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Föräldraidentiteter i livsberättelser /Karlsson, Marie, January 2006 (has links)
Diss. Uppsala : Univ., 2006.
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Parent Perceptions on Kindergarten EntryDuplissie, Kevin L. January 2009 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Parental selection of schools for pre-school childrenUnknown Date (has links)
Authorities in early childhood education and child development point out the importance of the early years of a child's life in the development of habits and attitudes which are important as the basis of his mental and emotional health. / Typescript. / "January, 1960." / "Submitted to the Graduate Council of Florida State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science." / Advisor: Sarah Lou Hammond, Professor Directing Paper. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 39-40).
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The Role of Parental Involvement in a Chapter I Extended-Day KindergartenStiefer, Toni Kilpatrick 08 1900 (has links)
This studied investigated parental involvement during the first year of a Chapter I extended-day kindergarten program which sought to promote parents taking an active role in their child's classroom and kindergarten educational experiences. A qualitative design was used to provide information about frequency and types of parental involvement as well as descriptive information about the interactions between parents and children within the classroom. This qualitative design also allowed investigation of the perceptions of the participants. Data analysis was ongoing and inductive; data were collected in the form of field notes, videotapes, audiotapes, interviews and classroom documents. Findings suggest that parental involvement provides benefits for the students, parents, teachers and the school as a whole. Findings also suggest that adult volunteers do not necessarily have to be parents; the adult volunteers could come from segments of the population that are not now fully utilized. Senior citizens and university teacher education students are two groups that could fill the volunteer positions. These findings have implications for the educational community in public schools and in teacher training programs of universities.
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Attrition from a parent training prevention program for conduct problems.Baker, Courtney N. 01 January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Promoting preschoolers' number sense and interest in learning mathematics: how should parents interact with their children during home numeracy activities?. / CUHK electronic theses & dissertations collectionJanuary 2012 (has links)
本論文透過兩項研究,探討家長與幼兒在家進行數字棋盤遊戲時,應如何與幼兒互動,以培養幼兒的數字感及學習數學的興趣。 / 研究1旨在檢視香港幼兒數字感的發展趨勢,以及不同級別幼兒參與數字棋盤遊戲的能力。此外,研究1會考察家長與幼兒進行數字棋盤遊戲時的表現,並探究其與幼兒數字感及學習數學的興趣的關連。因此,研究1收集51名香港三至六歲幼兒在八項數字感測試的得分,以及其學習數學的興趣水平,並邀請這些幼兒與其家長進行一個數字棋盤遊戲。研究結果發現,在不少數字感測試項目中,各級別幼兒之間都存有顯著的差異。一般而言,低班幼兒已具備參與數字棋盤遊戲的能力。當家長與幼兒進行數字棋盤遊戲,並輪至他們移動棋子時,他們很少邀請幼兒參與其中。雖然「辨讀棋子移動後所停留方格中的數字」、「辨讀棋子移動時所經方格中的數字」及「辨識棋子移動後所停留方格中的數字與其他數字的關連」三項行為在家長與幼兒互動時甚少出現,但有關行為的出現程度與幼兒部份數字感元素有著正向的關連。 / 研究2旨在了解當家長接受親子活動策略訓練後,家長定期與幼兒進行數字棋盤遊戲,能否培養幼兒的數字感及學習數學的興趣。因此,研究2以實驗形式,邀請四組共91位家長與其低班幼兒在家進行不同的親子活動 (經訓練的遊戲組、遊戲組、紙筆練習組,以及控制組),然後比較各組幼兒在前後測的表現。研究結果發現,對數學能力非特別優異的幼兒而言,數字棋盤遊戲與紙筆練習兩者均能提升幼兒數字序列背誦及兩位數字認讀的能力。當家長接受訓練後,家長定期與幼兒進行數字棋盤遊戲,更能提升幼兒加法運算的能力。不論家長接受訓練與否,定期與幼兒進行數字棋盤遊戲能培養幼兒學習數學的興趣。 / 歸納以上研究結果,本論文顯示家長可透過與幼兒在家進行有關數字的活動,培養幼兒的數字感及學習數學的興趣。然而,不少家長與幼兒進行有關活動時,往往未有充分把握教學機會。因此,家長有需要接受有關方面的訓練。 / Through two related studies, this dissertation investigated how parents should interact with their preschool children during home numeracy activities, such as number board game playing, so as to promote children’s number sense and interest in mathematics. / In Study 1, I examined Hong Kong preschool children’s number sense development and their competence in playing number board game. Furthermore, I investigated whether parents had utilized number board game playing experiences to foster their preschool children’s number sense and interest in mathematics. The relations of the prevalence of various numeracy-related events during number board game playing to children’s number sense and interest in mathematics were also explored. Fifty-one Hong Kong three- to six-year-old preschool children were first tested on eight number sense tasks (including object counting, rote counting, missing number, numeral identification, numeral writing, numerical magnitude comparison, addition, and subtraction). Their interest in mathematics was also measured. Then, parents of these children were asked to play a number board game with their children in dyads. The parent-child interactions during the game were coded and analyzed. Results showed that third year kindergarteners (K3) performed better than second year kindergarteners (K2) on all