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Peer reviewedLamb, Michael E.; Sternberg, Kathleen J.; Esplin, Phillip W. – Child Abuse & Neglect: The International Journal, 1998
Describes the factors that influence children's competence when they are being interviewed about sexual abuse and discusses ways in which investigative interviewers can maximize the quality and quantity of information they obtain from alleged witnesses and victims. Strategies for developing rapport and eliciting factual information are described.…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Child Development, Children, Competence
Peer reviewedBruch, Monroe A.; Berko, Eric H.; Haase, Richard F. – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1998
A model was tested in which emotional inexpressiveness fully mediates the relationship of shyness, gender identity, and physical attractiveness with men's interpersonal competence. In a second study, a partially mediated model explained the data better. Implications for further modifications and testing of the model and for counseling practice are…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, College Students, Counseling, Higher Education
Peer reviewedMills, Steven D.; Sprenkle, Douglas H. – Family Relations, 1995
Discusses theoretical and clinical developments that have accompanied family therapy's entry into the postmodern era. Clinical trends, including use of reflecting teams, self-of-the-therapist issues, increased therapist self-disclosure, and postmodern supervision are examined. Feminist critiques, health-care reform, and increasing collaboration…
Descriptors: Counseling Theories, Family Counseling, Family Life Education, Individual Development
Harper, Vernon B., Jr. – T.H.E. Journal, 2005
The Web is no longer a novel ingredient in the learning experience, it is intrinsic and constant. In fact, a host of new technologies has sparked an age of inexpensive, effortless, and universal Web access in the classroom, while wireless devices and protocols have steadily moved downstream and down the socioeconomic ladder. With this incredible…
Descriptors: Learning Experience, Internet, Self Disclosure (Individuals), Computer Mediated Communication
Gonyea, Robert M. – New Directions for Institutional Research, 2005
Higher education scholars and institutional researchers rely heavily on self-reported survey data in their work. This chapter explores problems associated with self-reports and provides questions and recommendations for their use.
Descriptors: Institutional Research, Self Disclosure (Individuals), Statistical Surveys, Research Problems
Stevens, Richard Allen – Journal of College Student Development, 2004
Using grounded theory methodology, the experiences of 11 self-identified gay male college students were explored to understand how the environment contributed to the exploration and development of a gay identity. One central category (finding empowerment) and 5 integrative categories (self-acceptance, disclosure to others, environmental…
Descriptors: Homosexuality, College Environment, Student Experience, College Students
Egu, Chizoma Linda; Weiss, David J. – Journal of Child and Family Studies, 2003
In the United States, reported child abuse rates vary dramatically with race. We employed a scenario methodology to examine whether teachers, whose professional obligations include reporting suspected instances of abuse, exhibit bias in evaluating a possibly abused child. Each teacher (180 White, 180 Black, and 180 Hispanic) read one of six…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Profiles, Teacher Attitudes, Disclosure
Kukka, Christine – Journal of School Nursing, 2004
There are students and staff in many schools with hepatitis B, hepatitis C, or HIV infections. Should parents or guardians be expected to disclose students' bloodborne infections to school officials? Can infected students play contact sports given the increased risk of blood spills? What type of response plan should schools develop in the event of…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, School Nurses, Communicable Diseases, Child Health
Hamre, Bridget K.; Pianta, Robert C. – Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 2004
The current study describes the prevalence of self-reported depressive symptoms in a sample of 1217 nonfamilial caregivers and examines the relation between depression and the quality of interactions between caregivers and young children. One hundred and fourteen of these caregivers (9.4%) reported clinically significant levels of depressive…
Descriptors: Depression (Psychology), Measures (Individuals), Child Caregivers, Incidence
Sturza, Marisa L.; Campbell, Rebecca – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2005
In this study we examined rape survivors' post assault use of prescription drugs, including sedatives, tranquilizers, and antidepressants. In a community-based sample of 102 sexual assault survivors, 44% had used prescription drugs post rape. Consistent with prior research on alcohol as a postassault coping mechanism, the current study found…
Descriptors: Rape, Victims of Crime, Narcotics, Substance Abuse
Ketelle, Diane – Qualitative Report, 2004
This article argues that school administrators can learn about themselves through fictionalizing their real world experience. Examples of this writing form are offered in the text to illustrate the form and possible function of this type of work. The author presents this alternate writing form as a reflective tool that can assist professionals in…
Descriptors: School Administration, Administrators, Experience, Validity
Coulter, David – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2002
Central to teaching is a grand dichotomy: public and private. Children need the protection of privacy to form their own identities: they try out new roles and need to be sheltered from some consequences of these attempts so that they feel confident to keep trying. Forming an identity, however, is also a public concern: the very roles that children…
Descriptors: Privacy, Ethics, Discourse Analysis, Pragmatics
Renne, Christine G. – Educational Foundations, 2003
This paper presents a narrative that explores the author's own life as a woman from a working class background who is now a professor. After situating her work in the small but growing research field about the intersection of social class and academics, the author presents her autobiography by providing a documentary through the three categories…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Self Disclosure (Individuals), Social Experience, Intellectual Experience
Tomada, Giovanna; Schneider, Barry H.; de Domini, Piero; Greenman, Paul S.; Fonzi, Ada – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2005
Most school transitions are characterised by sweeping changes in children's social and learning environments, often accompanied by important biological and cognitive changes; the multiple changes occurring within the child and the environment make the results of school-transition studies difficult to interpret. Italian elementary school children…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Foreign Countries, Grade 2, Academic Achievement
Taimalu, Merle; Lahikainen, Anja Riitta; Korhonen, Piia; Kraav, Inger – Social Indicators Research, 2007
Our main interest in this paper is in studying children's well-being by using children themselves as informants and fear as an indicator of insecurity from cross-cultural and longitudinal perspectives. More specifically our paper documents the changes in the content and prevalence of children's fears in two neighboring countries, Finland and…
Descriptors: Security (Psychology), Cross Cultural Studies, Incidence, Social Change

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