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Peer reviewedKrall, Charlotte M.; Jalongo, Mary Renck – Childhood Education, 1999
Presents specific ways teachers can create a safe, just, inclusive, communicative, inviting, and caring elementary classroom community that promotes academic achievement. Focuses on teachers becoming more caring and competent by being honest, cultivating communication skills, being flexible, being empathetic, promoting humor, being kind,…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Classroom Environment, Educational Environment, Elementary Education
Sorensen, Patty – MultiMedia Schools, 1999
Based on her experiences requiring acceptance of continuous changes, a school library media specialist reveals the importance of remaining flexible in this dynamic environment. Highlights include embracing technology, changing districts, a difference in perspective on teacher education, and changing teaching strategies. (AEF)
Descriptors: Change, Educational Environment, Educational Technology, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedKaplowitz, Stan A.; Feiman-Nemser, Sharon – Religious Education, 1997
Presents findings from a survey of avocational teachers at the beginning and end of a three-year project to recruit and prepare volunteer teachers for a religious school. Reveals that participants joined to improve their children's education and enhance their own Jewish learning, and that the quality of the school improved. (DSK)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Individual Development, Judaism, Lay Teachers
Peer reviewedMcKinley, Nita Mary – Developmental Psychology, 1999
Examined age differences in objectified body consciousness (OBC) based on cultural, developmental, and familial contexts of women's body experience in undergraduate women and their middle-aged mothers. Found that mothers scored lower on surveillance and body shame. Found no differences in appearance-control beliefs, body-esteem, or restricted…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Body Image, College Students, Context Effect
Peer reviewedStern, David – Paths of Learning: Options for Families & Communities, 2000
Children are unique. They need different things at different times. Parents and educators should listen thoughtfully to children to determine how best to support them. Describes how a New Hampshire Quaker boarding school implements a thoughtful mix of direction and freedom based on participatory decision making and listening. "Clearness…
Descriptors: Adult Child Relationship, Boarding Schools, Conflict Resolution, Educational Philosophy
Peer reviewedDowdy, Bonnie B.; Kliewer, Wendy – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 1998
The contributions of dating status, grade, gender, and family structure to the frequency and intensity of normative conflict and to behavioral autonomy were studied in 859 10th and 12th graders. The importance of focusing on developmental patterns as well as age in assessing adolescent conflict is highlighted by the findings. (SLD)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Age Differences, Conflict, Dating (Social)
Peer reviewedHepburn, Mary A. – Social Studies, 1998
Summarizes a wealth of recent information concerning the effects of electronic mass media on the socialization of young people. Argues that significant changes have occurred in both the pervasiveness of the effects of mass media and the nature of the relationship between that and other socializing factors.(MJP)
Descriptors: Cultural Influences, Elementary Secondary Education, Family Influence, Hidden Curriculum
Peer reviewedJohnson, Sylvia T. – Journal of Negro Education, 1995
Argues that genetics, as popularized in "The Bell Curve" (Herrnstein and Murray, 1994), does not affect educational attainment and personal development, but environmental upheavals do. The environmental changes that effect educational and personal development are highlighted. It cautions that works involving pseudoscience, like "The…
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Black Education, Black Youth, Community Change
Peer reviewedRichardson, Tommye Lou – Middle School Journal, 2002
Recommends that teachers nurture students' emotional intelligence by teaching coping skills, how to acquire and use information, how to work with others, and how to manage personal growth. Discusses usefulness of emotional intelligence during transition to middle school, and suggests educators involve students in common activities that foster…
Descriptors: Behavior Development, Coping, Early Adolescents, Educational Environment
Peer reviewedSlangen-De Kort, Yvonne A. W.; Midden, Cees J. H.; Aarts, Henk; van Wagenberg, F. – International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 2001
Studied adaptive choice behavior of older, independently living persons faced with complications in their houses. The goal was to gain insight into the coping process and its outcome--in terms of assimilative vs. accommodative strategies--and in the role of three determinants on this process. Determinants were perceived self efficacy, importance…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Coping, Independent Living, Individual Development
Peer reviewedCabrera, Natasha J.; Tamis-LeMonda, Catherine S.; Bradley, Robert H.; Hofferth, Sandra; Lamb, Michael E. – Child Development, 2000
Discusses how social trends changed father involvement and family life, and in turn affected children's and fathers' developmental trajectories. Examines how today's children will construct expectations about fathers' and mothers' roles. Maintains that a life-span approach considers the broader sociohistorical context in which fatherhood develops.…
Descriptors: Child Development, Childhood Attitudes, Children, Context Effect
Peer reviewedEckstein, Shulamith Graus – Developmental Review, 2000
Extends dynamic model of cognitive growth proposed by van Geert in three directions: (1) added a term to consider exposure to material to be learned; (2) developed method to apply model to cross-sectional studies; and (3) developed procedure to scale cognitive abilities tests with items of varying difficulty. Tests model with 2- to 15-year-olds'…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Children, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Development
Peer reviewedDelgado-Romero, Edward A. – Journal of Counseling & Development, 1999
This narrative distinguishes the covert racism of self-hatred that developed from divided cultural loyalty in this immigrant family. The author developed understanding of both the racist and the victim through life experiences and self-confrontation. The question is not: "Am I a racist?"; but: "How racist am I?" (EMK)
Descriptors: Acculturation, Children, Cultural Pluralism, Ethnic Bias
Peer reviewedKing, Linda – International Review of Education/Internationale Zeitschrift fuer Erziehungswissenschaft/Revue Internationale de l'Education, 1999
Describes the central concept of Mayan culture, the possession of the soul, or ch'ulel, in the process of forming a knowledgeable person. Soul acquisition is important to becoming the ideal person, and to the educational formation of future generations. Looks at the role language plays in culture as memory, thought formation, and learning process.…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Cognitive Processes, Cultural Context, Folk Culture
Russell, Connie; Burton, John – Pathways: The Ontario Journal of Outdoor Education, 2001
In a rural Ontario high school, students can spend a semester in the Environmental Studies Program, which features holistic outdoor experiences and high school students teaching elementary students outdoors. Post-course surveys revealed positive student attitudes toward the course and major themes of experiential learning, interpersonal skills…
Descriptors: Cross Age Teaching, Elementary Secondary Education, Environmental Education, Experiential Learning


