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Landphair, Juliette; Preddy, Teri – About Campus, 2012
Co-rumination, a social process between two friends, is defined as the frequent and excessive discussion of personal problems. Like body image and alcohol use, it is one of those complicated issues embedded in larger cultural realities, which makes it universally recognizable. On campus, co-rumination has deleterious side effects: it challenges…
Descriptors: College Students, Self Concept, Problem Solving, Modeling (Psychology)
Peer reviewedMcCaulley, Mary H. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1987
An overview of Jung's theory of psychological type, a problem-solving model, types of students in different college majors, predictions about teaching problem solving to students, practical applications of the theory to the teaching of problem solving, and strategies that develop skills in perception and judgment are presented. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Instruction, College Students, Critical Thinking, Educational Strategies
Peer reviewedTversky, Amos; Kahneman, Daniel – Science, 1981
Presents evidence that the psychological principles that govern the perception of decision problems and evaluation of probabilities and outcomes produce predictable shifts of preference when the same problem is framed in different ways. (Author/SK)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Conflict Resolution, Decision Making, Higher Education
Peer reviewedSternberg, Robert J.; Horvath, Joseph A. – Educational Researcher, 1995
Argues for a reconceptualization of teaching expertise based on psychological similarities of expert teachers to one another. The authors offer a prototype-based categorization model, drawn from psychological research, on which the family resemblance among expert teachers may be founded. The authors discuss several implications of the prototype…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Elementary Secondary Education, Knowledge Base for Teaching, Knowledge Level

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