number sense tasks except object counting and rote counting. K2 children performed better than first year kindergarteners (K1) on all number sense tasks except addition and subtraction. Usually, by K2, children could start to play number board games. When parents played number board game with their preschool children, they seldom elicited children’s participation during their turns to move the token. The events “announcing the final number“, “announcing the numbers passed through“, and “stating the numerical relations of the final number to other numbers only rarely occurred, though the prevalence of these events was positively associated with some components of children’s number sense (e.g., numeral identification, numeral writing, addition, and subtraction). / In Study 2, I investigated the extent to which offering a training program to parents on strategies of interacting with preschool children during number board game playing, together with regular playing of number board games with children, could promote children’s number sense and interest in mathematics. Ninety-one K2 children and their parents were recruited as participants; and an experimental design that involved the pre-test-post-test comparisons of four conditions (i.e., the game with a training condition, the game condition, the exercise condition, and the control condition) was used. Results showed that among children who were not very skilled in mathematics, number board game playing shared some similar educational benefits with completing mathematics exercises from books, such as promoting children’s rote counting and two-digit numeral writing skills. When parents received training, number board game playing could even promote children’s addition skills. No matter whether parents received training, number board game playing could promote children’s interest in mathematics. / Findings of these two studies suggest that home numeracy activities, such as number board game playing, can promote preschool children’s number sense and interest in mathematics. Nevertheless, parents may not be aware of the opportunities to incorporate numeracy into these activities. Therefore, training of parents is needed. / Detailed summary in vernacular field only. / Detailed summary in vernacular field only. / Detailed summary in vernacular field only. / Detailed summary in vernacular field only. / Cheung, Sum Kwing. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2012. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 195-211). / Electronic reproduction. Hong Kong : Chinese University of Hong Kong, [2012] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Abstract also in Chinese. / Acknowledgements --- p.iii / List of Tables --- p.vi / Abstract --- p.x / Chapter Chapter One --- Introduction --- p.1 / Chapter Chapter Two --- Study 1 --- p.47 / Method --- p.51 / Results --- p.62 / Discussion --- p.105 / Chapter Chapter Three --- Study 2 --- p.120 / Method --- p.127 / Results --- p.141 / Discussion --- p.173 / Chapter Chapter Four --- General Discussion --- p.184 / References --- p.195 / Appendix --- p.212
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Emotional and Behavioral Effects within the Triadic Family System: Actor-Partner Interdependence between Parents and PreschoolersUnknown Date (has links)
The purpose of the current study is to examine emotional and behavioral
interdependence within the triadic family system. Interdependence was assessed over
time between 17 participant groups of mothers, fathers and preschoolers. Responses of
each parent and preschooler were observed during story recitations that were chosen to
elicit positive or negative responses; observations included measures of attention,
external affect, and affective congruency. Parental self-report ratings of expressivity,
negative emotions, and child temperament were compared to observations during story
recitations, as well. Some father-child interactions appeared to be affected by story
condition. However, parent gender had little effect on parent-child interactions overall in
regards to child consistency. The findings suggest that children drive the interactions
more so than parents. Further research with a larger sample size is needed to fully examine the emotional and behavioral interdependence between parents and
preschoolers. / Includes bibliography. / Thesis (M.A.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2017. / FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
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Parent involvement : predictors and relation to children's behavior and emergent academic performance.Zeljo, Alexandra L. 01 January 2001 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Joint book-reading and literacy pedagogy: a socio-semantic examinationWilliams, Geoff January 1995 (has links)
