess three areas of development, namely cognitive ability, language skills and motor skills for the quantitative part of the study. The adaptive behaviour and social-emotional functioning of the infants was also assessed using the BSID (III), and this data was used in conjunction with the focus group feedback and problem-solving scenarios for the qualitative part of the study.
Gender and the two age categories (3–7 and 8–12 months) for both the experimental and the control groups were examined and excluded from possible explanations for any significant findings. It was also determined that the control and experimental groups were well matched at the start of the intervention programme.
The findings for aim A, the pre-test and post- test results showed that an average of 60 days involved in intervention programme had a statistically significant effect (z = -4.32, p < 0.001) on the cognitive ability of the infants.
The findings for aim B, for the comparison between the control and experimental groups after the intervention programme, indicated significant results for the cognitive subscale (U = 732, p < 0.01, r = 0.42). Although the language and motor scores showed an increase in the descriptive statistics for the experimental group after the intervention, the Mann-Whitney U test did not show a significant difference.
The findings for the qualitative study for aim C revealed that there was no effect on the adaptive behaviour of the infants.
The findings for the social-emotional scales descriptive statistics for the qualitative study in aim D showed that there was a fairly large increase in the composite score means of the experimental group in comparison with the control group. The large increase in results complements the social-emotional functioning theme that emerged from the focus group.
Three main themes emerged from the focus group, namely the cognitive ability, communication skills and social-emotional functioning of the infants.The increase in the social-emotional scale for the intervention group and the increase in the cognitive scale as mentioned in aim B were interrelated. These early social-emotional experiences are linked to long-term positive outcomes in both the social and cognitive areas of development (Landry, Smith, Swank, & Miller-Loncar, 2000). The parents all reported the ability to interpret the communication from their infants when participating in the flashcard sessions. This communication forms a foundation for establishing language development. Relationships between an infant’s nonverbal communication skills and subsequent language development have been reported (Brooks & Meltzoff, 2005).
The problem-solving scenarios that were assessed during the second assessment showed that the infants who participated in the intervention programme were able to correctly identify a flashcard 73% of the time in comparison with the control group who were only able to identify a flashcard 1.4% correctly.
The results of the study show that an early intervention programme has the potential to increase an infant’s cognitive ability and enhance his or her social-emotional functioning. However, the long-term impact of these findings would have to be explored in a longitudinal study. / Psychology / M.A. (Psychology)
|
745 |
Die invloed van die saamleestegniek op die verhouding tussen die ouer en die kind met leesproblemeOdendaal, Maria Christina. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (M. Ed.)--University of South Africa, 2002.
|
746 |
The life world of the primary school in a boys townSuchanandan, Atal 06 1900 (has links)
The purpose of the present study is to obtain an
understanding of the primary school child's life world while resident at a Boys' Town.
The study presents an extensive review of the literature on developmental phases of
the primary school child, relationships with himself, his family and peer group while
resident in an institution. The study employed the use of quantitative and qualitative
measures to elicit information from the child. To enhance the findings of the study,
information from a comparative group of primary school children with intact families from
the wider community was utilized. The target subjects in the study included all
primary school children resident at a Boy's Town in Tongaat. The results yielded useful
insights in the life world of the primary school child.
These insights into the life world of the primary school child formed the basis for
recommendation and served the direction for future research.
These insights into the life world of the primary school child formed the basis for
recommendation and served the direction for future research. / Psychology of Education / M. Ed. (Psychology of Education)
|
747 |
Communication and educative intervention as essentials for the attainment of responsible adulthoodBaloyi, Wilson Mavhavaza 06 1900 (has links)
This research stems from the problems that may be encountered
in an attempt to accompany the non-adult towards proper
adulthood in the absence of both communication and educative
intervention in the educative occurrence. The educator may
fail to render his educative task adequately without communieating
with the child and intervening educati vely in his
life; and the child may be deprived of his opportunity of
becoming a responsible adult.
A human child, particularly in the industrialised societies,
is confronted by various phenomena with which he often fails
to communicate normatively. This investigation is an endeavour
to reveal the essentiality of communication during
the educative intervention, that is, in guiding the child to
refrain from immoral, non-normative and unacceptable activities
and all that violates cultural adulthood according to
the norms, values and standards prevailing in that particular
community. It further aims at disclosing that communication
in the educative sense implies educative intervention,
failing which communication becomes meaningless.
Educative intervention and communication are, in truth, inseparable
during the educative occurrence and they should
supplement and enhance each other, because their separation
may imply the nullification of the educative guidance on the
part of the educator and the denial of the child's opportunity
of attaining acceptable adulthood. In order to assist
the child to gradually actualise his adulthood, the educator
who intervenes in his life should be a devoted communicator
who strives to communicate (verbally and non-verbally) his
knowledge, feelings, beliefs and attitudes to the child while
upholding his status of adulthood. It is not expected of the
true educator to communicate well about normative adulthood
verbally and simultaneously violate this through his nonverbal
communication which includes all unacceptable physical
activities which erode the dignity of adulthood.
