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Avshenyuk, Natalia; Kostina, Lyudmyla – Comparative Professional Pedagogy, 2014
Cogent argument for better understanding of the take-up of teacher professional development through understanding the definition itself has been presented. The main constituents of the definition with reference to different sources of information in psychology, philosophy and pedagogics have been analyzed. To make the research more logical, the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Faculty Development, Personality Development, Definitions
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Niyetbaeva, Gulmira; Shalabayeva, Laura; Zhigitbekova, Bakyt; Abdullayeva, Gulzira; Bekmuratova, Gulzhanar – International Journal of Environmental and Science Education, 2016
Our personality develops gradually, and this process is influenced by various factors, with language being one of the most important. We need to communicate with other people, to speak as much, as we need occupation, and this need determines the development of our personalities. Language is deeply embedded in our conscious and subconscious.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adolescent Development, Personality Development, Interpersonal Communication
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White, Robert; Shin, Tae Seob – Multicultural Education Review, 2017
Character Education initiatives within schools have gained both proponents and opponents over recent years and continue to garner mixed reviews. Proponents argue that the need is urgent and the increasing level of school disruption, antisocial behavior and violence requires a focus on values/virtues/moral education and claim this is synonymous…
Descriptors: Values Education, Prosocial Behavior, Humanism, Humanistic Education
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Goldsmith, H. Hill; And Others – Child Development, 1987
Four current approaches to understanding temperament are discussed. Theorists representing four postions--Goldsmith, Buss and Plomin, Rothbart, and Thomas and Chess--outline their views by reponding to six common questions. Commentaries highlighting differences and similarities between the positions are offered by Hinde and McCall. (Author/BN)
Descriptors: Children, Definitions, Discussion, Fundamental Concepts
Obiakor, Festus E.; Alawiye, Osman – 1990
The success or failure of black children in school has been attributed to positive or negative self-concept, but the construct of self-concept has been misused and misrepresented by educators and researchers. The traditional definition of self-concept as a highly interrelated perception of the self has been defined in perceptual rather than…
Descriptors: Black Students, Definitions, Elementary Secondary Education, Identification (Psychology)
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Cangemi, Joseph P. – Education, 1984
To determine perceptions of self-actualizing behavior as a purpose of higher education, students, professors, and administrators rated 12 self-actualizing behaviors on a 5-point scale from important to unimportant for the university to encourage. Analysis of responses showed the three groups essentially agreed that higher education should develop…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, College Role, Definitions, Educational Objectives
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Shahar, Golan; Henrich, Christopher C.; Blatt, Sidney J.; Ryan, Richard; Little, Todd D. – Developmental Psychology, 2003
A theoretical model was examined linking early adolescent interpersonal relatedness and self-definition, autonomous and controlled regulation, and negative and positive life events. Findings indicated that self-criticism predicted less positive events, whereas efficacy predicted more positive events. Effects were fully mediated by absence and…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Cognitive Development, Definitions, Early Adolescents