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Heift, Trude – ReCALL, 2004
This paper describes a study in which we investigated the effects of corrective feedback on learner uptake in CALL. Learner uptake is here defined as learner responses to corrective feedback in which, in case of an error, students attempt to correct their mistake(s). 177 students from three Canadian universities participated in the study during…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Universities, Metalinguistics, Error Correction
Blayney, Paul; Freeman, Mark – Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 2004
This paper reports on the effects of automating formative feedback at the student's discretion and automating summative assessment with individualised spreadsheet assignments. Quality learning outcomes are achieved when students adopt deep approaches to learning (Ramsden, 2003). Learning environments designed to align assessment to learning…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Environment, Formative Evaluation, Feedback (Response)
Bourne, Victoria J.; Todd, Brenda K. – Developmental Science, 2004
Previous research has indicated that 70-85% of women and girls show a bias to hold infants, or dolls, to the left side of their body. This bias is not matched in males (e.g. deChateau, Holmberg & Winberg, 1978; Todd, 1995). This study tests an explanation of cradling preferences in terms of hemispheric specialization for the perception of facial…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Females, Specialization, Gender Differences
Jensen, S. A.; Rosen, L. A. – Journal of Attention Disorders, 2004
Objective: This study examined Barkley's (1997b) theory regarding the emotional regulation of children with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). Method: Mothers of children with and without ADHD between the ages of 6 and 15 were asked to rate their child's emotional response on each of three measures. Results: Children with ADHD were…
Descriptors: Mothers, Emotional Response, Hyperactivity, Attention Deficit Disorders
Riley, Kathryn; Jordan, Jill – Improving Schools, 2004
This article describes a change initiative which began in 2002: "Woolwich Reach and Plumstead Pathfinder Action Zones" (WRaPP). WRaPP has involved 17 primary, secondary and nursery schools in a deprived part of Greenwich, South London, and although nationally funded (through the UK Government's Education Action Zones), it has been…
Descriptors: Nursery Schools, Educational Change, Foreign Countries, Primary Education
Durrant, Judy; Dunnill, Richard; Clements, Simon – Improving Schools, 2004
This article examines three projects in which a Higher Education Institution (HEI) worked in partnership with individual secondary schools to support school self-review. Each project was designed and negotiated to meet the needs of the school. External "visitors" from the HEI worked alongside teachers to gather evidence and develop…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Colleges, Secondary Schools
Gardner, Sheena – Journal of English for Academic Purposes, 2004
Factors such as increases in student numbers and technological developments are threatening the luxury of one-on-one tutorials and bringing changes in modes of academic discourse. This small scale exploratory study identifies characteristics of taped oral, compared to written, feedback that are attributable to its spoken nature (longer, less…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Academic Discourse, Audiences, Discourse Analysis
Weller, Martin; Pegler, Chris; Mason, Robin – Internet and Higher Education, 2005
This paper examines how four innovative Internet technologies were incorporated into one course at The UK Open University. The technologies were: blogging, audio conferencing, instant messaging and Harvard's Rotisserie system. Each of the technologies is addressed, and details from the student evaluation are provided. The student feedback on all…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Computer Mediated Communication, Student Evaluation, Open Universities
Alvarez, Jose Luis; Miller, Paddy; Levy, Jan; Svejenova, Silviya – Journal of Management Education, 2004
This article suggests that temporary (project based) filmmaking organizations, and film directors as their leaders, lend themselves to examining a plethora of leadership issues, from social sources of power to competencies in network organizations. It advances for classroom discussion and teaching the cases of Almodovar and Coppola as examples of…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Films, Film Study, Production Techniques
Early Maladaptive Schemas in a Sample of British Adolescent Sexual Abusers: Implications for Therapy
Richardson, Graeme – Journal of Sexual Aggression, 2005
This study describes the results of the administration of the Young Schema Questionnaire in a British sample of 54 sexually abusive adolescents. This questionnaire is a measurement of the 16 Early Maladaptive Schemas (EMSs) as conceptualized by Young in his schema model of psychopathology. A clinical group of 40 was differentiated from a…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Psychopathology, Questionnaires, Adolescents
Webb, Richard E.; Widseth, Jane C. – Journal of College Student Psychotherapy, 2005
The authors question the assertions made by Gregory Hatchett in his article in Volume 19, Number 2, of this "Journal" (2004) and the suggestions that follow. We review the appropriateness of using data from outpatient clinics with adults in contrast to data from surveys of students. We look at average numbers of sessions of students in therapy…
Descriptors: National Surveys, Reader Response, Developmental Psychology, Psychotherapy
Johannessen, Larry R. – Social Studies, 2003
The nonfiction literature of the Vietnam War is accessible and engaging to students, and it deals with issues that speaks to students in powerful ways. In addition, the literature can help students better understand their parents and grandparents and the effect on them of the Vietnam War. A number of teachers who have taught the nonfiction…
Descriptors: Student Reaction, Reader Response, Nonfiction, Asian History
Schuster, Edgar H. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2004
State academic standards broadly support the writing process, including the planning (prewriting), drafting, revising, editing, and publishing (sharing) stages. There is also widespread recognition that a valuable part of the process is conferencing, either between teacher and student, student and student (often referred to as peer feedback), or…
Descriptors: State Standards, Writing Tests, Academic Standards, Writing Processes
Wade, Tracey D.; Lee, Christina – Clinical Psychologist, 2005
This paper investigated the prospective predictors of mental health after breast cancer diagnosis among mid-aged Australian women (initially aged 45-50 years). Two waves of data collected 2 years apart from a longitudinal population-based survey of 12,177 women identified a group of 63 women who reported onset of BC between T1 (T1) and Time 2…
Descriptors: Females, Quality of Life, Cancer, Mental Health
Wright, Andrew – British Journal of Religious Education, 2004
Though religion continues to enjoy a global significance for humankind, any justification of the compulsory status of religious education must be made on the basis of reason rather than public consensus. We live in a pluralistic world in which contrasting world views, grounded in radically conflicting ontological assumptions, vie for our…
Descriptors: World Views, Religious Education, Compulsory Education, Etiology

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