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:: It’s Not All in Your Head

:: More Fun With Sisters And Brothers: Kids Learn To Handle Emotional Responses To Siblings

:: The Sound Benefits of Music

:: Newborns: Can You Hear Me Now?

:: Some Children are Born with Temporary Deafness

:: Behind the Name

:: Is Surgery The Best Answer For Children With Sleep Apnea?

:: Doctors’ Tests Often Miss High Blood Pressure in Kids with Kidney Disease

:: New Groundbreaking Treatment For Oxygen-Deprived Newborns

:: Surgeons Team Provide Young Woman With “New Back”

:: Teens' Fruit, Veggie Intake Decreasing

:: Helping Children Get Chatty

:: One-Third of U.S. Children Regularly Take Dietary Supplements

:: Classroom of the Future to Reshape Young Waistlines

:: Criteria Developed to Detect Bone Mass Deficiencies in Children

:: Hormone Activity Explains Adolescent Mood Swings

:: Spiritual Healing

:: Baby Talk Is Universal

:: Future Climate Change Likely To Cause More Respiratory Problems In Young Children

:: Game Pain Away

:: Out-of-Shape Kids the Norm

:: Culturally Speaking

:: Correcting Poor Vision Can Help Preschoolers’ Performance

:: Sleep-related Breathing Disorders Linked to Bullying

:: More Than 30 Percent of Common Children's Vision Disorders Missed

:: Pulmonary Expert Comments on Lung Transplants Study

:: Diagnosis Of Swallowing Disorder In Children

:: Breaking the Silence

:: A Challenging Generation

:: Disabled Orphans to Receive Physical Therapy from UCF Students

:: New National Study Finds Increase In P.E. Class-Related Injuries

:: Educational Home Visits Can Improve Asthma in Children

:: Use Your Head Gear

:: Expert Serves up the Skinny on Healthy and Fun School Lunches

:: Training Curbs Anger And Aggression In Adolescents With Tourette Syndrome

:: New Risks to Smokers' Children Revealed

:: A New Twist to Speech Therapy

:: Experts Cite Pediatric Pain, Palliative Care Shortcomings

:: Gene Therapy Restores Sight to Children with Congenital Blindness

:: Infants Should Be Screened For Hip Trouble

:: Parents fail to protect children from exposure to tobacco smoke

:: Is Your Child at Risk of Little League Elbow?

:: In-utero Alcohol Exposure Affects 'Booze Behavior'

:: Federal Resources for Children Face Challenges

:: Kids’ Headaches, Migraines Increase as New School Year Begins

:: Addressing Stigma of Pediatric Mental Health Conditions

:: Toying Around

:: Getting to the Root of Rett

:: A Resounding Goal

:: Children Of Undocumented Parents May Be At Higher Developmental Risk

:: High Number Of Infant Deaths Linked To Unsafe Sleeping Conditions

:: Immigrant Children Sluggishly Scale Language Barrier

:: The Impact of Sleep Disorders on Academics

:: A Communication Barrier to Pediatric Care

:: Talk the Talk

:: Over-reacting Can Make Stuttering Worse

:: No Cognitive Benefit From TV Viewing Before The Age Of 2

:: Listen Up

:: Insomnia Symptoms and Medical Complaints in Young Children

:: Guideline: Kids with Small Head Size at Risk of Neurologic Problems, Screening Needed

:: Kicking up New Research on Pediatric Soccer Injuries

:: Adding a New Dimension to Learning

:: Pediatric Ritalin Use May Affect Developing Brain

:: Childhood Social Skills Linked to Learning Abilities

:: Striking Effects of Stress

:: Baby Talk

:: Children Take Pediatric Arthritis Advocacy to the Hill

:: Exposure to phthalates may be a risk factor for low birth weight in infants

:: Asthmatic Teens Welcome Web-based Management

:: Building Baby Brain Connections

:: At the Crossroads of Therapy Intelligence

:: Hypothermic Technique for Treating Pediatric Head Injuries

:: Getting to the Root of Stuttering

:: Childhood Brain Tumors Leave a Lasting Mark on Cognition

:: Phonics, Whole Processes Determine Reading Speed

:: Study Shows “Free Play” Is Highly Important To Human Social Development

:: Humans Appear Hardwired to Learn by “Over-Imitation”

:: Gesturing Helps Grade-Schoolers Solve Math Problems

:: American Lung Association Urges Parents Of Kids With Asthma To Prepare For Flu Season & New School Year Ahead

:: OHSU researchers study speech and language disorders in autism

:: Pediatric Strokes More Than Twice as Common

:: Farm Therapy

:: Cervical Spine Injuries in Children Involved in Motor Vehicle Crashes

:: Convenience of Retail Clinics Drawing More Kids in for Care

:: Head Injury Greater in High School Football

:: Low Birth Weight, High Risk for Hyperactivity

:: Early Bird Gets the Word

:: Crossing International Lines

:: Adult Automated External Defibrillators Save Children’s Lives

:: Infantile Scoliosis Responds Well to Casts, Study Finds

:: An Eye for an Eye Movement

:: When Babies Learn Language, the Eyes Have It

:: Exercise Helps Children Fall Asleep Faster, Study Indicates

:: Reading Between the Language Acquisition Lines

:: Imaging Study Finds Evidence Of Social Orienting Ability Associated With Brain Abnormalities In Toddlers With Autism