It implies, therefore, that in his attempt to guide the child
to comply and respect the aspects, conditions and criteria of
adulthood the educator should respect and comply with them
verbally and non-verbally. A responsible person is expected
to maintain and promote adulthood through both verbal and
non-verbal forms of communication. / Educational Studies / D. Ed. (Fundamental Pedagogics)
|
748 |
Mechanisms of resilience for children of mothers with depressionDobrowolski, Stephanie January 2013 (has links)
Maternal depression is a common mental health disorder that can have significant adverse effects on child functioning, including increased rates of child behaviour problems. Adopting a resilience approach highlights that despite the increased risk there is considerable variation in child behaviour development, although mechanisms through which this occurs are not well understood. This thesis investigates positive parenting, harsh parenting, and child inhibitory control as developmentally salient processes that may explain why some children of mothers with depression develop more positive behaviours than others. Analyses were conducted using data from the Early Steps Multisite Study, a longitudinal randomised controlled trial that includes 731 ethnically diverse families from three sites across the United States. Baseline measures were completed at child age 2, with annual follow-up assessments until age 8. These analyses used mother self-reported depressive symptoms, observed measures of parenting, alternate caregiver-reported child inhibitory control, and mother- and teacher-reported child externalising behaviours. Categorical and continuous variables of maternal depression and child behaviour were tested to explore the implications of different analytic approaches, particularly with reference to the concept of resilience. Logistic regression results indicate that child inhibitory control is a robust predictor of developmentally normative behaviours for children of mothers with depression and children in general. Linear regression results support a risk-specific effect of harsh parenting, such that it interacts with maternal depression to predict increased externalising behaviours specifically for children of mothers with depression. Positive parenting appears to predict the behaviour of children in general but not the behaviour of children of mothers with depression. Path analyses indicate that between the ages of 2 and 4, harsh parenting partially mediates the association between maternal depression and child externalising behaviours. Moderated mediation results suggest that children with lower levels of inhibitory control elicit increased harsh parenting behaviours from mothers both with and without depression. Cross-lagged path analyses provide support for reciprocal influence between maternal depression, harsh parenting, and child externalising behaviour, and suggest an impact of maternal depression severity on the establishment of negative patterns of mother-child interactions from age 2. The findings of this thesis support the importance of reducing harsh parenting behaviours particularly for mothers with depression and of improving child self-regulation from an early age. The concept of resilience as a dimensional and potentially reciprocal process is discussed in the context of maternal depression and child behaviour development. Results emphasise that both mother and child are actively involved in influencing processes of resilience. From early childhood, there is a need to support more adaptive patterns of behaviour between mothers with depression and their children in order to increase the likelihood of positive child outcomes over time.
|
749 |
Assessment of cognitive development in four to eight year old children by means of drawing tasksKarakitsou, Chrisoula January 1999 (has links)
The present thesis explores the link between children's drawings and cognitive development. The aim of this study is to investigate the intellectual abilities of the child draughtsman with good depiction skills and to evaluate the merit of the drawing technique in the assessment of conceptual maturity. The standardised Goodenough-Harris Drawing Test (GHDT) of intellectual maturity was administered to 115 children between 4 to 8 years of age against criterion ability measures (Wechsler scales). Its psychometric properties are examined in respect to its norms and scales, its reliability and validity at different age levels and ranges of intelligence. Early theories in the area of pictorial representation were directed towards identifying features characteristic of different developmental periods (Kerschensteiner, 1905; Luquet, 1927/1977). At the same time Piaget and Inhelder (1948/1967) incorporated these stage theories into their model of spatial intelligence. Yet, the recent experimental study of children's drawings has disclosed a number of variables which interfere during the course of production, challenging the view that drawings can be seen as the royal route to access children's concepts. Stage theories are re-evaluated by means of fourteen experimental drawing tasks with various degree of difficulty. The tasks - administered to the same children tested with the standardised instruments -are spatial in nature and have been sampled from two widely researched areas related to the pictorial representation of partial occlusion and of spatial axes (horizontal/vertical). The acquisition of the pertinent spatial concepts by means of drawings is examined, considering competence-deficiency and competence-utilisation accounts of children's performance at different ages. Finally, overall perfomance on spatial tasks is compared with performance on conventional (Wechsler scales) and non-verbal (GHDT) measures of intellectual functioning, considering the optimum method to assess children's abilities by means of drawings. In general, drawing performance is reasonably sensitive to children's level of intelligence, yet the significance of drawing varies at different ages and ranges of IQ. Finally, the establishment of steadfast developmental trajectories falls short in the field of pictorial representation. The variable performance, particularly from the children at intermediate ages, suggests that the stages of intellectual or visual realism should be seen as relative and not as absolute.
|
750 |
The Life History Narrative: How Early Events and Psychological Processes Relate to Biodemographic Measures of Life HistoryBlack, Candace Jasmine January 2016 (has links)
The aim of this project is to examine the relationships between two approaches to the measurement of life history strategies. The traditional method, termed here the biodemographic approach, measures developmental characteristics like birthweight, gestation length, inter-birth intervals, pubertal timing, and sexual debut. The alternative method under exploration, termed here the psychological approach, measures a suite of cognitive and behavioral traits such as altruism, sociosexual orientation, personality, mutualism, familial relationships, and religiosity. Although both approaches are supported by a large body of literature, they remain relatively segregated. This study draws inspiration from both views, integrating measures that assess developmental milestones, including birthweight, prematurity, pubertal timing, and onset of sexual behavior, as well as psychological life history measures such as the Mini-K and a personality inventory. Drawing on previous theoretical work on the fundamental dimensions of environmental risk, these measures are tested in conjunction with several scales assessing the stability of early environmental conditions, including both "event-based" measures that are defined with an external referent, and measures of internal schemata, or the predicted psychological sequelae of early events. The data are tested in a three-part sequence, beginning with the measurement models under investigation, proceeding to an exploratory analysis of the causal network, and finishing with a cross-validation of the structural model on a new sample. The findings point to exciting new directions for future researchers who seek to integrate the two perspectives.
|
Page generated in 0.057 seconds