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Peer reviewedLefebre-Pinard, Monique – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 1983
Presents an integrated view of contributions made by various sections within cognitive psychology in which problems of consciousness are addressed. Implications concerning the relationship between cognition and behavior are pointed out. (Author/RH)
Descriptors: Behavior, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Development, Metacognition
Schmidt, John L. – Pointer, 1983
Resource teachers can help learning disabled students generalize skills to a mainstream setting with three types of procedures: transfer activities; self control procedures (in which a behavior contract is developed and contingencies for self reinforcement are specified); and cooperative planning (in which resource teachers and regular teachers…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Generalization, Learning Disabilities, Mainstreaming
Leone, Peter – Pointer, 1983
Learning disabled adolescents can become more responsible for their social and academic performance by learning to monitor themselves. Self-monitoring activities can involve self-assessment, self-recording, and self-reinforcement. Procedures for establishing a self-monitoring approach are discussed. (CL)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Learning Disabilities, Reinforcement, Self Control
Lim, Howard – Training and Development Journal, 1982
Discusses myths about the Japanese management styles; what the West can learn from the Japanese; the concept of nonlinear management; and training modules which teach self-discipline, tolerance, and nonlinear management. (CT)
Descriptors: Cultural Traits, Management Development, Self Control, Teamwork
Lovett, David L.; Haring, Kathryn A. – Education and Training in Mental Retardation, 1989
The study evaluated the effects of self recording alone and of additional self-management techniques in improving the ability of adults with mental retardation (N=9) to self-direct daily living activities. All subjects improved their performance in task completion suggesting that self-recording alone may be effective in improving task completion.…
Descriptors: Adults, Daily Living Skills, Mental Retardation, Productivity
Peer reviewedPearce, C. Glenn – Business Education Forum, 1995
Emotional responses affect interpretation of messages heard and raise barriers to effective listening. Teaching students to listen objectively and recognize emotional triggers will help them develop clearer understanding and result in better learning. (SK)
Descriptors: Business Education, Communication Problems, Emotional Response, Listening
Peer reviewedSmith, Larry L.; Beckner, Beryl M. – Journal of Offender Rehabilitation, 1993
Conducted short-term anger management workshop with 18 medium security male inmates. Data from pre- and posttest administrations of Novaco Anger Scale revealed significant decline in scores following treatment. Inmates' comments suggest that most effective anger management skill they learned was to walk away from conflict and calm down in some…
Descriptors: Anger, Correctional Rehabilitation, Prisoners, Self Control
Peer reviewedWegner, Daniel M. – Psychological Review, 1994
A theory of ironic processes of mental control is proposed to account for the intentional and counterintentional effects that result from efforts at self-control of mental states. The theory holds that an attempt to control the mind introduces operating and monitoring processes that work together and separately. (SLD)
Descriptors: Behavior, Cognitive Processes, Discipline, Personal Autonomy
Peer reviewedBrookfield, Stephen – Canadian Journal for the Study of Adult Education, 2001
Elaborates on Foucault's analysis of how sovereign power has been replaced by disciplinary power exercised by people on themselves and others. Urges adult educators to be aware of power, especially in the apparently beneficent participatory practices they intend to be empowering for learners. (Contains 20 references.) (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Educators, Adult Learning, Empowerment, Self Control
Tobin, Renee M.; Sansosti, Frank J.; McIntyre, Laura Lee – California School Psychologist, 2007
Regulation has been implicated in the development of emotional and behavioral disorders in childhood. Indeed, emotion dysregulation is one of the most common reasons families seek psychological services and behavioral supports. Interventions to support children with regulatory difficulties may be enhanced if they are informed by basic…
Descriptors: Psychological Services, Emotional Intelligence, Psychological Studies, School Psychologists
Sloan, Melissa M. – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2007
I examine the utility of self-concept anchorage (as described by Turner 1976) in the analysis of inauthenticity in the workplace. As controlling internally felt emotion may distance the worker from her true feelings or true self, the management of emotion in the workplace can produce feelings of inauthenticity in the worker. This relationship has…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Self Concept, Work Environment, Self Control
Keetch, Katherine M.; Lee, Timothy D. – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2007
Research suggests that allowing individuals to control their own practice schedule has a positive effect on motor learning. In this experiment we examined the effect of task difficulty and self-regulated practice strategies on motor learning. The task was to move a mouse-operated cursor through pattern arrays that differed in two levels of…
Descriptors: Psychomotor Skills, Drills (Practice), Motor Development, Computers
Verhoeven, Marjolein; Junger, Marianne; Van Aken, Chantal; Dekovic, Maja; Van Aken, Marcel A. G. – Journal of Family Issues, 2007
The present study examines the contribution of parental, contextual, and child characteristics to parenting behavior during toddlerhood in 111 two-parent families with a 17-month-old son (M = 16.9 months, SD = 0.57). Parenting was conceptualized in terms of five dimensions: support, structure, positive discipline, psychological control, and…
Descriptors: Discipline, Mothers, Child Rearing, Parent Child Relationship
Barkley, Russell A. – School Psychology Review, 2007
In this article, the author considers some issues concerning future research into school-based assessment and management of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). He focuses on a few issues of some relevance to school interventions for children and teens with ADHD. He features three articles that found that less intensive interventions…
Descriptors: Hyperactivity, Attention Deficit Disorders, Intervention, Children
Hofer, Manfred – Educational Research Review, 2007
In this paper, pupils' misconduct in the classroom is interpreted as a change from on-task to off-task behaviour. This change entails a switch from a current learning behaviour to an activity that is more attractive to the student but that is seen as a discipline problem by the teacher. Thus, academic and non-academic goals of pupils rival one…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Student Behavior, Discipline Problems, Students

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