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A racial comparison of pre-adolescent white, Mexican, and Negro boysEzell, Paul H. (Paul Howard), 1913-1988 January 1939 (has links)
No description available.
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THE ABILITY TO CONSERVE QUANTITY OF LIQUID AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO SOCIO-ECONOMIC BACKGROUND, INTELLIGENCE, AND ACHIEVEMENT AMONG SELECTED FOURTH GRADE PUPILSBozarth, James Oliver, 1933- January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
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EFFECTS OF TASK TYPE AND DIFFICULTY LEVEL ON RATES OF SELF-REINFORCEMENT IN CHILDRENMolho, Arthur Irving January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
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Prospective study of the growth, physical development and nutritional status of children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder before and after starting treatment with stimulant medicationPoulton, Alison January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Indices of maternal risk and divergence of cognitive development during the second year of lifeFarmer, Val, 1940- January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
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Maternal influences on infant cognition during the second yearBerg, Gregory Keith, 1948- January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
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Ages and Stages: 4 to 8 Year OldsSteinfelt, Victoria 07 1900 (has links)
3 pp. / To understand children, their development, needs and uniqueness is vital for parents. This publication uses tables to outline the mental, social and physical development for each group of children from 4 to 8 year old.
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The effects of a multidisciplinary parent-training program on parental teaching strategies /Pallmann, Marianne H. J. January 1983 (has links)
No description available.
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A developmental study of normative ritualistic and compulsive behaviour in elementary school children / / Developmental study of normative ritualisticZygmuntowicz, Catherine E. January 2006 (has links)
The high prevalence of compulsive-like behaviours in normal childhood suggests that these behaviours may play an important role in development. Furthermore, the similarities between the typical compulsive behaviours of childhood and the clinically significant behaviours that characterise Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) suggest that these two phenotypes may share similar neuropsychological profiles. In this study, two theories are investigated; one, that the neuropsychological deficits attributed to the pathogenesis of OCD also play a role in the manifestation of typical compulsive behaviours of childhood. Two, that compulsive behaviour supports the advancement of adaptive behaviour. / The participants were 48 elementary school children (19 males) between the ages of 72 and 152 months (M= 106.5, SD = 24.49). Parents rated the frequency of typical compulsive behaviour on the Childhood Routines Inventory (CRI; Evans et al., 1997). Adaptive behaviour was assessed with the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales---Survey Form (VABS; Sparrow, Balla, & Cicchetti, 1984). The measure of set shifting was the manual 64-card version of the Wisconsin Card Sort Task (WCST; Kongs, Thompson, Iverson, & Heaton, 1981). Response inhibition was tested with the Conners' Continuous Performance Test (CPT; Conners, 2000) and the Tapping Test (Diamond & Taylor, 1996). Stepwise multiple regressions were performed to examine the relationships amongst variables of interest. The participants were later divided into three groups (seven years and younger, seven to ten years, ten years and older) to examine relationships by age. Adaptive behaviour and response inhibition were predictive of levels of typical compulsive behaviour across the age range. Together, coping skills and play and leisure skills as assessed on the VABS emerged as the most important predictors of the repetitive compulsive behaviours. Response latency on the tapping task was the strongest predictor of increased levels of just right compulsive behaviour. Set shifting did not predict levels of compulsive behaviour although positive correlations were found in the youngest group. Overall, the data support the notions that clinical OCD and the typical compulsive and ritualistic behaviour of childhood share similar neuropsychological profiles, and that compulsive behaviour in childhood supports the development of increasingly advanced adaptive behaviour.
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Children's conceptions of prideZwiers, Michael Lee 05 1900 (has links)
One of the major concerns of counselling psychology is to foster development rather
than to simply remediate problems. One of the emotions through which proactive
development might be facilitated is pride. Pride has potential connections to achievement
motivation, care and attention toward work, task persistence, self-competence, esteem, and
general productive well-being within a social context. The purpose of this study was to
describe children's conceptions of pride in the anticipation that knowing about these
conceptions would help indicate ways for counsellors to intervene.
Using phenomenography, a descriptive research methodology that emphasizes
conceptions of things experienced, child participants in Grades 2, 4, and 7 were interviewed to
determine their conceptions of pride. The children were invited to talk about pride, mainly by
telling stories of experiences with pride. The resulting narratives were analyzed to sift out all
qualitatively distinct categories of meaning for pride, mapping the general domain of the
emotion. Eight distinct conceptions emerged, including three active or doing conceptions
(achieving, acting ethically, and acting independently) and five having conceptions
(possessing, having a desired attribute or ability, belonging, having special status, and pride by
association). All conceptions were represented in all three grades sampled, with no
outstanding age- or gender-related differences. Research results contribute to our knowledge
of how children experience and comprehend pride, and point toward educational and
psychological implications for those who parent, educate, or counsel children.
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