Good to read @durre_nayab_
RT @DaveEvansPhD: Three questions we need answers to on parental perceptions of children's development from @LiaFernald #CGDTalks Coming o…
RT @DaveEvansPhD: Three questions we need answers to on parental perceptions of children's development from @LiaFernald #CGDTalks Coming o…
RT @DaveEvansPhD: Three questions we need answers to on parental perceptions of children's development from @LiaFernald #CGDTalks Coming o…
RT @DaveEvansPhD: Three questions we need answers to on parental perceptions of children's development from @LiaFernald #CGDTalks Coming o…
RT @DaveEvansPhD: Three questions we need answers to on parental perceptions of children's development from @LiaFernald #CGDTalks Coming o…
Three questions we need answers to on parental perceptions of children's development from @LiaFernald #CGDTalks Coming out of work with @estherchung5 and others https://t.co/CIHICKpMvN https://t.co/Wb4etveNK4
How accurate are parents' perception of their child’s intelligence or abilities compared with other children? Affiliate @liafernald and coauthors tested this in #Madagascar and found discrepancies between parent perceptions and objective measures: https://
RT @DaveEvansPhD: When researchers asked moms in Madagascar about their kids' development, moms were 6x more likely to overestimate their c…
RT @DaveEvansPhD: When researchers asked moms in Madagascar about their kids' development, moms were 6x more likely to overestimate their c…
RT @DaveEvansPhD: When researchers asked moms in Madagascar about their kids' development, moms were 6x more likely to overestimate their c…
RT @DaveEvansPhD: When researchers asked moms in Madagascar about their kids' development, moms were 6x more likely to overestimate their c…
RT @DaveEvansPhD: When researchers asked moms in Madagascar about their kids' development, moms were 6x more likely to overestimate their c…
RT @DaveEvansPhD: When researchers asked moms in Madagascar about their kids' development, moms were 6x more likely to overestimate their c…
When researchers asked moms in Madagascar about their kids' development, moms were 6x more likely to overestimate their children's development than to underestimate it. https://t.co/VUtBmHxTIo Sounds like parents... New research by @estherchung5 @liafe