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Julich, Shirley – Journal of Child Sexual Abuse, 2005
This article, based on an analysis of unstructured interviews, identifies that the emotional bond between survivors of child sexual abuse and the people who perpetrated the abuse against them is similar to that of the powerful bi-directional relationship central to Stockholm Syndrome as described by Graham (1994). Aspects of Stockholm Syndrome…
Descriptors: Sexual Abuse, Child Abuse, Interviews, Emotional Response
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Trepal, Heather C.; Semivan, Suzanne Gibson; Caley-Bruce, Mary – Journal of Creativity in Mental Health, 2005
Pregnancy is a developmental task that requires women to become accustomed to inherent and sometimes profound biological, somatic, and psychological changes. When pregnancy is interrupted by miscarriage, it may become a pivotal crisis point in the development of a woman's maternal identity as well as an issue in family development. This manuscript…
Descriptors: Females, Pregnancy, Developmental Tasks, Prenatal Influences
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Stevens, Kay B.; Lingo, Amy S. – Beyond Behavior, 2005
Teachers of students with emotional and behavioral disorders (EBD) understand conceptually, emotionally, and legally the importance of using research-based procedures as well as positive behavioral supports. One way to provide positive behavioral support for students with EBD is constant time delay (CTD). CTD is an instructional delivery procedure…
Descriptors: Behavior Disorders, Emotional Disturbances, Special Needs Students, Student Needs
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Stouffer, Eric M.; White, Norman M. – Learning & Memory, 2005
Three experiments show latent (or incidental) learning of salt-cue relationships using a conditioned cue-preference paradigm. Rats drank a salt solution while confined in one compartment and water in an adjacent, distinct compartment on alternate days. When given access to the two compartments with no solutions present, sodium-deprived rats…
Descriptors: Cues, Scientific Methodology, Contingency Management, Shift Studies
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Kapeliuk, Adi; Reich, Yoram; Bar-Lev, Roni – International Journal of Educational Management, 2004
About 9 per cent of the students in Israel drop out of school. Attendance officers, who are appointed to enforce education attendance laws, and other decision makers have to deal with many dropout cases with limited resources, leading to sub optimal or even wrong solutions. In contrast, creative, successful solutions adopted by one attendance…
Descriptors: Knowledge Management, Dropout Prevention, Dropouts, Foreign Countries
Hawks, Steven R.; Goudy, Marylynn B.; Gast, Julie A. – American Journal of Health Education, 2003
The purpose of this exploratory study was to evaluate the relationship between emotional eating and spiritual well-being. It was found that among college women lower levels of spiritual well-being correlated with higher levels of emotional eating (r = -0.22, p = 0.0015). In other studies emotional eating has been found to contribute to higher…
Descriptors: Obesity, Health Education, Public Health, Eating Disorders
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Lindle, Jane Clark – Journal of School Leadership, 2004
The study of school leaders' feelings during and about their work suffers from inadequate academic definitions about the depth, character, and legitimacy of those feelings, as well as from limitations on the means of capturing and recording those feelings. This study pushes the definitions of administrators' stress into the areas of traumatic…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Principals, Work Environment, Emotional Response
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Lamm, Richard D. – Academic Questions, 2004
Direct and honest speech has its place, and that place seems not to be at the University of Denver, at least when the speech concerns discrepancies in minority achievement. Richard Lamm's credentials as a scholar and former political leader carried little weight with the chancellor and other administrators at the U of D who adamantly refused to…
Descriptors: Freedom of Speech, Academic Freedom, Racial Discrimination, Academic Achievement
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Kiger, Derick M. – Planning and Changing, 2003
Parents comprise a key stakeholder group of public education that can exert significant influence over school policy, budget, and instructional decisions. Restricting this group's participation in school reform jeopardizes the success of any innovation, no matter how promising. This may be occurring with block scheduling. This research describes…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Block Scheduling, Professional Development, School Restructuring
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Roberts, Laura Weiss; Hammond, Katherine A. Green; Geppert, Cynthia M. A.; Warner, Teddy D. – Academic Psychiatry, 2004
Objective: To assess the perspectives and preferences of medical students and residents regarding professionalism and ethics education. Methods: A new written survey with 124 items (scale: "strongly disagree" = 1, "strongly agree" = 9) was sent to all medical students (n = 308) and PGY 1-3 residents (n = 233) at one academic center. Results: Of…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Medical Students, Psychiatry, Evaluation Methods
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Martin, Vicki L.; Bennett, David S. – Academic Psychiatry, 2004
Objective: In recent years, the trend in medical education has been to utilize clerkship settings outside the medical school. Subsequently, students rotate at distant sites from the main campus and have lectures of varying quantity and quality. The objective of the present study was to standardize the core didactic experience for students in the…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Medical Schools, Computer Assisted Instruction, Psychiatry
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Van Borsel, John; Sunaert, Reinilde; Engelen, Sophie – Journal of Fluency Disorders, 2005
The present study investigated the language familiarity hypothesis formulated by Mackay [(1970). How does language familiarity influence stuttering under delayed auditory feedback? "Perceptual and Motor Skills", 30, 655-669] that bilinguals speak faster and stutter less under delayed auditory feedback (DAF) when speaking their more…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Stuttering, Educational Objectives, Familiarity
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Bajaj, Amit; Hodson, Barbara; Westby, Carol – Journal of Fluency Disorders, 2005
Meta issues in stuttering were examined by analyzing verbal-descriptive data drawn from structured interviews with 23 male children who stutter (CWS) and their 23 fluent male peers. Participants described others' "good" and "bad" talk behaviors and provided their self-appraisals as talkers. Analysis of interview transcripts suggested that CWS…
Descriptors: Stuttering, Educational Objectives, Educational Research, Interviews
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Mendez-Morse, Sylvia; Klinker, JoAnn Franklin – Journal of Cases in Educational Leadership, 2005
This case study explores the duty of midmanagement administrators to enforce district policies with which they do not necessarily agree. The case addresses the issues of moral leadership, distribution of power, emotional responses that impact decision making, class differences, and equity. It also examines the role conflict that many married…
Descriptors: Role Conflict, Organizational Change, Leadership, Principals
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Tucha, Oliver; Lange, Klaus W. – Journal of Attention Disorders, 2005
Two experiments were performed regarding the effect of conscious control on handwriting fluency in healthy adults and ADHD children. First, 26 healthy students were asked to write a sentence under different conditions. The results indicate that automated handwriting movements are independent from visual feedback. Second, the writing performance of…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Handwriting, Hyperactivity, Attention Deficit Disorders
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