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Vukovic, Rose K.; Siegel, Linda S. – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2006
The double-deficit hypothesis of developmental dyslexia proposes that deficits in phonological processing and naming speed represent independent sources of dysfunction in dyslexia. The present article is a review of the evidence for the double-deficit hypothesis, including a discussion of recent findings related to the hypothesis. Studies in this…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Reading Difficulties, Phonology, Reading Rate
Markulis, Peter; Jassawalla, Avan R.; Sashittal, Hemant – Journal of Education for Business, 2006
In business school environments, teamwork often factors into discussions about effective pedagogy. However, leadership of classroom teams has attracted virtually no attention from scholars. How teams should be led in the classroom and what kinds of outcomes different types of team leaders produce remain underdeveloped areas of inquiry. In this…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Business Education, Teamwork, Group Dynamics
Johnson, Lee Michael; Simons, Ronald L.; Conger, Rand D. – Youth & Society, 2004
Studies of criminal careers reveal several possible factors associated with persistent offending. This analysis examines the part that criminal justice system involvement plays in persistent offending. Seven waves of data collected on 153 boys as part of the Iowa Youth and Families Project were used to test a structural equation model…
Descriptors: Juvenile Justice, Youth, Delinquency, Males
Gracia, Enrique; Herrero, Juan – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2006
Drawing from attitude-behavior research tradition, this study used a national probabilistic sample of the Spanish adult population (N = 2,432) to test hypotheses regarding correlates of public attitudes toward reporting partner violence against women, and the relationship between attitudes toward reporting and actual reporting behavior. Results…
Descriptors: Social Attitudes, Females, Family Violence, Adults
Sweetland, John D.; Reina, Jacqueline M.; Tatti, Anne F. – Gifted Child Quarterly, 2006
The cognitive profiles of 161 gifted children--those with a Full Scale, Verbal, and/or Performance IQ of 130 or higher on the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children, Third Edition (WISC-III; Wechsler, 1991)--were examined. It was hypothesized that this population of very intelligent children would demonstrate much larger Verbal-Performance…
Descriptors: Measures (Individuals), Gifted, Children, Hypothesis Testing
Johnson, Erica – Mathematics Teaching Incorporating Micromath, 2006
Hoping to develop in her students an understanding of mathematics as a way of thinking more than a way of doing, the author of this article describes how her students worked on a spatial reasoning problem stemming from an iteratively constructed sequence of cylinders. She presents an activity of making cylinders out of paper models, and for every…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Geometric Concepts, Geometry, Spreadsheets
Bloodstein, O. – Journal of Communication Disorders, 2006
This article suggests a possible link between incipient stuttering and early difficulty in language formulation. The hypothesis offers a unifying explanation of an array of empirical observations. Among these observations are the following: early stuttering occurs only on the first word of a syntactic structure; stuttering does not appear to be…
Descriptors: Stuttering, Hypothesis Testing, Syntax, Language Acquisition
Blomberg, Stefan; Rosander, Michael; Andersson, Gerhard – Research in Developmental Disabilities: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2006
The study investigated the prevalence of fear and hyperacusis and the possible connections between fear, hyperacusis and musicality in a Swedish sample of individuals with Williams syndrome (WS). The study included 38 individuals and a cross-sectional design, with no matched control group. Two persons, who knew the participant well, completed a…
Descriptors: Fear, Hearing Impairments, Music, Developmental Disabilities
Brozina, Karen; Abela, John R. Z. – Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, 2006
The common etiology hypothesis proposes that depression and anxiety commonly co-occur because they share etiological factors. This study examined the specificity of the hopelessness theory in the development of depressive and anxious symptoms in children. Students in Grades 3 through 6 (N = 418, 47% boys) completed measures assessing inferential…
Descriptors: Depression (Psychology), Anxiety, Behavior Theories, Etiology
Spector, Janet – Reading Psychology an international quarterly, 2005
The double-deficit hypothesis provides a framework for identifying students at-risk for persistent reading difficulties. I examined the temporal stability of four double-deficit subtypes (no-deficit, naming-speed deficit, phonological deficit, and double-deficit) in 197 low-performing, first-grade readers. Concurrent analyses in fall and spring…
Descriptors: Phonemes, Grade 1, Reading Difficulties, High Risk Students
White, Brian – International Journal of Science Education, 2004
This paper presents a generally applicable method for characterizing subjects' hypothesis-testing behaviour based on a synthesis that extends on previous work. Beginning with a transcript of subjects' speech and videotape of their actions, a Reasoning Map is created that depicts the flow of their hypotheses, tests, predictions, results, and…
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Hypothesis Testing, Biology, Thinking Skills
Balasubramanian, Venu; Max, Ludo – Brain and Cognition, 2004
The present study reports on the first case of crossed apraxia of speech (CAS) in a 69-year-old right-handed female (SE). The possibility of occurrence of apraxia of speech (AOS) following right hemisphere lesion is discussed in the context of known occurrences of ideomotor apraxias and acquired neurogenic stuttering in several cases with right…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Females, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Hypothesis Testing
Deutsch, Katherine M.; Newell, Karl M. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2004
This study examined the effect of age and practice on the structure of children's force variability to test the information processing hypothesis that a reduction of sensorimotor system noise accounts in large part for age-related reductions in perceptual-motor performance variability. In the study, 6-year-olds, 10-year-olds, and young adults…
Descriptors: Children, Young Adults, Psychomotor Skills, Age Differences
Van Strien, Jan W. – Brain and Language, 2004
To investigate whether concurrent nonverbal sound sequences would affect visual-hemifield lexical processing, lexical-decision performance of 24 strongly right-handed students (12 men, 12 women) was measured in three conditions: baseline, concurrent neutral sound sequence, and concurrent emotional sound sequence. With the neutral sequence,…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Hypothesis Testing, Cognitive Processes
North, Sarah – Applied Linguistics, 2005
Success in higher education depends on students' ability to meet the writing requirements of their chosen courses, and in many cases this involves adapting to the literacy practices of particular disciplines. While research into professional academic discourse suggests that it may reflect differences in disciplinary culture and epistemology, there…
Descriptors: Essays, Undergraduate Students, Hypothesis Testing, Writing Instruction

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