The other reason for shared parenting is the emerging consensus
among child development researchers that children want shared parenting and do much, much better in life if they have it.
Not exact matches
The investigation is the largest and the most ethnically diverse study comparing GI problems in
children with autism, developmental delay and typical
development, and
among the first to examine the relationship between GI symptoms and problem behaviors in
children with autism, the
researchers said.
In 2011, Shonkoff launched Frontiers of Innovation, a multi-sectoral collaboration
among researchers, practitioners, policymakers, investors, and experts in systems change who are committed to developing more effective intervention strategies to catalyze breakthrough impacts on the
development and health of young
children and families experiencing significant adversity.
Working in close collaboration with school - and community - based partners, a team of
researchers and program developers at Harvard University is developing, implementing, and evaluating a dual - generation program that supports low - income
children's academic and social - emotional
development while simultaneously building skills and social capital
among low - income parents.
There is growing consensus
among researchers who study
child development, education, and health that these skills are essential to learning and life outcomes.
Over the past decades, there has been a burgeoning interest
among researchers, educators, policymakers, and
child - service agencies in monitoring
children's social and emotional
development, health, and well - being at the population - level (e.g., Ben - Arieh 2008; Brown 2008; Keating and Hertzman 1999; Noll 2004).
In general, prosocial behaviors (helping, sharing, caring, politeness) increase during the course of childhood, although the
development and prevalence of prosocial behaviors varies across cultures.11 For example,
researchers find that prosocial behavior, as observed
among peers and in parent -
child interaction is more prevalent
among young East Asian
children than
among Western
children.