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Is Your Child Falling Behind?

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  • I’ve Found Parents are Fascinated by How Sounds are Made – This Shows Us How

    Phonemes are perceptually distinct speech sounds that distinguish one word from another, e.g. the “p”, “b”, “t” and “d” in “pie”, “by”, “tie” and “die”. They’re also articulatory gestures.

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  • What Every Child Needs for Self Regulation

    Self-regulation is not simply self-control. It is the ability to manage our energy states, emotions, behaviour and attention: the ability to return to a balanced, calm and constant state of being.

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  • Something for the Teenagers

    New York Times bestselling author Jason Reynolds has been writing poetry since he was 8 years old. He fell in love with the art form when he first started reading hip-hop lyrics and liner notes, and he moved toward novels after reading Richard Wright’s Black Boy at 17.

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  • Developing Language Skills through Human Interaction

    Home is where our story begins…” so the argument that a child’s early experiences at home perpetuate social inequality is understandably contentious. That controversy garnered new attention in 1995 when researchers Betty Hart and Todd Risley reported that children of highly educated, professional parents heard many more words addressed to them than children of less educated parents.

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  • Tuning into the Radio can Impact Older People’s Wellbeing

    For some, listening to the radio is a way to kill time while driving or catch up on the day’s news, but for older adults the desire to tune in might have deeper implications.

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  • Gardening with Young Children Helps Their Development

    May is the perfect time of year in Michigan to start a gardening project with your children. Gardening with children provides the perfect combination of skills and tasks to address your child’s development. For example, gardening is a great physical development activity.

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  • TV Subtitles Boost Literacy

    Government is too 'reticent' about advising parents how to help children learn at home, says former education secretary.

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  • Parenting a Child with Invisible Learning Differences

    My gorgeous daughter is nine years old and to look at her you would not notice anything out of the ordinary. She was diagnosed with Dyspraxia (Developmental Coordination Disorder) aged 5, following an NHS Occupational Therapy assessment which placed her motor skills in the lowest possible category. Dyspraxia is primarily a disorder of planning and executing sequences of movement, yet despite the diagnostic focus on movement, it is also so much more than this. Medical circles use the term ‘developmental coordination disorder’ but the emphasis on motor skills ignores the wide ranging impact of Dyspraxia on many other areas.

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  • What We Can Learn, as Parents form the Longest Study on Childhood Development

    For the past 70 years, scientists in Britain have been studying thousands of children through their lives to find out why some end up happy and healthy while others struggle. It's the longest-running study of human development in the world, and it's produced some of the best-studied people on the planet while changing the way we live, learn and parent. Reviewing this remarkable research, science journalist Helen Pearson shares some important findings and simple truths about life and good parenting.

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  • Behaviour as a Form of Communication – What’s the Issue?

    There's been quite a lot of discussion in the Twittersphere, on and off in recent months about the notion that "(all) behaviour is a form of communication". I've bracketed the word "all" here quite deliberately, as I think it is part of the problem, and will come back to that later.

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