Displaying results 1 - 7 of 7 (Go to Advanced Search)
Dataset
Part of Project: Profiles of Working Memory and Word Learning for Educational Research (POWWER)
Description: This dataset incudes data from 248 second graders (7- to 8-year-olds) with typical development from three states. One hundred sixty-seven were monolingual English-speaking and 81 were dual Spanish- and English-speaking.
Dataset
Part of Project: A Longitudinal Assessment of Late Talking Toddlers
Description: This dataset contains the data from the overarching project that was collected via the Vocabulary Acquisition and Usage for Late Talkers (VAULT) protocol. This data is longitudinal in nature, containing data for baseline, pretest, at treatment, post treatment, and a delayed follow-up for 68 students.
Dataset
Part of Project: Early Childhood Educators' Work and Stress
Description: These data are for time point 3 of the study. Data are in wide format.
Dataset
Part of Project: Project KIDS
Description: These data include information on family demographics, home environment, health information, child diet and nutrition, BRIEF, SWAN, all at the item level. This is cross-sectional data. Data can be linked to other Project KIDS data through the PK_ID variable.
Dataset
Part of Project: Home Math Environment Study
Description: A final sample of 339 parents of children aged 3 through 8 drawn from Mechanical Turk answered a questionnaire online.
Dataset
Part of Project: Speech and language skills in children with nonsyndromic cleft palate with or without cleft lip
Description: These data are from our third meta-analysis project. The speech-vocabulary analysis represented eight samples and the speech-mlu analysis represented four samples. The ages ranged from 18-months to 39-months.
Dataset
Part of Project: Speech and language skills in children with nonsyndromic cleft palate with or without cleft lip
Description: These data represent effect sizes comparing children with NSCP/L to non-cleft peers. There are 241 effect sizes from 31 studies. Children's ages ranged from 13-months to 104-months (8;7). The data are in long format as there were multiple effect sizes extracted per study.