Cognitive and Behavioral Management for Children in High-Stress, Low-Resource Contexts
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This article examines the principles and practices of cognitive and behavioral management for children growing up in high-stress, low-resource contexts prevalent in the Global South. Grounded in a qualitative study of 66 stakeholders, including caregivers, educators, and adolescents across diverse settings, the research explores how chronic stressors such as poverty, insecurity, and scarcity directly shape child development, manifesting in behaviors ranging from hypervigilance and withdrawal to aggression and cognitive fatigue. In response, caregivers and practitioners employ adaptive, culturally embedded strategies that often diverge from standardized models, prioritizing resilience, situational awareness, and practical skill acquisition. The analysis reveals a sophisticated, if often implicit, framework where discipline is frequently intertwined with teaching, and everyday routines become primary vehicles for cognitive and emotional learning. Tensions emerge between survival-oriented control and the nurturing of adaptive intelligence, highlighting the complex trade-offs faced by families. Key factors promoting positive outcomes include relational consistency, environmental predictability, and the strategic channeling of stress responses into constructive outlets. The article concludes by advocating for a strengths-based, ecological approach to child management that legitimizes and systematizes indigenous practices. It calls for policies and interventions that support rather than supplant existing community assets, fostering cognitive and behavioral development that is both contextually appropriate and foundationally robust.
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References
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