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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1161

Designing a STEM Professional Development Program for Preschool Teachers, with Supports for DLLs

El-Moslimany, Hebbah, Lange, Alissa A., Brenneman, Kimberly 27 April 2017 (has links)
SciMath-DLL is a preschool professional development (PD) model including STEM instructional offerings that aims to improve the quality of instruction for all children, including dual language learners (DLLs). The purpose of the PD model is to create practical and authentic STEM and DLL supports for early childhood educators, who are generally not well prepared to support STEM learning or to teach DLLs. The present study examines the iterative development process of our professional development model, in particular, what we learned during implementation, and changes we made to address what we learned across our studies.
1162

Teacher Candidates Identified and Rose Above the Elusive Concepts in Early Literacy Instruction

Facun-Granadozo, Ruth 28 July 2017 (has links)
No description available.
1163

Garden Tools, Ramps, and Wind Socks: Promoting Engineering in Preschool for All Learners

Lange, Alissa A., Sack, B., Mano, Hagit 15 November 2017 (has links)
No description available.
1164

Reflective Thinking and Teacher Candidates’ Paradigm Shift

Facun-Granadozo, Ruth 12 June 2017 (has links)
No description available.
1165

Supporting Adult Learning in Early Intervention

Trivette, Carol M. 06 April 2016 (has links)
No description available.
1166

Can an Emoji Help When You Don’t Know What to Say to a Parent?

Trivette, Carol M. 06 July 2016 (has links)
No description available.
1167

How to Support Parents and Professionals in Early Intervention: Principles of Adult Learning

Trivette, Carol M. 17 March 2016 (has links)
Young children with disabilities have better outcomes when their families and caregivers receive the necessary resources and supports to implement high quality practices. This session will set the framework for how adults learn and how they can learn to implement new practices and modify current ones to have the greatest impact on young children. In this 90 minute interactive webinar session participants will: Discover a systematic way to develop and present new information to effect change in practice, whether in “coaching” sessions with families or professional development sessions with colleagues. Learn how to implement new practices or modify current practices to meet the needs of military families facing unique circumstances such as deployment, relocations, and post-combat challenges. Gain adult learning tools and resources, which they can apply to their work with families and colleagues.
1168

Engaging Families to Focus on Intervention Strategies

Trivette, Carol M. 23 June 2016 (has links)
Young children with disabilities have better outcomes when their families are actively involved in supporting their child’s learning. This session will help Early Interventionists, private therapy providers, and other professionals working with young children with disabilities think about their interactions with the child's family and how those interactions strengthen a family’s ability to support their child’s learning. In this 90 minute session participants will: Learn about strategies to increase parent participation in their child’s Early Intervention home visits and/or therapy sessions Explore possible strategies that can be used to engage a deployed parent in home visits and/or therapy sessions Observe through video, professionals working with a parent to enhance the parent’s use of effective intervention strategies Explore the use of tools and strategies that promote reflection on practices being used to engage families
1169

Quality Interactions Between Professionals and Families to Enhance Child Learning

Trivette, Carol M. 03 November 2016 (has links)
Young children learn through the interactions they have within their environments. These interactions include all of the people who support them (parents, family members, interventionists, therapists, childcare providers, and other practitioners). This session will focus on how practitioners can help parents, families, and other adult caregivers develop the types of interactions needed to have a lasting positive impact on the learning of their young children with disabilities. Objectives: Explore strategies for helping families understand early communication attempts of children before language is developed or in the presence of a delay or disability Explore how adult-child interactions change to promote children’s learning Explore the role of the environment in the interaction between parent and child
1170

Strategies to Support Families Experiencing Difficult Circumstances

Trivette, Carol M. 08 December 2016 (has links)
One of the most challenging tasks for many early childhood providers is how to support families who are facing tough, difficult issues like death of a parent, PTSD, abuse, and neglect. Not only do these issues impact the family’s overall functioning and well being and the quality of parents’ interactions with their young children but they also affect the relationship between the family and the early childhood providers (e.g., missed appointments and adversarial interactions). Dr. Carol Trivette will cap her yearlong webinar series sharing resources and discussing evidence-based practices that providers can implement when they are working with military families in particular, who are facing difficult situations. Participants are encouraged to engage and share challenges, resources, and successes they have experienced working with families of young children with disabilities.

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