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Showing 151 to 165 of 452 results Save | Export
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Brooks, Rechele; Meltzoff, Andrew N. – Developmental Science, 2005
We examined the ontogeny of gaze following by testing infants at 9, 10 and 11 months of age. Infants (N = 96) watched as an adult turned her head toward a target with either open or closed eyes. The 10- and 11-month-olds followed adult turns significantly more often in the open-eyes than the closed-eyes condition, but the 9-month-olds did not…
Descriptors: Infants, Adults, Nonverbal Communication, Eye Movements
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Dannemiller, James L. – Developmental Science, 2005
Very young infants orient overtly with eye and head movements to salient events in their visual environments, but those events rarely occur in the absence of competing visual stimuli. Two different models of how this kind of orienting is related to number and distribution of elements in the stimulus field were tested with infants across the age…
Descriptors: Infants, Visual Stimuli, Nonverbal Communication, Eye Movements
Dahl, Rene F. – 1990
This paper examines the extent to which legitimacy affects program continuation, and focuses on the process by which programs attempt to maintain legitimate status through conformity with the larger environment. Legitimacy is defined as cultural support from a program's larger environment, such as the school district or community. An innovative…
Descriptors: Accountability, Community Support, Developmental Continuity, Elementary Secondary Education
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Delahaye, Brian – Australian Journal of Adult Education, 1987
The author administered the Student Orientation Questionnaire to 205 tertiary students to measure students' orientation towards pedagogy or andragogy. Results indicate that the second factor is independent of the first factor. Thus, he argues that the relationship between pedagogy and andragogy is orthogonal. (CH)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Andragogy, Developmental Continuity, Foreign Countries
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Maddux, James E.; And Others – Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1986
Argues that health psychology for children is not given proper attention. Proposes applying a developmental perspective to health psychology, highlighting children's problems and the fact that children need to be viewed as more than potential consumers of adult health psychology services or as agents for the prevention of adult health problems.…
Descriptors: Children, Counselor Role, Developmental Continuity, Elementary Education
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Mitchell, Alice A. – Journal of Career Development, 1988
The author describes the design, distribution, and impact of class newsletters anchored in theories of intellectual development and produced by the Counseling and Career Development Center at Allegheny College (Pennsylvania). Developmental stages and concerns of students in each class year are presented as a basis for the topics and approach used…
Descriptors: Career Guidance, Developmental Continuity, Education Work Relationship, Newsletters
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Granello, Darcy Haag – Counselor Education and Supervision, 2002
Investigates the cognitive development of counseling students at 3 points in their training. Analysis showed a linear trend between the students' progression through the program and their cognitive development. Results lend support to the idea that it may be possible to capture the broad development of counselor education students with a…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Counselor Training, Developmental Continuity, Graduate Students
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Baxter Magolda, Marcia B.; King, Patricia M. – Journal of College Student Development, 2007
This article presents two interview strategies used to assess college students' developmental growth toward self-authorship. We illustrate that self-authorship is a foundation for achieving many college learning outcomes and argue that designing practice to promote self-authorship requires understanding how to assess it. We offer a brief overview…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Competence, Interviews, Questioning Techniques, Writing for Publication
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Ng, Thomas W. H.; Feldman, Daniel C. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2007
This article proposes a theoretical framework to study organizational embeddedness and occupational embeddedness. Organizational embeddedness is the totality of forces (fit, links, and sacrifices) that keep people in their current organizations, while occupational embeddedness is the totality of forces (fit, links, and sacrifices) that keep people…
Descriptors: Organizational Climate, Concept Mapping, Organizational Development, Tenure
Wilson, Jo Anne – 1988
The increased interest in FLES (Foreign Language in the Elementary Schools) programs has prompted many foreign language educators to consider the impact of program articulation on the development of a successful K-12 language program. Program articulation is the process of providing a smooth transition between foreign language classrooms, and can…
Descriptors: Articulation (Education), Developmental Continuity, Educational Planning, Elementary Secondary Education
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Thompson, Linda; And Others – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1985
Surveyed college students' and both their parents' (282 families), actual attitudes and their perceptions of the other generation's attitudes. Although results confirm that youths perceived less intergenerational continuity in attitudes than their parents, they call into question the connection between psychosocial development status of either…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attitudes, College Students, Developmental Continuity
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van den Oord, Edwin J. C. G.; Rowe, David C. – Developmental Psychology, 1997
For pairs of full siblings, half-siblings, and cousins, analyzed maternal ratings of children's behavior problems at three times between ages 4 and 10. Found that nonshared environmental influences were substantial at each age but did not contribute to continuities in children's problem behaviors. Results favor a liability model that relates…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Children, Developmental Continuity, Family Relationship
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Jepsen, David A.; Dickson, Ginger L. – Career Development Quarterly, 2003
Examines continuity in career development from adolescence to middle adulthood by testing the proposition that early developmental task-coping activity predicts later task-coping activity. Results reveal that occupational choice clarity predicted midcareer establishment activity. (Contains 39 references and 3 tables.) (GCP)
Descriptors: Career Choice, Career Development, Career Exploration, Coping
Drew, Mary; Law, Carolyn – Principal, 1990
Omaha, Nebraska's, full-day kindergarten program was designed to allow students to become actively involved with their environment in a child-centered classroom. The program integrated new learning with past experiences, aided by carefully selected materials fostering interaction and problem solving. The district next designed a developmentally…
Descriptors: Developmental Continuity, Early Childhood Education, Full Day Half Day Schedules, Kindergarten
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Pedlow, Robert; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1993
Explored the stability of temperament of 450 Australian children. One of the child's parents completed a measure of the child's temperament at 5 instances between 18 months and 8 years. Approach, irritability, cooperation-manageability, inflexibility, rhythmicity, and persistence factors showed substantial continuity from infancy to eight years.…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Developmental Continuity, Foreign Countries, Longitudinal Studies
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