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In this collection, Literacy and Learning in Times of Crisis:
Emergent Teaching Through Emergencies, the contributors offer
insights from theoretical, historical, and pedagogical lenses and
these critical insights emerge out of their academic, scholarly,
and personal experiences of teaching during crises. In some cases,
authors have taught while battling COVID, and others have done so
while addressing and acknowledging school-based violence. While
some teach the analysis of the discourse of crisis, others critique
the missteps of policy-making during calamity. More so, some
authors examine the finesse of micro-teaching at emotional levels;
others find the means to develop macro-structures of programmatic
curriculum. Literacy and Learning in Times of Crisis highlights the
educational decision making that educators have used to cope with
the dilemmas that they and their students have faced at the turn of
the millennium. Specifically, contributors to this collection offer
a broad range of experiences, expertise, and engagement with
pedagogy during emergencies that we currently face but also frame
issues of emergencies that will inevitably challenge educators in
the future.
In this collection, Literacy and Learning in Times of Crisis:
Emergent Teaching Through Emergencies, the contributors offer
insights from theoretical, historical, and pedagogical lenses and
these critical insights emerge out of their academic, scholarly,
and personal experiences of teaching during crises. In some cases,
authors have taught while battling COVID, and others have done so
while addressing and acknowledging school-based violence. While
some teach the analysis of the discourse of crisis, others critique
the missteps of policy-making during calamity. More so, some
authors examine the finesse of micro-teaching at emotional levels;
others find the means to develop macro-structures of programmatic
curriculum. Literacy and Learning in Times of Crisis highlights the
educational decision making that educators have used to cope with
the dilemmas that they and their students have faced at the turn of
the millennium. Specifically, contributors to this collection offer
a broad range of experiences, expertise, and engagement with
pedagogy during emergencies that we currently face but also frame
issues of emergencies that will inevitably challenge educators in
the future.
This book presents the Maternal Sensitivity Program (MSP), an
eight-session home-delivered intervention designed to enhance
overall maternal sensitivity to infant behavior between the third
and the tenth month of life using video feedback and live modeling
strategies. The intervention was based on successful international
programs but was specifically developed to fit the realities and
needs of low-income countries, whose public health services rely on
scarce human and economic resources. The program aims to promote
maternal acknowledgment of infant mental activity and model
responses that encourage infants' communication of intentions,
needs, desires, and emotions. The first part of the book provides
an overview of core theories related to the concept of maternal
sensitivity, illustrating how it varies across cultural contexts,
and how it is shaped by economic scarcity. The second part of the
book presents evidence of the effectiveness of sensitivity-based
interventions, describes and provides a rationale for the Maternal
Sensitivity Program (MSP), and proposes a framework for training
interventionists seeking to implement the program in different
contexts. The third part of the book presents the intervention
manual, describing in detail the procedures in each of the eight
sessions of the program. The Maternal Sensitivity Program: A Model
for Promoting Infant Development in Challenging Contexts will be an
invaluable resource for developmental psychologists, health care
providers, and social workers who work with families in low-income
countries and in contexts of social vulnerability and need to
implement low-cost interventions to foster healthy child
development.
This book presents the Maternal Sensitivity Program (MSP), an
eight-session home-delivered intervention designed to enhance
overall maternal sensitivity to infant behavior between the third
and the tenth month of life using video feedback and live modeling
strategies. The intervention was based on successful international
programs but was specifically developed to fit the realities and
needs of low-income countries, whose public health services rely on
scarce human and economic resources. The program aims to promote
maternal acknowledgment of infant mental activity and model
responses that encourage infants' communication of intentions,
needs, desires, and emotions. The first part of the book provides
an overview of core theories related to the concept of maternal
sensitivity, illustrating how it varies across cultural contexts,
and how it is shaped by economic scarcity. The second part of the
book presents evidence of the effectiveness of sensitivity-based
interventions, describes and provides a rationale for the Maternal
Sensitivity Program (MSP), and proposes a framework for training
interventionists seeking to implement the program in different
contexts. The third part of the book presents the intervention
manual, describing in detail the procedures in each of the eight
sessions of the program. The Maternal Sensitivity Program: A Model
for Promoting Infant Development in Challenging Contexts will be an
invaluable resource for developmental psychologists, health care
providers, and social workers who work with families in low-income
countries and in contexts of social vulnerability and need to
implement low-cost interventions to foster healthy child
development.
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