An approach that engages families in ongoing
child assessment consistent with Performance Standard § 1307.3 b (2).
Not exact matches
There must be a
consistent and objective education needs
assessment to truly understand the requirements of
children and adolescents in conflict.
Through Reading First, states and districts receive support to apply scientifically based reading research — and the proven instructional and
assessment tools
consistent with this research — to ensure that all
children learn to read well by the end of third grade.
All commentators said that to be worthwhile, the recording of proficiency levels required a long - term
assessment of a
child across all subjects, made by someone with the correct training, in a
consistent manner across all schools.
Consistent with our mission and educational philosophy, ECMS staff use a wide range of
assessment strategies to gain a dynamic understanding of the whole
child.
These surveys allow users to collect
consistent data on the use of
child assessments and learning standards in early childhood learning settings.
Extensive multi-informant, multimodal data collection was used to determine diagnoses,
consistent with recommendations from the
child assessment literature.30 Participants were compensated for each
assessment.
The aims of this project are
consistent with nationally recognized initiatives in the areas of school readiness, preventive education and the
assessment of
children's educational progress.
For over two decades the PRIDE Model of Practice has increased opportunities for
child welfare agencies to provide a standardized,
consistent, structured framework for the competency - based recruitment, preparation,
assessment, selection, of foster and adoptive (resource) parents, and for foster parent in - service training and ongoing professional development.
However, the factor that may be most important in this situation is the reliability of the
assessment of internalizing behavior Parents do not always recognize signs of depression in young
children; thus, reports of internalizing problems tend to be less
consistent across informants (Reynold, Anderson, & Baratell, 1985).
The results revealed a differentiated and
consistent view of developmental trajectories of hyperactive — impulsive behaviors derived from these repeated
assessments, with 7.1 % of
children seen by mothers (7 % for fathers) as displaying high and stable hyperactive — impulsive behaviors.
Lower
assessments of family functioning by parents of
children with ASD seems to be
consistent with the results of those studies in which this group of parents reported lower family cohesion and adaptability compared to controls [61], and their family's expressive feelings as lower due to their
child's communication difficulties [33].
Alternatively, MCAST
assessments of attachment to mother and father, separately, may be subject to cultural bias: mother figures placed in the kitchen cooking (as prompted by the interviewer in «hurt knee» and «tummy ache») is entirely
consistent with Italian cultural expectations and, very likely, also with the
children's experiences.