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Peer reviewedPearson, Patricia G. – Journal of Social Work Education, 1998
A survey of 346 faculty in 38 graduate social-work programs explored their educational orientations (mentor vs. master teacher) and their educational philosophies. Results indicated faculty tended toward a master-teaching approach in imparting essential knowledge and empowering students, but incorporated elements from the mentoring approach.…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Educational Attitudes, Educational Philosophy, Graduate Study
Peer reviewedSimons, Ronald L.; Lin, Kuei-Hsiu; Gordon, Leslie C. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1998
Several theoretical perspectives regarding the manner in which parental behavior might increase the probability that an adolescent will engage in dating violence were tested using 113 adolescent males. Frequent exposure to corporal punishment increased the risk of dating violence; interparental aggression did not. Low support and involvement by…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Aggression, Corporal Punishment, Dating (Social)
Peer reviewedHenley, David – Art Education, 1997
Defines two terms, censorship and "disturbation," and relates them to the responsibility of art educators to allow artistic free expression, but within certain realms of social responsibility. Argues that art educators should attempt to develop a provocative young artist's "disturbation" into mature and conscious forms. (DSK)
Descriptors: Antisocial Behavior, Art, Art Education, Censorship
Peer reviewedHodges, Jan S.; Keller, M. Jean – Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness, 1999
A study identified the perceptions of six college students with visual impairments on what influenced their social activity on campus. It found influences were different for visually-impaired students than for traditional students. The need to intervene in the social development of students with visual impairments before college is stressed.…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), College Students, Early Intervention, Higher Education
Peer reviewedBomer, Randy – Voices from the Middle, 1999
Discusses how English/language-arts teachers can actively teach students to use a socially critical lens for thinking. Considers three modes of teaching this. Discusses how, once students have a least 10 notebook entries focused on social issues, "noticings," and questions, they should be able to reread their notebooks for themes that have…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, English Instruction, Language Arts, Middle Schools
Harder, Anita – Northwest Education, 1999
An Oregon elementary-school principal describes her experience of creating a peaceful school. To create the safe environment needed for learning, teachers taught students conflict-resolution skills; 15 life skills, such as integrity, initiative, flexibility, and humor; and a three-step problem-solving model. Students are taking their new skills…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Behavior Change, Conflict Resolution, Educational Environment
Peer reviewedElksnin, Linda K.; Elksnin, Nick – Intervention in School and Clinic, 2000
Strategies teachers can use to teach parents to teach their children to be prosocial are described. These strategies include teaching incidentally, performing social skills autopsies, coaching emotions, and assigning homework. Issues to be considered when working with parents and children from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds are…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Disabilities, Diversity (Student), Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedSacks, Sharon Zell; Wolffe, Karen E.; Tierney, Deborah – Exceptional Children, 1998
Two studies examined how adolescents and young adults (ages 15-21) with visual impairments spent their time engaged in academic, social, daily living, and vocational pursuits in comparison to typical youth. Both studies identified socialization and career development as areas where students with visual impairments may need additional supports.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Career Development, Comparative Analysis, Interpersonal Competence
Peer reviewedGarner, Pamela W.; Estep, Kimberly M. – Early Education and Development, 2001
Investigated linkages between aspects of emotional competence and preschoolers' social skills with peers, as well as parental emotion socialization practices as predictors of social skill. Found that emotional competence variables were meaningfully related to the peer variables and that, for non-constructive anger reactions, maternal reports of…
Descriptors: Child Behavior, Developmental Psychology, Emotional Development, Emotional Response
Peer reviewedEgan, Kieran – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1999
Discusses three educational ideas, demonstrating their incompatibility: (1) a focus on socialization; (2) Plato's notion that education is the process of seeking truth about reality; and (3) Jean-Jacques Rousseau's idea that the mind undergoes a developmental process and education furthers its development. Argues that education is learning to use…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Educational Change, Educational Objectives, Educational Philosophy
Peer reviewedGarner, Pamela W.; And Others – Child Development, 1994
Two studies investigated the relationship between emotion socialization variables, social cognitive knowledge, and children's social competence in preschoolers from low-income families. Found that mothers' self-reported emotion socialization practices were related to children's emotional knowledge and sibling caregiving behavior. (MDM)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Anger, Early Childhood Education, Emotional Adjustment
Peer reviewedSherkat, Darren E.; Blocker, T. Jean – Social Forces, 1994
Longitudinal data on over 1,300 youths, 1965-73, indicate that their participation in the protests of that era was positively related to college attendance, academic achievement in high school, self-efficacy, parents' income and education, and parents' political participation, and to being male, black, urban, non-Southern, and not a fundamentalist…
Descriptors: Activism, College Attendance, Higher Education, Individual Development
Peer reviewedJagers, Robert J.; And Others – Child Development, 1996
Examined the relationships between certain socialization experiences and social judgments among 54 inner-city, African American kindergartners from low-income families. Results indicated that in evaluating transgressions children distinguished between moral and social-conventional issues when explaining why they were wrong and in terms of rule and…
Descriptors: Black Youth, Blacks, Childhood Attitudes, Inner City
Peer reviewedLan, William Y.; Repman, Judi – Journal of Experimental Education, 1995
Responses of 138 third and fourth graders to failures and successes in mathematics computation were studied in 4 experimental conditions varied by social learning context and modeling. The collaborative learning context increased student persistence after failure and dynamism after success, and modeling increased persistence and dynamism in an…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Failure, Computation, Context Effect
Peer reviewedWillie, Charles Vert – Journal of Negro Education, 1995
Asserts that Herrnstein and Murray's "The Bell Curve" (1994) is an attempt to influence and control public discourse about public policy and inequality. It examines four of the book's flaws in classification, analyses, research, and its failure to recognize intelligence as having both genotypic and phenotypic manifestations. (GR)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Cultural Influences, Genetics, Intelligence


