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Peer reviewedDuru-Bellat, Marie – Journal of Education Policy, 2000
Individual factors, such as socioeconomic background and streaming choices (at the secondary level), contribute significantly to educational inequalities. Families have unequal resources to manage their children's schooling careers in an increasingly complex, decentralized system. The class or school attended widens gaps in academic results and…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Decentralization, Elementary Secondary Education, Equal Education
Maeroff, Gene I. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1998
Building social capital for poor children is an important endeavor. Disadvantaged children generally lack a network that allows them to thrive in school and achieve a sense of belonging. Schools in impoverished neighborhoods can strengthen ties to students by building links to the community, becoming full-service community schools, and joining…
Descriptors: Activism, Advocacy, Child Welfare, Community Schools
Peer reviewedSpoon, Mary Dodds; Benedict, Jamie; Leontos, Carolyn; Krelle-Zepponi, Natalie – Journal of Extension, 1998
Based on Social Learning Theory, the Take Five program was taught to middle school students in two Nevada schools. Students' attitudes about the acceptability of eating fruits and vegetables improved significantly. Students demonstrated a high level of knowledge of the health benefits of eating fruits and vegetables on the pretest with no…
Descriptors: Eating Habits, Extension Education, Intermediate Grades, Junior High School Students
Hodgkinson, Harold – Principal, 1998
By 2010, whites will comprise only 9% of the world's population--the smallest ethnic minority. While 26% of all Americans are nonwhite, among schoolchildren it is 36% The North's populations are old, white, wealthy, well educated, and declining. The South and West's populations are young, ethnically diverse, poorer, less educated, and increasing.…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Diversity (Student), Educational Trends, Elementary Secondary Education
Washington, Sharon – Zip Lines: The Voice for Adventure Education, 1998
Adventure programs should go beyond the "four Fs" of diversity activities (food, fashion, festivals, and facts) to explore differences and their implications for social justice. Possible group activities include sharing ethnic and family traditions surrounding a person's name and focusing on the cycle of socialization related to…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Consciousness Raising, Critical Thinking, Cultural Pluralism
Peer reviewedRhoads, Robert A. – Journal of Higher Education, 1998
Explores ways in which college students' community service contributes to citizenship education. A qualitative study over six years, involving interviews, surveys, and observation of students, examined how a more caring sense of self may be enhanced through student involvement. Three major themes in student experiences are discussed: exploration…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, College Students, Higher Education, Individual Development
Peer reviewedMoshkin, S. V.; Rudenko, V. N. – Russian Education and Society, 1996
Characterizes the telling and learning of political jokes as a powerful socializing tool for children to learn about the world. Maintains that this activity serves as a means of storing and transmitting social knowledge as well as information about the world of public affairs. Includes some representative examples. (MJP)
Descriptors: Childhood Attitudes, Creative Development, Elementary Education, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedPower, Desmond John; Hyde, Mervyn Bruce – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 1997
Describes the controversy in hearing-impaired education between advocates of unisensory and multisensory approaches to communication for learning and socialization. Concludes that the multisensory approach is superior after reviewing arguments from developmental and perceptual theories, information processing, early intervention pedagogy, and…
Descriptors: Deafness, Elementary Secondary Education, Hearing Impairments, Learning Strategies
Peer reviewedWild, Elke; Wild, Klaus-Peter – Zeitschrift fur Padagogik, 1997
Questions which familial socialization conditions are related systematically to individual student educational careers and motivations to learn. Assumes that students' motivations and aspirations are influenced by their parents' school-related practices. Concludes that autonomy-promoting, supportive pedagogical practices promote motivation to…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Child Development, Educational Research, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedKarniol, Rachel; Gabay, Rivi; Ochion, Yael; Harari, Yael – Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 1998
Assessed the relative contribution of gender and gender role orientation to empathy and its development in 119 Israeli 8th and 11th graders. When the contribution of masculinity/femininity was covaried, empathy was found unrelated to gender. Findings are discussed in terms of socialization of emotions and gender role orientation. (SLD)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Emotional Response, Empathy, Femininity
Peer reviewedMerrifield, John D. – Texas Education Review, 2000
Reviews the many dramatically different forms of school choice proposals, warning against implementing sharply limited and regulated school choice plans and arguing that if the failure of school choice is wrongly attributed to too much choice rather than too little, broader and freer experiments in choice could be politically doomed. Focuses on…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Competition, Elementary Secondary Education, Financial Support
Peer reviewedLoeffler, Margaret Howard – Montessori Life, 2001
Discusses five Montessori insights about children's development as they relate to family and school life: independence and autonomy, community and socialization, interest in culture and morality, preadolescents' apprenticeship for adulthood, and adult acceptance of the evidence of change. Notes that underlying dynamics of home and school are alike…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Behavior Development, Children, Developmental Stages
Peer reviewedWang, Qi; Leichtman, Michelle D. – Child Development, 2000
Examined social, emotional, and cognitive characteristics of American and Chinese 6-year-olds' narratives. Found that, compared to American children, Chinese children showed greater orientation toward social engagement, greater concern with moral correctness, greater concern with authority, a less autonomous orientation, more expressions of…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis, Cross Cultural Studies
Peer reviewedZanetic, Sally A.; Jeffery, Christopher J. – CUPA Journal, 1996
Differences in men's and women's communication styles affect their interactions with each other. Organizations must be flexible enough to recognize situations in which traditional male values of competition may be most functional and those in which more collaborative, female strategies are more appropriate. Personnel training can help ensure that…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Females, Interpersonal Communication, Interpersonal Competence
Peer reviewedSever, Irene – RQ, 1994
Applies the anthropological concepts of culture shock and ethnocentricity to problems of computer and nonprint literacy in an electronic library. The role of librarians as agents of socialization is discussed, and the concept of education as a lengthy, ongoing process is considered. (Contains 12 references.) (LRW)
Descriptors: Computer Literacy, Culture Conflict, Electronic Libraries, Ethnocentrism


