Importance of Resilience in Children Essay

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    Research shows the importance of increasing protective factors in child welfare work rather than focusing primarily on risk factors. The growing recognition of protective factors as a critical aspect of all work with children and families is long overdue. There is strong consistency and overlap between established, ongoing, and new work which underscores the salience of this strength-based approach across many disciplines. There is a powerful synergy between what children need in order to thrive…

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    Theoretical Perspectives

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    special focus on risk, protective factors, and resilience of the children. Most of these theories are put forth by psychologist and that has clinically experimented in different settings. For the purpose of better understanding on the theoretical perspective of this study, here explains the psycho social theories, behavior and social learning theories, biological theories, cognitive development theories very briefly and ecological system theory and resilience theory in a deep manner. All these…

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    millions of children every year. Of these children, the most affected are child soldiers. Forced to take on the jobs that expose them to hardship, these children must loot, fight and spy in order to live. (Posttraumatic Resilience1103). Exposed to countless trauma, these children must live through hardships at the hands of their abductors (1096). To escape such atrocities, they must risk their own lives in hopes of finding a better alternative which most often does not exist. Moreover, children…

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    Child Maltreatment About 686,000 children were victims of child abuse in 2012. Of those children, 1,640 died from the abuse. 70% of the victims were under the age of three. This is shocking and heartbreaking to me. I can’t believe that this many innocent children are going through abuse and neglect and that most of them are experiencing it by their parents. 80% of perpetrators are the child’s parents and 6.1% are other relatives. I can’t imagine what distrust and emotion hurt an abused child…

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    personality/temperament plays the most critical role in promoting resilience. True False Explain your choice: Because children have a better chance to develop their potential and achieve a resilient outcome in a supportive environment. The first priority as teachers is to develop a responsive relationship with each child and make the classroom a safe and predictable place. With this foundation, you can scaffold children learning and practice of the executive function skills…

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    The late 19th century in the United States was marked by significant social and cultural upheaval, particularly for Indigenous peoples whose traditional ways of life were increasingly threatened by government policies and westward expansion. One notable response to these challenges was the Ghost Dance movement, which emerged among various Native American tribes in the 1890s. This paper will explore the origins, beliefs, practices, and consequences of the Ghost Dance movement, shedding light on…

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    Child Parenting Styles

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    experiments involving attempts to alleviate the damage done when children lose their homes. This research has been of increasing importance as a significant percentage of children have been homeless for at least a short period of time, and many of them are never able to recover the ground they lose academically as a result (Masten et al, 2014). Overall, the authors' research has shown that homeless children had poorer academic outcomes than children…

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    At our school it is an importance that we can help children and young people develop a rage of methods to protect themselves and to make their own decisions when it come to their own safety. This is so they can keep themselves protected in vulnerable situations, and have the self-confidence, elf-esteem and resilience to be able to come and say to an adult to prevent neglect or a form of abuse, or that of another child is bothering them, or being able to make a disclosure without the fear of…

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    and primary care givers in an attempt to protect their children from the seemingly macabre subject matter contained within. In spite or because of that, it is posited that adolescents should indeed be exposed to these controversial topics in young adult fiction, so that they may safely be exposed to such themes which facilitate the learning of important life lessons from the safety of their bedroom, enabling them to develop mental resilience and…

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    balance between the reality of the circumstances and the resilience of the subjects. To conclude, John H. White’s photograph of black Chicago for DOCUMERICA portrays a cheerful sentiment, but also conveys a deeper meaning based on the historical context of the image. In the 1970s, black Americans in Chicago experienced economic turmoil and still dealt with the effects of discrimination, even after the Civil Rights Act was passed. The crowded children within the frame of the photograph provides…

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