"1994". / Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, School of English and Linguistics, 1995. / Bibliography: leaves 356-373 (pt. 1) / Introduction -- Research in joint book-reading and the discourse of literacy pedagogy -- The study : Part A: Research questions, preliminary analysis and participant selection -- Part B : Data gathering and preparation -- Language, context and semantic variation -- A semantic network for the description of linguistic interaction in joint book-reading -- Reading The three little pigs at home -- Results of the message semantic analysis of the interactive text -- Interpretations -- Joint book-reading in the discourse of literacy pedagogy -- Concluding comments -- Appendices. / The study contributes to the fields of educational linguistics and semantic variation by examining linguistic interaction during joint book-reading between mothers and four-year-old children, and between teachers and Kindergarten classes at the beginning of school. -- Joint book-reading was selected because of its centrality to the metaphor of a partnership between home and school in children's literacy development. The problem for the study was to investigate possible systematic semantic variation in linguistic interaction associated with social class locations of speakers, and relations between any such variants and features of interaction in joint book-reading in Kindergarten. -- A preliminary survey of 427 families in two sociogeographically contrasted sites established that joint book-reading was a common social practice, and gave sufficient indications of variation to justify an intensive socio-semantic study. Two sets of ten mother-child dyads, contrasted for class locations using Bernstein's (1990) theory of class relations, were constructed and recordings of joint book-reading sessions made by mothers. Recordings of interaction in two sets of ten Kindergarten classes in the same socio-geographical areas were made by teachers. -- Vygotsky's theory of semiotic mediation was the general resource used for interpreting children's learning, but it was necessary to resolve problems in the theory in the modelling of contexts for learning, and of mediational means. For this purpose the systemic functional linguistic concept of context of situation, as proposed by Halliday (1978) and expanded by Hasan (in press (a)), was deployed. -- Transcripts of recordings were analysed through a semantic network developed for the study, based on a network proposed by Hasan (1983). -- Semantic variation associated with class locations of families was found across all four metafunctions described within systemic theory, and one variant found to be associated with Kindergarten classroom interaction. The variable semantic features were interpreted as the realization of different principles regulating the individuation of experience, using Bernstein's theories of coding orientation and pedagogic discourse. / Mode of access: World Wide Web. / 2 parts (373, 539 p.) ill
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The Impact of HIPPY on Maternal Self-EfficacyNathans, Laura L. 08 1900 (has links)
Parenting self-efficacy refers to the ability of parents to have confidence in their abilities to effectively parent their children. Parenting self-efficacy can be divided into two types: (a) general parenting self-efficacy, which is defined as a parent’s overall sense of ability to effectively parent; and (b) task-specific parenting self-efficacy, which is defined as a parent’s confidence level to perform specific parenting tasks, such as teaching and nurturing (tested in this study). The study applied Bronfenbrenner’s bioecological theory to an analysis of (a) the effect of the HIPPY program in interaction with family and neighborhood variables on parenting self-efficacy and (b) the effect of the interaction of family and neighborhood variables on parenting self-efficacy. A group of 138 HIPPY mothers and a group of 76 comparison mothers who did not receive HIPPY services were surveyed. The sample was largely Hispanic. Results indicated HIPPY predicts task-specific parenting self-efficacy for teaching tasks, but not general parenting self-efficacy or task-specific efficacy for nurturance. Many family variables that reflected Hispanic family values were unique predictors of all three types of parenting self-efficacy, both in analyses involving interactions with HIPPY and with neighborhood variables. Neighborhood variables solely predicted general parenting self-efficacy. Moderation effects were found for the interaction between family conflict and neighborhoods in predicting general parenting self-efficacy, and the interactions between family control and all three types of parenting self-efficacy. Overall, the bioecological model was inapplicable to urban, Hispanic mothers in the surveyed population because of the lack of interaction effects found in the study.
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