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Peer reviewedLlabre, Maria Magdalena; Froman, Terry Wayne – Journal of Experimental Education, 1987
This study compared 38 Hispanic and 28 Anglo college students with respect to the amount of time allocated to items on a reasoning test administered by microcomputer. Results suggested that a time constraint may penalize Hispanic examinees. The applicability of computerized testing for studying test-taking strategy problems is illustrated.…
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Anglo Americans, College Students, Computer Assisted Testing
Peer reviewedCouch, Lezlie Laws – English Journal, 1987
Discusses the negative impact of poetry instruction based on scansion, biography, genre theory and formal principles. Describes three alternative lesson plans using imagist poetry, specifically that of Williams, because it rejects formal traditional rules and provokes student response. Concludes that students appreciate stylistic traits and that…
Descriptors: Assignments, Class Activities, Educational Theories, English Instruction
Peer reviewedSakiey, E. H.; Cagney, M. A. – Reading Horizons, 1987
Describes the Directed Reading-Writing Activity (DRWA) as a framework that helps high school students write about the information they acquire through reading. Discusses how the DRWA's three steps--preparation, involvement, and reaction--extends the thought processes associated with reading comprehension into effective writing. (AEW)
Descriptors: High Schools, Reader Response, Reading Comprehension, Reading Instruction
Peer reviewedMontero-Sieburth, Martha; Perez, Marla – Anthropology and Education Quarterly, 1987
Presents findings of an 18-month participant-observation research project on a Puerto Rican bilingual teacher's strategies for negotiating between the dominant culture's requirements and minority students' predicaments and aspirations. Discusses this teacher's thinking about her role and the beliefs and values that shape her pedagogy. (KH)
Descriptors: Bilingual Education, Bilingual Teachers, Culture Conflict, High Schools
Peer reviewedKelly, Michael Bryan; Bushell, Donald, Jr. – Psychology in the Schools, 1987
Assessed reading achievement of five second-grade girls under two contingencies: (1) teacher contacts were made during on-task behavior; and (2) differential reinforcement of an incompatible behavior (DRI) with teacher contacts contingent on students' hand-raising behavior. Reading achievement and time on task were greater under the on-task…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Behavior Modification, Behavioral Objectives, Elementary School Students
Peer reviewedDiogenes, Marvin; And Others – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1986
Suggests ways for the instructor to turn evaluation into an open-ended transaction with the student writer rather than a final pronouncement. Suggests that teachers should ask questions of the writer to clarify the rhetorical situation and goal, give the student one piece of advice per paper, and help the student set a reasonable goal for each…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Evaluation Methods, Freshman Composition, Grading
Peer reviewedFrost, Richard; Stauffer, John – Journal of Communication, 1987
Examines the possible factors affecting emotional arousal in response to media violence. Indicates that inner-city subjects were significantly more aroused than was a college sample by viewing 10 types of violence. Suggests that gender was not a mediating factor in arousal to violence. (NKA)
Descriptors: College Students, Emotional Response, Films, Higher Education
Peer reviewedEnglish Journal, 1987
Thirty-five English educators identify three priority areas: (1) pedagogy, including class size, occupational conditions, and the dropout rate; (2) teacher issues, including teacher motivation, teacher training, and administrative relations; and (3) curriculum issues, including grammar and repetition in textbooks. (JG)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Educational Objectives, Educational Policy
Peer reviewedSchein, J. D. – Journal of Visual Impairment and Blindness, 1988
This paper outlines perceptual consequences of loss of binocular vision; complicating factors in monocular impairment such as age at onset and degree of residual vision; empirical evidence of the severity of monocular impairments, in terms of driving accidents and rehabilitation prospects; and the impairment's economic, psychological, and social…
Descriptors: Adaptive Behavior (of Disabled), Adjustment (to Environment), Attitudes toward Disabilities, Economic Factors
Peer reviewedBenfield, Connie Y.; And Others – Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 1988
Assessment of clinically depressed and nondepressed children (ages 9-17) on measures of attributional style, hopelessness, depression, life stress, and child temperament suggested absence of a unique constellation of cognitive characteristics in depressed children compared with the nondepressed sample. Treatment appeared to affect self-reported…
Descriptors: Clinical Diagnosis, Comparative Analysis, Coping, Depression (Psychology)
Peer reviewedCurtis, Michael J.; Zins, Joseph E. – Journal of School Psychology, 1988
Investigated the effectiveness of a specific approach to school-based consultation training that emphasized didactic methods, simulation exercises, and videotape analyses. Examined the effect of instructor feedback on trainees' acquisition of consultation skills. Found the training led to increased acquisition of consultation skills, but addition…
Descriptors: Consultants, Consultation Programs, Feedback, Graduate Students
Peer reviewedCox, Mitch – English Journal, 1988
Maintains that the literature curriculum should reflect our pluralist society, not a canonical tradition. Suggests pairing canonical works with works instantiating pluralism. Describes a unit on the novel for a ninth grade honors class and the use of an "adolescent problem novel" in a sophomore intermediate class. (SR)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Cultural Pluralism, Educational Principles, English Curriculum
Peer reviewedVogt, Lynn A.; And Others – Anthropology and Education Quarterly, 1987
Specific cultural differences underlie school failure. A program successful in helping one ethnic majority may be incompatible with another minority group. Programs must be made culturally specific for each group. Examples are given of the KEEP program used with Hawaiians and Navajos. (VM)
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Adjustment (to Environment), Classroom Techniques, Cultural Awareness
Reite, Martin – Child Abuse and Neglect: The International Journal, 1987
Four studies involving 40 pigtail monkeys are described in which relatively short separation experiences in infancy were associated with evidence of persistent changes in social behavioral function (less sociability, fewer close friends) and immunological function (suppression of lymphocyte proliferation) up to 6 years later. (Author/JDD)
Descriptors: Animal Behavior, Attachment Behavior, Behavior Change, Behavior Development
Peer reviewedCardarelli, Aldo F. – Reading Teacher, 1988
Claims that in the conventional administration of the Informal Reading Inventory (IRI) comprehension diagnosis is inordinately influenced by the reader's ability to recall information. Suggests that allowing reinspection by the reader restores recall to its proper function and may result in other advantages. (NH)
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Elementary Education, Evaluation Methods, Informal Reading Inventories


