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FREEDMAN, MERVIN B. – 1961
THIS PROJECT ANALYZED PERSONALITY CHANGES IN COLLEGE WOMEN AS MEASURED BY A DISCHRONIC SERIES OF TEST BATTERIES. THE OBJECTIVE WAS TO DETERMINE THOSE CHANGES WHICH HAVE TAKEN PLACE IN THE PERSONALITY DEVELOPMENT, ATTITUDES, VALUES, AND OPINIONS OF AN EXTENSIVELY TESTED SAMPLE OF COLLEGE WOMEN. SIX GRADUATING SENIOR CLASSES AND SIX ENTERING…
Descriptors: College Students, Educational Research, Graduate Surveys, Personality Assessment
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Scholl, Mark B.; Cascone, Jason – Career Development Quarterly, 2010
The authors present the constructivist resume, an original approach developed to promote professional identity development and career adaptability (i.e., concern, curiosity, confidence, and control) in students completing graduate-level counselor training programs. The authors discuss underlying theories, including Super's (1990; Super, Savickas,…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Graduate Students, Counselor Training, Career Counseling
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Zentner, Marcel; Bates, John E. – European Journal of Developmental Science, 2008
This article provides a review and synthesis of concepts, research programs, and measures in the infant and child temperament area. First, the authors present an overview of five classical approaches to the study of child temperament that continue to stimulate research today. Subsequently, the authors carve out key definitional criteria for…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Personality Development, Children, Infants
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Carlone, Heidi B.; Haun-Frank, Julie; Webb, Angela – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2011
When evaluating equity, researchers often look at the "achievement gap." Privileging knowledge and skills as primary outcomes of science education misses other, more subtle, but critical, outcomes indexing inequitable science education. In this comparative ethnography, we examined what it meant to "be scientific" in two fourth-grade classes taught…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Science Education, Classroom Techniques, Science Interests
ATHEY, IRENE J.; HOLMES, JACK A. – 1967
ERIKSON'S THEORY ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF A HEALTHY PERSONALITY IS INTEGRATED WITH HOLMES' THEORY OF READING IN ORDER TO DERIVE A TESTABLE HYPOTHESIS REGARDING THE CONTRIBUTION OF SPECIFIED PERSONALITY CHARACTERISTICS TO READING SUCCESS AND TO VALIDATE THE FINDINGS. THE STUDY WAS CONDUCTED IN THE FOLLOWING THREE PHASES--THE CONSTRUCTION OF NEW SCALES…
Descriptors: Personality Assessment, Personality Development, Personality Studies, Reading Achievement
Athey, Irene J.; Holmes, Jack A. – 1967
Erikson's theory on the development of a healthy personality is integrated with Holmes' Theory of Reading in order to derive a testable hypothesis regarding the contribution of specified personality characteristics to reading success and to validate the findings. The study was conducted in the following three phases--the construction of new scales…
Descriptors: Personality Assessment, Personality Development, Personality Studies, Reading Achievement
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Roberts, Brent W. – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly: Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2005
In this commentary I make three points. First, the four articles presented in this special issue are critical examples of the viability and importance of the idea of childhood personality. Second, I identify several concerns, including the narrow scope of the study of childhood personality, the lack of focus on environmental factors that might…
Descriptors: Children, Personality, Personality Development, Personality Studies
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Kim, Sooyeon; Brody, Gene H.; Murry, Velma McBride – Journal of Early Adolescence, 2003
Applied confirmatory factor analysis in a test of alternative factor models and measurement invariance across gender groups, using data from the Early Adolescent Temperament Questionnaire focusing on shyness, high-intensity pleasure, activity level, attention, irritability, and fear. Found that factor models based on composite indicators showed…
Descriptors: Early Adolescents, Factor Structure, Models, Personality
Conrad, Rowan W. – 1974
Tracing problems observed among the Mountain-Plains student population, a trend of apparently improper or arrested personality development emerges. Observations indicate that a majority of the student population does not possess normally developed trust, autonomy, initiative, industry, sense of identity, or ability to develop intimate…
Descriptors: Behavior Rating Scales, Disadvantaged, Individual Characteristics, Personality Assessment
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Elias, Maurice J.; DeFini, Jennifer; Bergmann, Jennifer – Middle School Journal (J3), 2010
Many schools attempt to implement multiple programs to promote positive young adolescent development; however, these programs are often fragmented and lack coordination. The authors describe an initiative designed to help schools coordinate their social-emotional and character development (SECD) efforts to improve school climate and help students…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Middle Schools, Program Effectiveness, Values Education
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Pearson, Paul R.; And Others – Educational Studies, 1989
Reports a British study that explores relationship between social class and personality among 11-year-olds, using the Junior Eysenck Personality Inventory-Short Form. Social class was determined by the father's occupation, and alternatively, by neighborhood. No correlation was found between father's occupation and any of the four personality…
Descriptors: Family Environment, Fathers, Foreign Countries, Middle Class
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Burdsal, C. A.; Cattell, R. B. – Journal of Genetic Psychology, 1974
Second order personality factors (those that do not appear in children) were investigated in male and female high school students. Two forms of the high School Personality Questionnaire were used as the basis of the study. (DP)
Descriptors: Factor Analysis, High School Students, Personality Development, Personality Measures
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Rogosch, Fred A.; Cicchetti, Dante – Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 2004
The Five-Factor Model was used to examine personality organization in 211 six-year-old children (135 maltreated and 76 nonmaltreated). Longitudinal assessments were conducted at ages 7, 8, and 9. Six-year-old maltreated children exhibited lower agreeableness, conscientiousness, and openness to experience and higher neuroticism than did…
Descriptors: Personality Development, Personality, Child Abuse
Honzik, Marjorie P.; Macfarlane, Jean W. – 1970
This is the latest in a series of reported findings for a Guidance Study which followed the same persons from infancy to age 40. The report focuses on: (1) how well the 50 men and 60 women subjects maintained their positions relative to I.Q. during the 22 years since they were last tested at age 18; (2) gains and losses in I.Q. over the 22 year…
Descriptors: Individual Characteristics, Intellectual Development, Intelligence, Intelligence Differences
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Roberts, Brent W.; Walton, Kate E.; Viechtbauer, Wolfgang – Psychological Bulletin, 2006
In a response to comments by P. T. Costa, Jr., and R. R. McCrae on the current authors' original article, the authors show that Costa and McCrae's writings on personality suggest a belief in immutability of personality traits. The authors agree with Costa and McCrae that new personality trait models that provide an accurate lower order structure…
Descriptors: Personality Change, Personality Traits, Meta Analysis, Longitudinal Studies
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