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Sutherland, LeeAnn M. – Journal of Literacy Research, 2005
This qualitative study highlights the interconnectedness of literature, literacy practices, identity, and social positioning within a framework of a common enactment of multicultural education: adding literature by and about people of color to the language arts curriculum. The study provides a window on the meaning-making of six 16-year-old Black…
Descriptors: African American Students, Multicultural Education, Females, High School Students
Stewart, Neil; Brown, Gordon D. A.; Chater, Nick – Psychological Review, 2005
In unidimensional absolute identification tasks, participants identify stimuli that vary along a single dimension. Performance is surprisingly poor compared with discrimination of the same stimuli. Existing models assume that identification is achieved using long-term representations of absolute magnitudes. The authors propose an alternative…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Identification, Serial Ordering, Task Analysis
Kaufman, Peter; Feldman, Kenneth A. – Research in Higher Education, 2004
Using data from 82 in-depth interviews with a randomly selected sample of college students, we explore how these students are forming felt identities in the following domains: intelligence and knowledgeability, occupation, and cosmopolitanism. We study the formation of students' identities by considering college an arena of social interaction in…
Descriptors: College Students, Interviews, Peer Influence, College Environment
Romo, Jaime J. – High School Journal, 2004
This paper examines the experiences and context in the making of a Chicano activist. Utilizing autoethnographic methodology, I discuss my own identity development, as it was mediated by issues of social capital and mentoring, two significant elements related to Chicano educational activism. I discuss dimensions or race, class, self-esteem, and…
Descriptors: Activism, Hispanic Americans, Professional Development, Ethnography
Trofanenko, B. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2006
Thinking about the museum's engagement in educational programmes is increasingly adopting a more critical perspective on the implications of a programme in authorizing and defining particular knowledge. While objects are still invoked to define history and culture and to underscore their authority, the museum's claim to educational purposes is…
Descriptors: Museums, Ethnology, Cultural Literacy, Foreign Countries
Spencer, Margaret Beale – American Psychologist, 2005
Decades following Brown v. Board of Education (1954), issues regarding the effects of skin color, poverty, and racial differences in the availability of protective factors persist. For a multiethnic sample of mainly African American (56%), female (69%), and high-achieving (65%) youths, a dual-axis model of vulnerability is used to compare four…
Descriptors: Racial Differences, Poverty, Youth, Racial Identification
Evans, Karla K.; Treisman, Anne – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
Studies have suggested attention-free semantic processing of natural scenes in which concurrent tasks leave category detection unimpaired (e.g., F. Li, R. VanRullen, C. Koch, & P. Perona, 2002). Could this ability reflect detection of disjunctive feature sets rather than high-level binding? Participants detected an animal target in a rapid serial…
Descriptors: Perception, Attention, Semantics, Language Processing
Thomas, Anita Jones; Witherspoon, Karen McCurtis; Speight, Suzette L. – Journal of Black Psychology, 2004
Preliminary findings on the validation of the Stereotypic Roles for Black Women Scale (SRBWS) are presented. A sample of 186 African American women took the SRBWS along with the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale and the Racial Identity Attitude Scale-B. A confirmatory factor analysis supported a four-factor structure of the scale, and moderate…
Descriptors: Measures (Individuals), Females, Self Esteem, Test Reliability
van Veen, Klaas; Sleegers, Peter; van de Ven, Piet-Hein – Teaching & Teacher Education: An International Journal of Research and Studies, 2005
This paper presents a cognitive social-psychological theoretical framework on emotions, derived from Richard Lazarus, to understand how teachers' identity can be affected in a context of reforms. The emphasis of this approach is on the cognitive-affective processes of individual teachers, enabling us to gain a detailed understanding of what…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Secondary School Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Foreign Countries
Hoveid, Marit Honerod; Hoveid, Halvor – European Educational Research Journal, 2004
Education is working with language. As teacher educators, this is the authors' main theory. They present one way of working with language through language-games. The article is constructed in three sections. The first part presents the method, stating what concepts are essential in order to understand both this way of working with student teachers…
Descriptors: Student Teachers, Teacher Characteristics, Pedagogical Content Knowledge, Play
Romo, Jaime J. – Taboo: The Journal of Culture and Education, 2006
In this article, the author explores the question: How can individuals understand the impacts of clergy sexual abuse upon K-12 teachers' effectiveness with all children? Given the parallels between the work of teachers and religious authority figures, the damage to one authority figure's credibility, says the author, is likely to impact another's…
Descriptors: Clergy, Sexual Abuse, Elementary Secondary Education, Outcomes of Education
Schneider, Jennifer; Mayer, Michelle – Understanding Our Gifted, 2006
As educators of gifted students, the authors see more schools climbing aboard the differentiation wagon, and students who have been identified as cognitively gifted receiving services beyond logic worksheets. Everyone still has a long way to go, however. As classroom teachers become more familiar with characteristics of giftedness and begin to…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Identification, Individualized Instruction, Visual Arts
Bailey, Jo Daugherty – Journal of Family Social Work, 2006
Children who are adopted internationally are at risk for losing their ethnic heritage, and social workers in the field have a vital role to play in minimizing this risk. By applying social identity theory to the case of international adoptees' ethnic identity formation, it follows that a positive ethnic identity is best facilitated by exposure to…
Descriptors: Ethnicity, Adoption, Cultural Background, Social Work
Jeweler, Sue; Barnes-Robinson, Linda; Shevitz, Betty Roffman; Weinfield, Rich – Understanding Our Gifted, 2006
Students who are bright and have learning difficulties need to be carefully analyzed so that they can receive an appropriate program of rigor in areas of strength and supportive skill development in areas of need. Smart kids with learning difficulties can be successful in school when parents, teachers, and students create working partnerships.…
Descriptors: Learning Problems, Learning Disabilities, Partnerships in Education, Student Needs
Bonatti, Luca; Frot, Emmanuel; Zangl, Renate; Mehler, Jacques – Cognitive Psychology, 2002
How do infants individuate and track objects, and among them objects belonging to their species, when they can only rely on information about the properties of those objects? We propose the Human First Hypothesis (HFH), which posits that infants possess information about their conspecifics and use it to identify and count objects. F. Xu and S.…
Descriptors: Infants, Cognitive Psychology, Identification (Psychology), Cognitive Processes

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