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Blocher, Donald H. – Personnel and Guidance Journal, 1980
Sees four implications for counseling as a result of the additions to research and theory building of social, developmental, and general psychology. From social influence theory and from cognitive, behavioral, humanistic, and developmental research, a prototype "systematic eclectic" task-model directed toward implications is offered. (Author)
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Counseling, Counselor Role, Counselors
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Martens, Brian K.; Kelly, Susan Q. – School Psychology Quarterly, 1993
Characterizes instructional practices that prevent discipline problems by encouraging learning and appropriate behavior from behavior analytic perspective. Notes that basic assumption of this perspective is that effective teaching strategies also serve managerial functions through development of stimulus control and management of behavioral…
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Discipline, Educational Strategies, Elementary Secondary Education
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Page, William T. – Journal of Business Communication, 1985
Examines research from several fields and evaluates techniques for managing discomfort when making presentations. (Written for business communication teachers and presentation-skills trainers in business.) (PD)
Descriptors: Anxiety, Behavioral Science Research, Business Communication, Communication Apprehension
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Thomlison, Ray J. – Social Work, 1984
Poses and responds to ten questions of key significance for social work practice, drawing on the results of effectiveness outcome studies in the related fields of psychotherapy, marital therapy, family therapy, and behavioral therapy. Highlights the research that is beginning to establish which methods work. (Author/LLL)
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Counseling Effectiveness, Counselor Characteristics, Foreign Countries
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Triandis, Harry C.; Brislin, Richard W. – American Psychologist, 1984
Provides references to the work of cross-cultural psychologists that can be integrated into regular undergraduate psychology courses. Discusses methodological problems, benefits, and difficulties of cross-cultural research. Reviews contributions of this field to the study of perception, cognition, motivation, interpersonal interaction, and group…
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, College Curriculum, Cross Cultural Studies, Curriculum Development
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Kraut, Alan G.; Duffy, Sarah Wells – American Psychologist, 1984
Examines ways in which behavioral and social science can contribute to the stability of the modern partnership between government, academia, and science. Stresses the role researchers can play in the legislative process. Summarizes related articles in the same journal issue. (KH)
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Federal Aid, Government Role, Government School Relationship
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Buss, Allan R. – International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 1979
ANOVA designs are used for description and/or explanation of developmental phenomena. These consist of taking any two of age, cohort, or time of measurement as independent variables. Employment of ANOVA has led researchers down blind alleys. Regression techniques are more useful. (Author)
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Behavioral Science Research, Data Analysis, Developmental Psychology
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Domjan, Michael; Purdy, Jesse E. – American Psychologist, 1995
Examines how the contributions of animal research are presented in eight of the most widely used introductory psychology textbooks. The authors show that, with the exception of principles of conditioning and learning, the contributions of animal research are often not explicitly acknowledged or are obscured to look like they had been obtained with…
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Conditioning, Developmental Psychology, Experimental Psychology
Gaebelein, Jacquelyn W. – 1980
Research strategies used to study human aggression include laboratory study, experimental simulation, field experiment, field study, judgment task, sample survey, and less empirical strategies such as computer simulations and formal theory. The context of these strategies can be classified as either contrived, natural, or irrelevant. Major issues…
Descriptors: Aggression, Behavioral Science Research, Field Studies, Laboratory Experiments
Horowitz, Sandra V. – 1981
Several psychological theories are viable when examining the victims of intimate violence, specifically battered women. Although cognitive consistency models view individuals as striving toward balanced cognitive states, battered women can exist with the cognitive inconsistency of being harmed by men who love them. The theory of cognitive arousal…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Battered Women, Behavioral Science Research, Cognitive Processes