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early childhood

NOUN
  1. the early stage of growth or development

How To Use early childhood In A Sentence

  • The majority of teachers in government-supported early childhood programs are trained as primary level teachers.
  • She spent her early childhood on a 160-acre tract known as Mankiller Flats, given to her grandfather as part of a settlement the federal government made for forcing the Cherokee to move to Oklahoma from their tribal lands in the Carolinas and Georgia in the 1830s. Post-gazette.com - News
  • Initiatives such as parental leave for men and parenting classes that emphasize the role of fathers could help to maximize children's development from early childhood to preadolescence," says Serbin.
  • One good theory is that too clean an environment in early childhood may turn immature cells away from learning to fight infections. The Sun
  • There was nothing in his early childhood to hint at the extraordinary life he would lead.
  • MUCH of my early childhood remains vivid in my memory. Times, Sunday Times
  • People learn to make visual sense of faces and other items of interest, often during infancy and early childhood but sometimes over much longer periods.
  • but then the possessiveness and competition, ingrained in us from early childhood, from preschool even, is like a thorn in our side which pricks every time a foreigner is seen.
  • An outgrowth of this discomfort is that it has created many conservatives -- who want do such things as to restrict social funding to various early childhood policy programs -- and use the supposed narrowness of IQ differentials over time, (within the various out-groups measured), to bolster their argument. You Can Do Anything You Put Your Mind To: A Noble Lie?, Bryan Caplan | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • It can take years of therapy to undo early childhood conditioning.
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