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Verte, Sylvie; Geurts, Hilde M.; Roeyers, Herbert; Rosseel, Yves; Oosterlaan, Jaap; Sergeant, Joseph A. – Autism: The International Journal of Research & Practice, 2006
The study explored whether children with high functioning autism (HFA), Asperger syndrome (AS), and pervasive developmental disorder not otherwise specified (PDD-NOS) can be differentiated on the Children's Communication Checklist (CCC). The study also investigated whether empirically derived autistic subgroups can be identified with a cluster…
Descriptors: Cluster Grouping, Autism, Asperger Syndrome, Developmental Disabilities
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Sireci, Stephen G.; Scarpati, Stanley E.; Li, Shuhong – Review of Educational Research, 2005
Test accommodations are often given to students with disabilities as one means of removing construct-irrelevant barriers to proper measurement of their knowledge, skills, and abilities. However, the practice is controversial. This article reviews numerous studies that focused on the effects of accommodations on test performance. Consistent…
Descriptors: Program Effectiveness, Mathematics Tests, Disabilities, Testing Accommodations
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Billington, Eric J.; Skinner, Christopher H.; Hutchins, Holly M.; Malone, John C. – Journal of Behavioral Education, 2004
College students were exposed to two pairs of mathematics assignments. Assignment Pair A included a high-effort assignment containing 18 long three-digit ? two-digit (3?2) multiplication problems with all numerals in each problem being equal to or greater than four and a moderate-effort assignment that contained nine long problems and nine…
Descriptors: Assignments, College Students, Multiplication, Problem Solving
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Perfetti, Charles A.; Liu, Ying – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2005
According to the Universal Writing System Constraint, all writing systems encode language, and thus reflect basic properties of the linguistic system they encode. According to a second universal, the Universal Phonological Principle, the activation of word pronunciations occurs for skilled readers across all writing systems. We review recent…
Descriptors: Phonology, Semantics, Written Language, Reading Processes
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Wilensky, Uri; Reisman, Kenneth – Cognition and Instruction, 2006
Biological phenomena can be investigated at multiple levels, from the molecular to the cellular to the organismic to the ecological. In typical biology instruction, these levels have been segregated. Yet, it is by examining the connections between such levels that many phenomena in biology, and complex systems in general, are best explained. We…
Descriptors: Biology, Science Instruction, Hypothesis Testing, Secondary School Science
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Pocklington, Barbara; Maybery, Murray – International Journal of Disability, Development & Education, 2006
A meta-analysis in the form of Brinley plots was conducted on the mean reaction times of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and Control groups of children and adolescents on the Stroop Color and Word Test (SCWT). ADHD reaction times were regressed on Control group reaction times for 17 data sets (accessed from 13 published studies).…
Descriptors: Attention Deficit Disorders, Hyperactivity, Meta Analysis, Control Groups
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Jensen, Arthur R. – Intelligence, 2006
A large number of national and geographic population samples were used to test the hypothesis that the variation in mean values of skin color in the diverse populations are consistently correlated with the mean measured or estimated IQs of the various groups, as are some other physical variables, known as an ecological correlation. Straightforward…
Descriptors: Intelligence Quotient, Correlation, Hypothesis Testing, Individual Differences
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Atkinson, Robert K.; Mayer, Richard E.; Merrill, Mary Margaret – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 2005
Consistent with social agency theory, we hypothesized that learners who studied a set of worked-out examples involving proportional reasoning narrated by an animated agent with a human voice would perform better on near and far transfer tests and rate the speaker more positively compared to learners who studied the same set of examples narrated by…
Descriptors: Hypothesis Testing, Multimedia Instruction, High School Students, Cues
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Sadovsky, Patricia; Sessa, Carmen – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2005
The purpose of the present article is to give an account of the emergence of knowledge pertaining to the transition from arithmetic to algebra in the course of a debate in a grade 7 classroom. This debate follows two other instances of work: (1) the adidactic interaction between each student and a given problem, (2) the adidactic interaction of…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Algebra, Transitional Programs, Grade 7
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Abela, John R. Z.; Skitch, Steven A.; Adams, Philippe; Hankin, Benjamin L. – Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, 2006
This study examined whether children's inferential styles moderate the association between the onset of depressive symptoms in children and their parents. To provide a powerful test of our hypotheses, we utilized a high-risk sample (parents with a history of major depressive episodes and their children) and a multiwave longitudinal design. During…
Descriptors: Depression (Psychology), Symptoms (Individual Disorders), Children, Parents
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Markova, Gabriela; Legerstee, Maria – Developmental Psychology, 2006
Predictions about the role of contingency, imitation, and affect sharing in the development of social awareness were tested in infants during natural, imitative, and yoked conditions with their mothers at 5 and 13 weeks of age. Results showed that at both ages, infants of highly attuned mothers gazed, smiled, and vocalized positively more during…
Descriptors: Mothers, Imitation, Infants, Interpersonal Competence
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Oliver, Kristin E.; Waehler, Charles A. – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 2005
The present study extends the literature base that is answering the call to examine the validity of J. L. Holland's (1959, 1997) 6 types of themes (realistic [R], investigative [I], artistic [A], social [S], enterprising [E], and conventional [C]) in his typology when applied to populations that are culturally different from the populations with…
Descriptors: Interest Inventories, Hawaiians, Vocational Interests, Construct Validity
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Dean, Graham M.; Dewhurst, Stephen A.; Morris, Peter E.; Whittaker, Annalise – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
Eight experiments investigated the effects of visual, spatial, auditory, and executive interference on the symbolic comparison of animal size and ferocity, semantic goodness of words, and numbers. Dynamic visual noise (DVN) and the reading of visually presented stimulus items were shown to selectively interfere with response times on the animal…
Descriptors: Semantics, Visualization, Interference (Language), Reaction Time
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Lent, Robert W.; Brown, Steven D. – Journal of Career Assessment, 2006
Efforts to test hypotheses derived from social cognitive theory require sound measures of the theory's constructs. Because the theory is concerned with domain-specific aspects of human functioning, it raises special measurement challenges. For example, unlike traits, which can be indexed with general, all-purpose measures, social cognitive…
Descriptors: Self Efficacy, Career Development, Social Cognition, Cognitive Measurement
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Warren, Keith; Anderson-Butcher, Dawn – Journal of School Violence, 2005
This exploratory study uses observations of the aggressive behavior of elementary school boys during three successive recess periods to test the hypothesis that aggressive behavior can spread between recess periods through peer contagion. If this hypothesis is correct, aggressive behaviors during the second recess period should mediate any…
Descriptors: Aggression, Structural Equation Models, Males, Elementary School Students
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