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  2. Evolving capacities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolving_capacities

    The concept of evolving capacities of the child first emerged in international law through the Convention on the Rights of the Child.It stems from the recognition that childhood is not a single, fixed, universal experience and that their lives require different degrees of protection, provision, prevention, and participation at different stages of their lives.

  3. Child development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Child_development

    Morphemes act as minimal meaning-bearing elements or building blocks of something in language that makes sense. For example, in the word "cat", the component "cat" makes sense as does "at", but "at" does not mean the same thing as "cat". In this example, "ca" does not mean anything. Morphology is the study of words and how they are formed ...

  4. Capacity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capacity

    Capacity building, strengthening the skills, competencies and abilities of developing societies; Productive capacity, the maximum possible output of an economy; Capacity management, a process used to manage information technology in business; Capacity utilization, the extent to which an enterprise or a nation uses its theoretical productive ...

  5. Capacity building - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capacity_building

    Capacity building (or capacity development, capacity strengthening) is the improvement in an individual's or organization's facility (or capability) "to produce, perform or deploy". [1] The terms capacity building and capacity development have often been used interchangeably, although a publication by OECD-DAC stated in 2006 that capacity ...

  6. Capacity theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capacity_theory

    Capacity theory is the theoretical approach that pulled researchers from Filter theories with Kahneman's published 1973 study, Attention and Effort positing attention was limited in overall capacity, that a person's ability to perform simultaneous tasks depends on how much "capacity" the jobs require. Further researchers - Johnson and Heinz ...

  7. Child - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Child

    A child (pl. children) is a human being between the stages of birth and puberty, [1] [2] or between the developmental period of infancy and puberty. [3] The term may also refer to an unborn human being.

  8. How to teach kids the meaning of Martin Luther King Jr. Day - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/teach-kids-meaning-martin...

    For elementary school kids: Read all about it. Books of every reading level are excellent ways for kids to learn about King’s life. Ask Abbey Mathis, who teaches first grade at Hickory Grove ...

  9. Mental age - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mental_age

    Anthropologists well known for their attempts to correlate cranial size and capacity with intellectual potential were Samuel Morton and Paul Broca. [3] The modern theories of intelligence began to emerge along with experimental psychology. This is when much of psychology was moving from philosophical to more biology and medical science basis.