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Rudolph, Karen D.; Lambert, Sharon F.; Clark, Alyssa G.; Kurlakowsky, Kathryn D. – Child Development, 2001
This longitudinal study examined role of maladaptive self-regulatory beliefs as vulnerability factors for academic and emotional difficulties during transition to middle school. Findings indicated that maladaptive self-regulatory beliefs predicted individual differences in perceived school-related stress and depressive symptoms during transition,…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Beliefs, Early Adolescents, Emotional Adjustment
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Boom, Jan; Brugman, Daniel; van der Heijden, Peter G. M. – Child Development, 2001
Asked Dutch university and Russian high school students to sort statements in terms of moral sophistication to investigate hierarchical stage structure of moral stages. Found that sorting statements representative of stages below one's own was straightforward; sorting statements above one's stage was difficult, suggesting that reflective…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Classification, College Students, Developmental Stages
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Long, Joyce Fleck; Hoy, Anita Woolfolk – Teaching & Teacher Education: An International Journal of Research and Studies, 2006
The present study is a multi-phased, mixed methodological investigation of teacher interest. In Phase 1, 12th grade students nominated and quantitatively evaluated teachers who were perceived as helping them learn and become interested in a high school core subject. Exploratory factor analysis revealed that student perceptions of teacher interest…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Teacher Effectiveness, Qualitative Research, Grade 12
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Dresel, Markus; Schober, Barbara; Ziegler, Albert – Journal of Educational Research, 2005
Researchers ascribe attributional processes a central role within the framework of motivational processes in educational contexts, a point that has been proved by an extremely wide range of empirical evidence. Therefore, it is beyond any controversy that a functional attributional style has positive effects on a series of personal traits and…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Student Motivation, Elementary School Students, Individual Differences
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North, Sarah – Studies in Higher Education, 2005
This article reports the findings of a 3 year research project which investigated disciplinary variation in student writing. Within an Open University course in the history of science, students from an arts background were found to achieve significantly higher grades than those from a science background. Textual and interview data suggest that…
Descriptors: Open Universities, College Students, Writing Skills, Communication Skills
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Moreno, Roxana; Duran, Richard – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2004
Elementary school children, some of whom were nonnative speakers of English, learned to add and subtract integers in a discovery-based multimedia game either with or without verbal guidance in English or optionally in Spanish (Groups G--verbal guidance and No-G--no verbal guidance, respectively). Group G members chose to listen to verbal…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Scores, Mathematics Education, Measures (Individuals)
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Oberlander, Jon; Gill, Alastair J. – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2006
To what extent does the wording and syntactic form of people's writing reflect their personalities? Using a bottom-up stratified corpus comparison, rather than the top-down content analysis techniques that have been used before, we examine a corpus of e-mail messages elicited from individuals of known personality, as measured by the Eysenck…
Descriptors: Personality, Computational Linguistics, Content Analysis, Individual Differences
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Im-Bolter, Nancie; Johnson, Janice; Pascual-Leone, Juan – Child Development, 2006
Research suggests that children with specific language impairment (SLI) have processing limitations; however, the mechanisms involved have not been well defined or investigated in a theory-guided manner. The theory of constructive operators was used as a framework to explore processes underlying limited processing capacity in children with SLI.…
Descriptors: Language Impairments, Children, Language Skills, Language Acquisition
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Guttentag, Cathy L.; Pedrosa-Josic, Claudia; Landry, Susan H.; Smith, Karen E.; Swank, Paul R. – Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology, 2006
Four components of a comprehensive, responsive parenting style ("Responsiveness to Signals, Maintaining Attentional Focus, Rich Language, and Warmth") have been previously identified [Landry, S. H., Smith, K. E., & Swank, P. R. (in press). Responsive parenting: Establishing early foundations for social, communication and independent problem…
Descriptors: Mothers, Disadvantaged, Parenting Styles, Predictor Variables
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Yip, Tiffany; Seaton, Eleanor K.; Sellers, Robert M. – Child Development, 2006
Cluster analytic methods were used to create 4 theorized ethnic identity statuses (achieved, foreclosed, moratorium, and diffused) among 940 African American adolescents (13-17 years old), college students (18-23 years old), and adults (27-78 years old). Evidence for the existence of 4 identity statuses was found across the 3 age groups. The…
Descriptors: African Americans, Racial Identification, Depression (Psychology), Adolescents
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Subramanian, Anu; Yairi, Ehud – Journal of Communication Disorders, 2006
Stuttering has been considered a heritable disorder since the 1930s. There have been different models of transmission that have been proposed most involving a polygenic component with or without a major locus. In spite of these models, the characteristics being transmitted are not known. This study used two different tasks--a tapping task that is…
Descriptors: Stuttering, Models, Genetics, Experimental Groups
Lohman, David F.; Korb, Katrina A. – Journal for the Education of the Gifted, 2006
The term "gifted" implies a permanent superiority. However, the majority of children who score in the top few percentiles on ability and achievement tests in 1 grade do not retain their status for more than a year or 2. The tendency of those with high scores on one occasion to obtain somewhat lower scores on a later occasion is one…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Longitudinal Studies, Regression (Statistics), Error of Measurement
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Lee, Michael D. – Cognitive Science, 2006
We consider human performance on an optimal stopping problem where people are presented with a list of numbers independently chosen from a uniform distribution. People are told how many numbers are in the list, and how they were chosen. People are then shown the numbers one at a time, and are instructed to choose the maximum, subject to the…
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Inferences, Numbers, Cognitive Processes
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Burwell, Kim – Music Education Research, 2006
How do singers approach teaching and learning in the context of performance studies in higher education? And how is their approach distinct from that taken by instrumentalists in the same context? This paper focuses largely on verbal dialogue recorded in 67 instrumental and vocal lessons, in the music department of a UK university. It examines the…
Descriptors: Musicians, Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods
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McCoach, D. Betsy; O'Connell, Ann A.; Levitt, Heather – Journal of Educational Research, 2006
Regardless of individual differences at kindergarten entry, schools have a mission to promote reading achievement for all students. Within-class ability grouping is an instructional strategy that has received attention for its potential benefits to students. The authors assessed the effects of within-class ability grouping on kindergarten reading…
Descriptors: Individual Differences, Kindergarten, Reading Achievement, Ability Grouping
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