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McLeskey, James; And Others – Learning Disabilities Research and Practice, 1995
This article reviews the literature on the effectiveness of grade retention for high-risk students and discusses the implications of this research for students with learning disabilities. It notes that, despite evidence that retention is ineffective for most students, many educators and laypersons continue to support this practice. (DB)
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Elementary Secondary Education, Grade Repetition, High Risk Students
Whitehead, Barbara Dafoe – American Educator, 1995
Social and cultural norms, institutional reinforcements, and adult oversight that used to enforce a moratorium on adolescent sexual activity have been largely relaxed, and the present approach to sex education is merely leaving adolescents adrift to fend for themselves. It is time to overhaul comprehensive sex education. (SLD)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adults, Comprehensive Programs, Contraception
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Baumeister, Roy F. – Psychological Review, 1990
Suicide is analyzed as a motivation to escape from adversive self-awareness. The causal chain is traced from initial failures that are attributed internally because of a cognitively deconstructed state. (SLD)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Behavior Disorders, Causal Models, Cognitive Processes
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Rieck, William A. – NASSP Bulletin, 1994
It is inappropriate to judge high school teachers' failure rates without making appropriate modifications to reflect student-caused failures. Devising an adjusted failure rate addresses this problem. If properly placed students with 10 or more days absent and 10% or more missing homework assignments are removed from failure numbers, the…
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Advanced Placement, Attendance, High Schools
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Arcilla, Rene Vincente – Educational Theory, 1992
Philosopher Nicholas Burbules' believed the tragedy of education was that in striving to educate, some teachers would inevitably fail some students, changing the students' lives tragically. The article analyzes the tragic sense of education that summons teachers to recollect more deeply the cause that started them on their endeavor. (SM)
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Educational Change, Educational Philosophy, Higher Education
Grady, Marilyn L.; Bryant, Miles T. – Executive Educator, 1991
According to a recent survey of Nebraska school board presidents, superintendencies most often fail because of poor people skills, failure to communicate, questionable ethics, and skirmishes over staffing. Fully 28 out of 75 incidents cited concerned problems with superintendents who were intimidating, reluctant to share information, publicly…
Descriptors: Board Administrator Relationship, Communication Problems, Elementary Secondary Education, Ethics
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Allen, J. Scott, Jr.; Drabman, Ronald S. – Learning Disability Quarterly, 1991
The investigation assessed whether 6 learning-disabled boys (ages 10-12) who were taking stimulant medication reported fewer adaptive attributions in academic situations than their 8 nonmedicated peers. Boys who were not taking medication reported more internal-effort attributions in failure situations than boys who were taking medication.…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Drug Therapy, Failure, Intermediate Grades
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Johnson, Genevieve M. – Urban Education, 1994
Presents an ecological theory of educational risk that conceptualizes this risk as discordant child-environment interaction that may occur in the classroom (microrisk), in the home (mesorisk), in the community (exorisk), and in the larger society (macrorisk). Discusses intervention strategies to reduce the prevalence of risk in each of these…
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Classroom Environment, Environmental Influences, Family Environment
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Fuchs, Lynn S.; And Others – School Psychology Review, 1993
Examined how contextual variables affect types of instructional adaptations teachers propose for students experiencing academic failure. Within academic areas (reading or mathematics), teachers (n=76) were assigned randomly to three idea generation formats: oral independent, written independent, and assisted with ideas for potential solutions.…
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Context Effect, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students
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Roderick, Melissa – American Educational Research Journal, 1994
Uses event-history analysis to explore whether and how grade retention influenced graduation outcomes for a cohort of 707 youths from an urban school system. Repeating a grade from kindergarten to grade 6 was associated with an increase in the odds of dropping out. Explores the impact of being over age for grade. (SLD)
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Age Differences, Dropout Prevention, Dropouts
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Hewitt, Mary Beth; Long, Nicholas J. – Reclaiming Children and Youth: Journal of Emotional and Behavioral Problems, 1999
Addresses the problem of students who want to do well but cannot manage the effects of failure or wrong actions. They have a conscience and experience guilt when they err, but rather than using mistakes as opportunities to rectify their behavior, they are overwhelmed by their inadequacy, which leads to self-defeating patterns of behavior.…
Descriptors: Achievement Need, Behavior Modification, Crisis Intervention, Depression (Psychology)
Ladson-Billings, Gloria; Gomez, Mary Louise – Phi Delta Kappan, 2001
A project conducted by two university instructors and a group of Madison-area primary teachers attempted to improve at-risk students' early literacy capabilities. The Teachers Helping Teachers project helped participating teachers create their own small professional-development communities, emphasize children's strengths, and improve instruction.…
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Instructional Improvement, Literacy Education, Primary Education
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Nelson, Murry R. – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 2001
By 1993, New York City's multicultural and innovative Children of the Rainbow curriculum had been discontinued and the education chancellor fired. This article examines the curriculum's development and implementation and the controversies surrounding it. After-effects linger, as other U.S. districts address various social issues in the school…
Descriptors: Administrative Problems, Curriculum Design, Educational Innovation, Elementary Education
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Solsken, Judith; Willett, Jerri; Wilson-Keenan, Jo-Anne – Research in the Teaching of English, 2000
Explores the potential of hybridity for supporting critical pedagogies that seek to transform the knowledge, texts, and identities of the school curriculum. Draws on microanalyses of oral and written texts constructed by a Latina student perceived to be struggling academically. Shows the student interweaving home, school, and peer language…
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Case Studies, Curriculum Development, Elementary Education
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Reilly, David H. – Journal of Educational Administration, 1999
European educational systems are under immense pressure to change, develop, improve, and satisfy many conflicting demands. Educational development and improvement in these countries is unlikely to progress in a neat, orderly, and linear fashion. Applying nonlinear (chaos) theory to development theory may aid understanding of educational…
Descriptors: Chaos Theory, Educational Development, Educational Improvement, Elementary Secondary Education
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