(2011). Children growing up in poverty and their ideas on what constitutes a good life: Childhood studies in Germany. Child Indicators Research, 4 (1), 1–19.Andresen, S., & Fegter, S. (2011). Children growing up in poverty and their ideas on what constitutes a good life: Childhood...
根据文章第一段“Growing up in poverty can have long-term negative consequences for children.(在贫困中成长会对儿童产生长期的负面影响。)”,再结合第二段“We know that the first few years of a child’s life are the most influential for their development. Brain development is particularly rapid ...
Growing up in poverty can have long-term negative consequences for children.Now,a studyoffering unconditional cash to a group of mothers on low incomes in the US is beginning todiscover the precise role of parental income in child development.It is the first randomised trialto look at whether ...
These figures often conceal a complex reality and a wide gap between the children growing up in poverty and the other children in the class. In this chapter, we will try to shed light on this gap for various different dimensions of well-being....
Children Growing Up in Poverty and Their Ideas on What Constitutes a Good Life: Childhood Studies in Germany 来自 掌桥科研 喜欢 0 阅读量: 31 作者:S Andresen,S Fegter 摘要: This article reports on childhood studies in Germany including two empirical research projects. It concentrates on children...
Children raised in poverty often attend poorly resourced schools that further limit their academicopportunities."Morgan said that, within families, parents who regularly talk and interact with toddlers(学步的儿童) can pointoutand explainphysical, natural and social events occurring around them daily. ...
Children growing up in poverty are far more likely to live their adult lives in poverty and raise their own children in similar circumstances. They do less well in school and have worse health as adults, they are more likely to struggle to find work and end up relying on benefits and are...
Now, I talked about what happens later, but some of these differences emerge at a really shockingly early age. In one study, children who were growing up in poverty were almost a year behind the richer children on educational tests, and that was by the age of just three. ...
More children are growing up in single-parent families Thirty-five percent of children lived in a single-parent household in 2013, up from 32% in 2008. More than two-thirds of African-American children live with a single parent. Child poverty is most severe in the South and Southwest ...
“Children growing up in low-income families typically experience comparatively fewer early opportunities to learn about the natural and social sciences,” the authors wrote. “Their parents often have lower educational levels and therefore less science knowledge themselves as well as fewer resources avai...