Not exact matches
With a non-cooperative
threat point, anything that
increases the wife's command over resources - the Canada
Child Tax Benefit, for example - would be expected
to shift the household's allocation of resources in a direction that she prefers:
Rather than struggling
to conform
to an idealized concept of an all - powerful, all - giving mother while under
threat of causing permanent damage
to their
children, Dally advocated for mothers
increasing their self - knowledge.
Nothing (short of a
threat or a bribe) will magically inspire a reluctant
child to clean a room, but if you respond with compassion out of the gate, you dramatically
increase the odds of getting order restored
to your living room.
Over time, as their
children's needs which have been driven underground emerge in ever -
increasing behavioral issues, parents often find that they are resorting
to yelling and
threats and physical punishment more and more often.
This shift has been stimulated by a combination of influences, including greater demand by families at all economic levels,
increased public understanding of the importance of early learning, greater support for investment in programs for low income
children as a matter of equity, and growing concern about the
threat of economic globalization and the need
to enhance the nation's human capital by building a strong foundation early in life
By using the
threat of effectively denying the
children of military personnel access
to public education, the bill seeks
to force the federal government either
to increase its impact - aid payments
to districts or
to establish separate schools, with full federal funding, on the bases.
Research by Kaspersky Lab
to mark Safer Internet Day 2017 reveals that the
increasing threats facing
children online are now having a detrimental effect, with almost half (49 per cent) of 10 - 15 year olds in the UK admitting they are scared or worried about going online.
I see
children and young people whose mental wellbeing is under
threat — and I wonder how far a narrow, academic curriculum and a barrage of high - stakes tests are contributing
to the
increasing mental ill health of our
children and young people.
With regards
to parental modelling, there have been a number of studies demonstrating that parent anxiety can be transmitted through modelling and verbal transmission of
threat and avoidant information.17, 18 In one experimental study, young infants showed
increased fearfulness and avoidance of a stranger following exposure
to a socially - anxious mother - stranger interaction.19 In this study, the effect was stronger for
children with an inhibited temperament.
Parental modelling of fearful behaviour and avoidant strategies is also likely
to increase a
child's risk of developing later emotional health problems.6 An anxious parent may be more likely
to model anxious behaviour or may provide
threat and avoidant information
to their
child,
increasing the
child's risk of anxiety disorder.
Features associated with an anxious, inhibited temperament including emotional reactivity,
threat processing biases, and an avoidant coping style may also
increase child vulnerability
to the impact of adversity.
The sequence in which tantrums, oppositional behavior, and physical aggression develop early; proactive aggression, the use of obscenities and vindictive behavior appear later, and blaming others, verbal aggression and insults, and homicidal
threats are last
to appear; reflects the
children's
increasing cognitive and verbal capacity.
These effects influence the
child's neuro - endocrine response
to threat, resulting (among other things) in infants who are «insecurely attached»
to their caregivers and at
increased risk of problems with peer and intimate relationships (Sroufe, 1995), of future mental illness and of abnormalities of cardiovascular and immune functioning (Repetti et al., 2002; Surtees et al., 2003; Luecken and Lemery, 2004; Bell and Belsky, 2007; Weich et al., 2009).