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Raquel Camero; Carlos Gallego; Verónica Martínez – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2024
The aim was to test the use of eye-tracking methodology for the early detection of ASD in a task of association between unfamiliar objects and pseudowords. Significant differences were found between ASD (n = 57) and TD (n = 57) Spanish speaking toddlers in the number and time of fixation. The TD children showed more and longer fixations on eyes…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Disability Identification, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Toddlers
Kelsey Young; Bryn Harris; Jennifer Hall-Lande; Amy Esler – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2024
Though there is evidence autism identification has been inequitable for populations who are culturally and linguistically minoritized, there is limited research that explains the issue of disproportionality and factors contributing to its occurrence, especially within an educational setting. To explore contributors to racial/ethnic disparities in…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Eligibility, Predictor Variables, Children
Louw, Marti; Sanford-Dolly, Camellia W. – Science Education, 2024
Scientific observation is a disciplinary-informed way of looking at the world that requires the coordination of domain knowledge and perceptual skills with specialized tools and techniques to systematically identify objects, organisms, specimens, or phenomena of interest. Identification is a particular form of skilled observational practice where…
Descriptors: Volunteers, Observation, Identification, Biology
Rhonda Boaler; Caroline Bond; Louise Knox – Educational Psychology in Practice, 2024
Emotionally based school non-attendance (EBSNA) difficulties negatively impact children and young people (CYP) and their families at many levels. EBSNA is complex, often involving individual and contextual risk factors which may require a school-wide or multi-agency response. This action research study in one UK local authority explored how…
Descriptors: Attendance, Emotional Response, Psychological Patterns, Foreign Countries
Philip James Adams – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The history of higher education in the U.S. encompasses a vast proliferation and remarkable evolution of individual colleges and universities as well as state systems of higher education. Research on higher education institutions, however, has come to focus predominantly on two institution types: large public universities and small private…
Descriptors: Institutional Characteristics, Identification, Public Colleges, Liberal Arts
Roddy Theobald; Dan Goldhaber; Andrew Katz – National Center for Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education Research (CALDER), 2024
We use student-level data on elementary special education identification from Washington state to explore student identification rates in the months immediately after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and over 2 subsequent years. Special education identification rates dropped dramatically in March 2020 through the end of the 2019-20 school year…
Descriptors: Special Education, Elementary School Students, Disability Identification, COVID-19
Christina L. Paxon – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The problem addressed in this study was that many parents cannot identify their children's early signs of developmental dyslexia, potentially causing academic and social-emotional issues into adulthood as well as delays in reading and writing development. The purpose of this qualitative generic study was to identify what parents perceive as their…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Students with Disabilities, Dyslexia, Disability Identification
Joshua G. Clements – Journal of College Reading and Learning, 2024
This essay aims to continue a conversation initiated in the 1980s about the contrasting terms "peer" and "tutor." This essay begins with a brief history of the terms, and applies Kenneth Burke's concept of identification to peer tutoring to attempt to explain these contradicting terms. Burke's theory of identification…
Descriptors: Tutoring, Peer Teaching, Identification, Definitions
Jennifer Greif Green; Manuel Ramirez; Gabriel J. Merrin; Melissa K. Holt – School Mental Health, 2024
Bias-based (also called identity-based) harassment refers specifically to a subset of peer victimization that targets a person's identity, such as their gender identity, religion, immigration status, sexual orientation, race, or ethnicity. Research indicates that bias-based harassment is a particularly devastating form of victimization that has an…
Descriptors: Youth, Adolescents, Bias, Bullying
Edward Karl Schultz; Tammy Stephens; Pedro Olvera – Contemporary School Psychology, 2024
The specific learning disabilities (SLD) identification literature is replete with competing narratives concerning the advantages and disadvantages of various techniques and methods. Until a widely accepted and empirically proven SLD identification methodology is universally supported, evaluators should seek to improve the existing alternatives.…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, Identification, Intellectual Development, Evaluation Methods
Ferrão, Maria Eugénia; Alves, Maria Teresa Gonzaga – Large-scale Assessments in Education, 2023
This article aims at a better understanding of the Brazilian education system's performance concerning the quality and equity over the decade 2007-2017. It examines the extent to which students' sociodemographic characteristics are related to schooling trajectory without failure in primary education and how such relationships have changed over…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Students, Student Characteristics, Socioeconomic Influences
Gomez-Najarro, Joyce – Urban Education, 2023
Limited qualitative work has examined how response to intervention (RTI) is shaping teachers' understandings of intervention, the premise for conversation about referral, when serving diverse learners. In this case study, I use the lenses of Cultural-Historical Activity Theory and intersectionality to examine (a) how educators at one public…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Elementary School Students, Identification (Psychology), Identification
Scott J. Peters; Angela Johnson – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2023
Prior research has documented substantial inequity across, racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic lines within the population of students identified as gifted. Less attention has paid to the equity of gifted identification for student learning English or those with disabilities and what effect state policies toward gifted education might have on these…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Students with Disabilities, English Learners, Twice Exceptional
Davis, Sara D.; Peterson, Daniel J. – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2022
There is an increasing need in eyewitness identification research to identify factors that not only influence identification accuracy but may also impact the confidence--accuracy (CA) relationship. One such variable that has a notable impact on memory for faces is viewing distance, with faces encoded from a shorter distance remembered better than…
Descriptors: Identification, Ambiguity (Context), Accuracy, Geographic Location
Sternberg, Robert J.; Karami, Sareh – Gifted Education International, 2022
Gifts can be individually, dyadically, or collectively chosen and oriented. Society, in its identification of the gifted, has chosen to focus on individual and sometimes dyadic goods. This practice represents a culture of individualism, but it has become solipsistic. We argue that identification instead should focus on those most likely to help to…
Descriptors: Gifted, Definitions, Individualism, Collectivism

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