:: One Therapist, Under Law

:: How Language Impairments Affect Child’s Story Telling

:: Planting The Seeds For Rehabilitation

:: Staggering Pediatric SCI Stats

:: Monkeys Use ‘Baby Talk’ to Interact with Infants

:: Physicians Support New Immunizations, Urge Children To Get Vaccinations

:: Normalizing School-Based Therapy

:: New Orleans’ Ochsner Introduces Literacy Program to Promote Healthy Minds

:: Pointing the Way to Drugs for Deadly Childhood Leukemia

:: Newborn Blood Data Used To Study Cerebral Palsy

:: A Lot to Swallow

:: Study Reveals Barriers to Pain Treatment in Children with Sickle Cell Disease

:: Children with Brain-Damage Often Have Cold Feet

:: Inhaled nitric oxide protects premies

:: A Breath of Life

:: Block-Play May Improve Toddler Language Development

:: Children at Play

:: Creating a Therapy-Based Program for Students

:: Antidepressant Ineffective Against Autism Spectrum Disorder Children’s Obsessive Behavior

:: Childhood Vaccines and Autism: No Scientific Link Found

:: Obesity Is No. 1 Health Concern for Kids in 2008

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Children’s Early Skills Predict Later School Success
11.21.07

Article available online at: http://www.therapytimes.com/112707Pediatrics


Children entering kindergarten with elementary math and reading skills are the most likely to do well in school later, even if they have various social and emotional problems, say researchers who examined data from six studies of close to 36,000 preschoolers. Children’s attention-related skills also mattered, the researchers found.

These findings are reported on in the November issue of Developmental Psychology.

For the first time, researchers compared results from six large-scale longitudinal studies comprising two national representations of U.S. children, two multi-site studies of U.S. children, one study focusing on children from Great Britain and one study focusing on children from Canada to assess what school-entry skills and behaviors best predicted higher teacher ratings and reading and math test scores as the children progressed through school. Children’s preschool cognitive abilities and socio-demographic characteristics were held constant to rule out their influences.

From a meta-analysis of the results, economist Greg J. Duncan, PhD, of Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill., and 11 co-authors found that mastering early math concepts, such as knowledge of numbers and understanding the order of numbers, best predicted later success. Mastering early language and reading skills that included vocabulary, knowing letters and understanding phonetics were next in predicting later achievement.

Also contributing to later achievement were children’s attention-related skills, including the ability to control hyperactive behavior, to concentrate while completing a task, and to be motivated for learning. Surprisingly, difficulty getting along with classmates, aggressive or disruptive behaviors, and sad or withdrawn behaviors did not detract from later learning.

School readiness skills and behaviors were measured at school entry (around age 5) and later achievement was measured between the ages of 7 and 14. Even after controlling for children’s prior cognitive ability, the authors found that early math skills were strong predictors of later math achievement and predicted later reading achievement as well as early reading skills. These and other patterns were similar for boys and girls and for children from both upper- middle-class and poor families.

The authors also found that early attention skills had a role in later achievement. But early behavior problems and lack of social skills did not affect later achievement measures in this sample. They caution that their studies were drawn from general populations and that children diagnosed with clinical levels of these problems may not conform to these patterns.

The lack of associations between social and emotional behaviors and later learning was the biggest surprise and could not be attributed to differences in the way early social and academic skills were measured, the researchers found. “Perhaps teachers are able to ensure that a child’s problem behaviors do not affect his or her achievement,” notes Duncan, but adds, “We were unable to assess whether a child’s behavior problems affected the amount that classmates learned.”

The results are consistent with recommendations from expert panels of early mathematics and reading professionals to bolster the teaching of math and reading skills during the preschool years. “Our results did not address what types of preschool curricula are most effective in promoting these school readiness skills,” says Duncan. “But we do know that play-based, as opposed to ‘drill-and-practice,’ curricula designed with children’s developmental needs in mind can foster academic and attention skills in ways that are engaging and fun.”

Source: American Psychological Association


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AccMed Technology Solutions at CSM 2010
Bill Cummins, MS, CCC-SLP, discusses the Cypress Therapy software from AccuMed Technology Solutions, which provides a library of documentation templates, including daily notes, weekly summaries, initial and monthly plans of progress, and discipline-specific evaluations, as well as Cypress Mobile software in which therapists enter treatment data as they work with patients, running on any handheld device using the Windows Mobile® operating system Cypress Therapy software integrates, manages, and displays information for therapists, managers, and business office staff.
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