Stress and child development [0.03%]
压力与儿童发展
Ross A Thompson
Ross A Thompson
Children's early social experiences shape their developing neurological and biological systems for good or for ill, writes Ross Thompson, and the kinds of stressful experiences that are endemic to families living in poverty can alter childr...
Lindsay Chase-Lansdale,Jeanne Brooks-Gunn
Lindsay Chase-Lansdale
Most of the authors in this issue of Future of Children focus on a single strategy for helping both adults and children that could become a component of two-generation programs. Lindsay Chase-Lansdale and Jeanne Brooks-Gunn, on the other ha...
Ron Haskins,Irwin Garfinkel,Sara McLanahan
Ron Haskins
Ann S Masten
Ann S Masten
Anita Chandra,Andrew S London
Anita Chandra
As this issue of the Future of Children makes clear, we have much yet to learn about military children and their families. A big part of the reason, write Anita Chandra and Andrew London, is that we lack sufficiently robust sources of data....
Harold Kudler,Rebecca I Porter
Harold Kudler
Military children don't exist in a vacuum; rather, they are embedded in and deeply influenced by their families, neighborhoods, schools, the military itself, and many other interacting systems. To minimize the risks that military children f...
Allison K Holmes,Paula K Rauch,Stephen J Cozza
Allison K Holmes
When a service member is injured or dies in a combat zone, the consequences for his or her family can be profound and long-lasting. Visible, physical battlefield injuries often require families to adapt to long and stressful rounds of treat...
Patricia Lester,Eric Flake
Patricia Lester
How are children's lives altered when a parent goes off to war? What aspects of combat deployment are most likely to put children at risk for psychological and other problems, and what resources for resilience can they tap to overcome such ...
M Ann Easterbrooks,Kenneth Ginsburg,Richard M Lerner
M Ann Easterbrooks
Much research on children in military families has taken a deficit approach--that is, it has portrayed these children as a population susceptible to psychological damage from the hardships of military life, such as frequent moves and separa...
Latosha Floyd,Deborah A Phillips
Latosha Floyd
The U.S. military has come to realize that providing reliable, high-quality child care for service members' children is a key component of combat readiness. As a result, the Department of Defense (DoD) has invested heavily in child care. Th...