Displaying results 1 - 10 of 10 (Go to Advanced Search)
Project
Description: Language sampling is a critical component of language assessments. However, there are many ways to elicit language samples that likely impact the results. The purpose of this study was to examine how different discourse types and elicitation tasks affect various language sampling outcomes.
Project
Description: Emerging adulthood is a transitional period of self-exploration and potential stressors, emphasizing the necessity for self-regulation. Sibling interactions play a pivotal role in the development of regulatory abilities as siblings provide a safe space to practice these skills.
Project
Description: The National Project on Achievement in Twins (NatPAT) is funded by the National Institutes of Health (grant number HD052120).
Project
Description: The Colorado Learning Disabilities Research Center (CLDRC; P50 HD27802) is a long-standing interdisciplinary, multisite research program that is supported by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.
Project
Description: Mathematical thinking is in high demand in the global market, but approximately six percent of school-age children across the globe experience math difficulties (Shalev, et al., 2000).
Project
Description: This project was funded by the NIH through the P50 Florida Learning Disabilities Research Center. More information about the project can be read in this publication about the project:
Taylor, J., Martinez, K., & Hart, S.A. (2019). The Florida State Twin Registry. Twin Research and Human Genetics, 22(6), 728-730.
Project
Description: The aim of this research is to create developmentally appropriate, play-based storytelling elicitation procedures to collect language samples of young children aged 18-48 months, tools for evaluating the magnitude and quality of narrative language produced in play-based storytelling sessions, and examine the psychometric properties of these new
Project
Description: The purpose of this Hub was to deepen insight into an understudied and vulnerable subset of students with learning disabilities (LD), students with comorbid difficulty across reading comprehension (RC) and word problem solving (WPS) and whether text structure intervention in one domain transfers to the other domain.
Project
Description: The Western Reserve Reading and Math Project (WRRMP) is a NIH funded longitudinal study on child development. The project has collected data annually for 15 years, with data on approximately 450 twin pairs collected during this time. The project has had several focal points throughout its history.
Project
Description: Project KIDS aimed to rigorously combine data from several independent RCTs to explore individual differences in response to intervention, focused on cognitive, behavioral, contextual, and family history correlates of intervention response.