Effect of quality of day care environment on children's language development

1984 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. McCartney
2003 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 300-325 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.Clasien De Schipper ◽  
Louis W.C Tavecchio ◽  
Marinus H Van IJzendoorn ◽  
Mariëlle Linting

Author(s):  
Lars Holm

ResuméFormelle institutionelle kategoriseringer af småbørns sproglige udvikling analyseres i denne artikel dels som et udtryk for bestemte teoretiske positioner og faglige traditioner i måden at betragte sprog og sproglig udvikling på, og dels som normative faglige og politiske perspektiver på, hvordan børns sproglige udvikling bør forstås og forløbe. En analyse af de skiftende kategoriseringer udgør derfor et produktivt omdrejningspunkt for at belyse centrale udviklingsprocesser i rammesætningen af det sprogpædagogiske arbejde i dagtilbud. I artiklen identificeres tre forskellige tilgange til sproglig kategorisering af småbørn inden for dagtilbudsområdet. Artiklen trækker bredt på analyser af lovgivning, faglige diskurser, sproglige testmaterialer og på fremtrædende, nyere programmer og koncepter, der sigter mod at udvikle småbørns sprog. AbstractIn this article, formal institutional categorizations of young children’s language development are analyzed in two ways. Partly as an expression of certain theoretical positions and academic traditions in the way language and language development are considered, and partly as a normative academic and political perspective on how children’s language development should be understood and proceed. Therefore an analysis of the changing categorizations of young children’s language development is a productive focal point to highlight key development processes around the framing of the language work in day care. The article identifies three different approaches to linguistic categorization of young children in day care drawing broadly on analyzes of legislation, academic discourses, linguistic test materials and prominent, newer programs and concepts that aim to develop young children’s language.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 59 (3) ◽  
pp. 487-488
Author(s):  
Paul C. Young

This book is one of a series of handbooks being published by the Office of Child Development to "promote discussion and to improve the quality of day care in the United States," according to an introductory statement by Saul Rosoff, Acting Director, Office of Child Development. It was written by Donald J. Cohen, M.D., psychiatrist and pediatrician at Yale, in collaboration with Ada S. Brandagee, M.A. Dr. Cohen attempts "to provide a broad overview of the day care field, a basic state-of-the-art guidebook for those seriously concerned about preschool day care.


Author(s):  
Esperanza Granados-Bezi

The scaffolds of American colleges and universities can no longer protect our institutions from the winds of change that penetrate their walls and appear to be threatening their foundations. They also seem incapable of protecting faculties from persistent criticism due to unsatisfactory performance and reluctance to modify educational approaches to meet society's current demands. This chapter reviews some of the most common concerns pertaining not only to the quality of higher education in general but also to that of foreign language teaching in particular. It analyzes the reasons that there is a general sense of dissatisfaction with the results of traditional practices to language learning and discusses the benefits of implementing the flipped model to enhance the quality of instruction. In addition, it underlines the importance of adopting innovative technologies to increase language development in a world in which instructors are expected to be more productive and students have to reach higher learning outcomes.


2011 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-33
Author(s):  
Ana Torres Morgade ◽  
Marcos Martínez-Romero ◽  
José M. Vázquez-Naya ◽  
Miguel Pereira Loureiro ◽  
Ángel González Albo ◽  
...  

In intensive care units (ICUs), clinicians must monitor patients’ vital signs and make decisions regarding the drugs they administer. The patients’ lives depend on the quality of these decisions but experts can make mistakes. Recent technological strategies and tools can decrease these errors. In this paper, the authors describe the development of a knowledge based system (KBS) to provide support to clinicians with respect to the drugs they administer to patients with cardiopathies in ICUs to stabilize them. To develop the system, knowledge from medical experts at the Meixoeiro Hospital in Vigo (Spain) has been extracted and formally represented as an ontology. As a result, a validated KBS has been obtained, which can be helpful to experts in ICUs and whose underlying knowledge can be easily shared and reused.


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