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Ruiling Lu; Linda Bol – Journal of Interactive Online Learning, 2007
Peer review has become commonplace in composition courses and is increasingly employed in the context of telecommunication technology. The purpose of this experiment was to compare the effects of anonymous and identifiable electronic peer (e-peer) review on college student writing performance and the extent of critical peer feedback. Participants…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Peer Evaluation, Computer Mediated Communication, Writing (Composition)
Moreau, Lori; Weaver, Roberta; Adams, Shauna M.; Landers, Mary F.; Owen, Mary Jane – Catholic Education: A Journal of Inquiry and Practice, 2006
This article offers responses from Lori Moreau, a principal, Roberta Weaver, associate dean, Shauna M. Adams, associate professor, Mary F. Landers of University of Dayton, and Mary Jane Owen, a founding director, to the article "The State of Special Education in Catholic Schools," by L. DeFiore (2006). Jesus, the master teacher, reached out to the…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Special Education, Special Needs Students, Catholic Educators
Edmunds, Julie – SERVE Center at University of North Carolina at Greensboro, 2006
This paper addresses some real assessment challenges that teachers have identified: (1) Figuring out what really is important for students to know and be able to do in history; (2) Teaching the skills of "doing history" in a world of testing that often seems to value only factual knowledge; (3) Identifying and using assessments that provide…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, History Instruction, Course Objectives, Check Lists
Mudge, Suzanne D.; Grinnan, Cullen T.; Priesmeyer, H. Richard – Online Submission, 2006
Current educational research suggests that emotions can either enhance or inhibit the ability to learn, with social and cultural influences causing changes in behavior and altering biological processes. In this exploratory study researchers utilized a qualitative design to seek insight into student emotions associated with school attitude and…
Descriptors: Cultural Influences, Educational Experience, Educational Research, School Attitudes
National Scientific Council on the Developing Child, 2006
A growing body of scientific evidence demonstrates that emotional development begins early in life and is closely connected with the emergence of cognitive, language and social skills. Early emotional development lays the foundation for later academic performance, mental health, and the capacity to form successful relationships. Despite this…
Descriptors: Early Intervention, Public Policy, Child Behavior, Young Children
Cummings, Richard; Miller, Mark W. – College Teaching Methods & Styles Journal, 2006
The CPA Vision Project-2011 and Beyond) is a blueprint for the accounting profession of the 21st Century. From this visioning process the AICPA Core Competency Framework for Entry into the Accounting Profession (1999) was developed. It is from this framework that accounting educators are invited to adjust curriculum to provide students with the…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Accounting, Partnerships in Education, Competency Based Education
Drapela, Laurie A. – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 2006
General Strain Theory (GST) argues that drug use is one way adolescents mitigate negative emotions brought on by aversive environmental stimuli. To date, many of the empirical tests of the strain-drug use relationship have neglected to include measures of negative emotion, despite its prominence in GST's etiology of deviant behavior. The following…
Descriptors: Etiology, Dropouts, Depression (Psychology), Drug Use
Werderich, Donna E. – Reading Horizons, 2006
This grounded theory study explores how middle school literacy teachers used dialogue journals and the processes by which they responded to their students' written responses. Literary conversation between teacher and student was conceptualized as an ongoing scaffolding process within dialogue journals. Teachers used "response facilitators"…
Descriptors: Early Adolescents, Visual Aids, Teacher Role, Literacy
Brown, Chris; Dahlbeck, David T.; Sparkman-Barnes, Lynette – Professional School Counseling, 2006
Fifty-three school counselors and administrators employed in middle and high school settings were surveyed regarding their thoughts about school districts working collaboratively with non-school mental health professionals to respond to the mental health needs of students. In addition, the survey sought to understand what school counselors and…
Descriptors: Counselor Training, Principals, Mental Health Workers, Health Needs
Wang, Jianjun – Educational Psychology, 2006
The reciprocal relationship between mathematics achievement and self-concept is examined in this study to expand the existing knowledge to a cross-cultural setting. Based on analyses of educational data two years before and after Hong Kong's sovereignty switch in 1997, this investigation shows a weak reciprocal relationship among the eighth-grade…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Self Concept, Mathematics Achievement, Cross Cultural Studies
Goodvin, Rebecca; Carlo, Gustavo; Torquati, Julia – Social Development, 2006
This study examined the additive and interactive effects of children's trait vicarious emotional responsiveness and maternal negative emotion expression on children's use of coping strategies. Ninety-five children (mean age = 5.87 years) and their mothers and teachers participated in the study. The mothers reported on their own negative emotion…
Descriptors: Mothers, Emotional Response, Coping, Parent Child Relationship
Fine, Sarah E.; Izard, Carroll E.; Trentacosta, Christopher J. – Social Development, 2006
We examined individual differences in developmental trajectories of emotion situation knowledge (ESK), at three time points throughout elementary school in a sample of children from economically disadvantaged families. Results showed that ESK and the subscales of joy, fear, anger, shame and interest exhibited positive growth from the first to the…
Descriptors: Cues, Economically Disadvantaged, Individual Differences, Verbal Ability
Wammes, Birgitte; Breedveld, Boudewijn; Kremers, Stef; Brug, Johannes – Health Education Research, 2006
To help people prevent weight gain, the Netherlands Nutrition Centre initiated the "balance intervention", which promotes moderation of food intake and/or increased physical activity in response to occasions of overeating. The aim of this study was to determine whether intervention materials were appreciated, encouraged information…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Body Weight, Health Promotion, Physical Activities
Friedman, Adam; Kajder, Sara – Journal of Computing in Teacher Education, 2006
This study sought to identify the attitudes and perceptions of students in an introductory educational technology course situated within a teacher education program. Data were collected in the form of anonymous feedback throughout the semester. Findings included: students tended to enter the course with either a good deal of technology knowledge…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Teacher Education Programs, Student Teacher Attitudes, Elementary Secondary Education
Flinn, Mark V. – Developmental Review, 2006
The stress response systems of the human child are highly sensitive to social challenges. Because stress hormones can have negative developmental and health consequences, this presents an evolutionary paradox: Why would natural selection have favored mechanisms that elevate stress hormone levels in response to psychosocial stimuli? Two…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Children, Hypothesis Testing, Social Influences

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