Differential associations between extracurricular participation and Chinese children's academic readiness: Preschool teacher–child interactions as a moderator

2022 ◽  
Vol 59 ◽  
pp. 134-147
Author(s):  
Lixin Ren ◽  
Bi Ying Hu ◽  
Huiping Wu ◽  
Xiao Zhang ◽  
Alexandra N. Davis ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 774-783
Author(s):  
Güzin Özyılmaz ◽  

The aim of science education is to enable children to become “science-literate.” Science literacy is defined as taking responsibility for and making decisions about situations requiring scientific understanding and having sufficient knowledge, skills, attitudes and understanding of values to put their decisions into practice. Revealing teachers’ beliefs can help to understand the types of experiences presented by teachers in their classrooms. Inadequate understandings and misbeliefs of teachers shape the first perceptions of children about the NOS when they are formally introduced with science education in their early childhood. Most of the studies were also performed with science teachers and there have been few studies conducted with preschool teachers. Therefore, the present study was directed towards determining NOS beliefs of preschool teacher candidates. To achieve this aim, Nature of Science Beliefs Scale (NOSBS), developed by Özcan and Turgut (2014), was administered to the preschool teacher candidates studying in Preschool Education Department of Buca Education Faculty at Dokuz Eylül University in the spring semester of the 2018-2019 academic year. In the study, the NOS beliefs of the teacher candidates were found to be acceptable in general. While the findings of this study are consistent with those revealed in several relevant studies in the literature


2016 ◽  
Vol 50 (4) ◽  
pp. 359-372 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael T. Willoughby ◽  
Brooke Magnus ◽  
Lynne Vernon-Feagans ◽  
Clancy B. Blair ◽  

Substantial evidence has established that individual differences in executive function (EF) in early childhood are uniquely predictive of children’s academic readiness at school entry. The current study tested whether growth trajectories of EF across the early childhood period could be used to identify a subset of children who were at pronounced risk for academic impairment in kindergarten. Using data that were collected at the age 3, 4, and 5 home assessments in the Family Life Project ( N = 1,120), growth mixture models were used to identify 9% of children who exhibited impaired EF performance (i.e., persistently low levels of EF that did not show expected improvements across time). Compared to children who exhibited typical trajectories of EF, the delayed group exhibited substantial impairments in multiple indicators of academic readiness in kindergarten (Cohen’s ds = 0.9–2.7; odds ratios = 9.8–23.8). Although reduced in magnitude following control for a range of socioeconomic and cognitive (general intelligence screener, receptive vocabulary) covariates, moderate-sized group differences remained (Cohen’s ds = 0.2–2.4; odds ratios = 3.9–5.4). Results are discussed with respect to the use of repeated measures of EF as a method of early identification, as well as the resulting translational implications of doing so.


2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 753-768
Author(s):  
Margo Gardner ◽  
Stephen Hutt ◽  
Donald Kamentz ◽  
Angela L. Duckworth ◽  
Sidney K. D’Mello

Author(s):  
Alisa Valeryevna Salkova

The paper discusses the problem of organizing methodological support of educators in the project-ing the educational situations to develop interest in St. Petersburg among older children. An explanation of the concepts of “interest”, “pedagogical project-ing”, “projecting skills of a preschool teacher”, "ed-ucational situation" in relation to a preschool organ-ization is given. The matrix of projecting skills of a preschool teacher is presented. As a way of study-ing the professional readiness of a teacher, “case-situations”, in which the activity of a teacher to de-velop children’s interest in St. Petersburg is mod-eled, are proposed and substantiated. The study also identifies groups of teachers depending on the characteristics of projecting skills. Also, groups of teachers are identified depending on the assess-ment of their own readiness to projecting educa-tional situations to develop interest in St. Petersburg for older children. Individual and group difficulties of teachers in the projecting of educational situa-tions to develop interest in St. Petersburg in older children were identified. The content of the technol-ogy of projecting an educational situation for the development of interest in St. Petersburg among children of senior preschool age is described. The relationship between the use of the developed tech-nology and an increase in professional readiness for the projecting of educational situations for the de-velopment of interest in St. Petersburg in older chil-dren is considered.


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