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Casto, Glendon; And Others – 1976
Presented is the summary report of a project designed to review the state of the art in basic areas of affective development in the normal and handicapped preschool child. Reviewed are theories of affect and development of specific emotions with particular emphasis on five dimensions (emergence of self, caretaker attachment, adaptation-mastery,…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Affective Measures, Emotional Development, Handicapped Children
Heathers, Glen – 1975
The development of the student as person and as group or community member became a major theme of educational innovation during the 1960s. Previously, most educators had sought to make a sharp distinction between intellectual and personal/social development, assigning the first to the schools, the latter to home and community. This distinction has…
Descriptors: Administrators, Affective Behavior, Curriculum, Educational Improvement
Fair, Charles M. – 1977
This chapter deals with three difficulties that inhibit the author's addressing the assigned question--what new theories, practices, concepts, or research in the natural sciences provide new insight into the affective domain? The first difficulty is that no striking discoveries have been made and that what is known about the relationship of…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Affective Behavior, Developmental Psychology, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedTucker, G. Richard; And Others – Canadian Modern Language Review, 1976
This paper examines the role of selected affective, cognitive and social factors in second language acquisition, in an attempt to define a group of factors associated with success in second language learning within the formal educational system. Also examined is the effect of different teaching programs on an optimal group of factors. (CLK)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Bilingual Education, Cognitive Processes, Educational Objectives
Peer reviewedYarborough, Betty H.; Johnson, Roger A. – Educational Research Quarterly, 1978
The effectiveness of six years of nongraded and graded elementary schooling was studied in seventh-grade students at four intelligence levels. All pupils profited equally cognitively. Pupils with lower IQ's benefitted affectively from nongraded schooling, while higher-IQ pupils profited from graded schooling. All pupils experienced affective…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Educational Attainment, Elementary Education, Intelligence Differences
Bialystok, Ellen; Froehlich, Maria – TESL Talk, 1978
A study was conducted to measure the extent to which three learning strategies--practicing, monitoring and inferencing--affected student performance in three grade 10 (ages 14-15) and three grade 12 (ages 16-17) classes of French as a second language. (Author/HP)
Descriptors: Achievement, Affective Behavior, Cognitive Ability, French
Peer reviewedSinger, Jerome L.; Singer, Dorothy G. – Journal of Social Issues, 1986
Examines some of the ways television may influence the imagination, motor activity, and aggressiveness of preschool and early school-aged children. Proposes a model in which a number of family and personal variables influence the growing child's response to television, and reports the results of several empirical studies that investigated family…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Aggression, Child Development, Emotional Adjustment
Peer reviewedWatson, Jennifer Barber – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1988
Adult stutterers (n=75) and nonstutterers (n=81) rated themselves on communication attitudes involving behavioral, affective, and cognitive components. The findings raise issues regarding stutterers' avoidances, attitude multidimensionality in the perceptions of speaking situations, differences in stutterers and nonstutterers' belief systems, and…
Descriptors: Adults, Affective Behavior, Attitude Measures, Attitudes
Peer reviewedRosenthal, Doreen; Bornholt, Laurel – Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 1988
Examination of the child development beliefs of 40 families reveals that Greek-Australians regard behaviors reflecting initiative and independence, personal maturity, and interpersonal sensitivity to be appropriate at a later age than do Anglo-Australians, but the converse holds true for respect, self-control, and unsupervised activities. Parents'…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Behavior Development, Behavior Patterns, Behavior Standards
Peer reviewedDedman, Elizabeth B.; And Others – Journal of Medical Education, 1987
A study to determine whether affective skills could be taught to residents in a family practice center without placing arduous constraints on their schedules is described. Residents at the University of Louisville Department of Family Practice were videotaped during a regular patient visit and then scheduled for review sessions. (MLW)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Clinical Experience, College Instruction, Family Practice (Medicine)
Peer reviewedJacob, Theodore; Krahn, Gloria L. – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1988
Observed family interactions of 107 families with at least one adolescent child as they engaged in discussions of personally relevant problems, during sessions when alcohol was consumed, and nondrinking sessions. Couples with alcoholic husbands tended to be more negative when drinking than were couples where husband was depressed, or where husband…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Affective Behavior, Alcoholism, Communication (Thought Transfer)
Peer reviewedStatman, Stella – System, 1987
Observation of native Hebrew speakers who read Hebrew and English texts suggested that there is a powerful affective factor which completely blocks the reading in English of some students and severely limits the comprehension of a considerable number of others when they meet difficulties in the foreign language texts. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Cognitive Processes, English (Second Language), Hebrew
Peer reviewedLyons-Ruth, Karlen; And Others – New Directions for Child Development, 1986
Study findings indicate that maternal depression is prevalent among low-income mothers with infants. Depressed mothers are more likely than nondepressed mothers to show hostile and intrusive behavior toward their infants, and infants of depressed mothers are more likely to exhibit slowed development and unstable avoidance attachment behaviors.…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Attachment Behavior, Behavior Patterns, Child Development
Peer reviewedGnepp, Jackie; Hess, Debra L. R. – Developmental Psychology, 1986
First-, third-, fifth-, and tenth-grade children listened to eight stories designed to elicit prosocial or self-protective display rules. Children predicted protagonists' verbal and facial expressions to emotion-laden situations. Findings indicated knowledge of control of emotional displays increases between first and fifth grades, but then levels…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Age Differences, Cognitive Processes, Elementary School Students
Peer reviewedWeiner, Bernard – Psychological Review, 1985
This article advances an attributional theory of motivation and emotion, with achievement strivings as the theoretical focus. Causes of success and failure share three common properties: locus, stability, and controllability. Stability of causes influences changes in expectancy of success. Expectancy and affect guide motivated behavior.…
Descriptors: Achievement, Affective Behavior, Attribution Theory, Elementary Secondary Education


