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Sharma, Bal Krishna – Innovation in Language Learning and Teaching, 2015
This study investigates the teacher role in mediating the task and the learner in an advanced academic writing class. Having identified three verbal (non-)participation patterns of students in collaborative tasks (silence, dominance, and off-task talk), I examine how these interactional concerns are understood and addressed by English as a second…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition), Teacher Role
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Richmond, Aaron S.; Murphy, Bridget C.; Curl, Layton S.; Broussard, Kristin A. – Teaching of Psychology, 2015
During the past decades, little research has investigated the effects of immersion scheduling on the psychology classroom. Therefore, we sought to compare academic performance of students in 2-week immersion psychology courses to that of students in traditional 16-week courses. In Study 1, students who received instruction in a 2-week immersion…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation of Teacher Performance, Immersion Programs, Scheduling, Academic Achievement
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Parade, Stephanie H.; Dickstein, Susan; Schiller, Masha; Hayden, Lisa; Seifer, Ronald – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2015
The current study examined the stability of temperament over time. Observers and mothers rated child behavior at eight timepoints across three assessment waves (8, 15, and 30 months of age). Internal consistency reliability of aggregates of the eight observer reports and eight mother reports were high. When considering single timepoint…
Descriptors: Child Behavior, Infants, Toddlers, Age Differences
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Brandler, Brian J.; Peynircioglu, Zehra F. – Journal of Research in Music Education, 2015
Collaboration is essential in learning ensemble music. It is unclear, however, whether an individual benefits more from collaborative or individual rehearsal in the initial stages of such learning. In nonmusical domains, the effect of collaboration has been mixed, sometimes enhancing and sometimes inhibiting an individual's learning process. In…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music Activities, Cooperative Learning, Educational Benefits
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Baadte, Christiane; Rasch, Thorsten; Honstein, Helena – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 2015
The ability to flexibly allocate attention to goal-relevant information is pivotal for the completion of high-level cognitive processes. For instance, in comprehending illustrated texts, the reader permanently has to switch the attentional focus between the text and the corresponding picture in order to extract relevant information from both…
Descriptors: Multimedia Instruction, Attention Control, Cognitive Processes, Hypothesis Testing
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What Works Clearinghouse, 2015
This review-specific protocol guides the review of research that informs the What Works Clearinghouse (WWC) intervention reports in the Children Identified With or at Risk for an Emotional Disturbance topic area. The review-specific protocol is used in conjunction with the "WWC Procedures and Standards Handbook (version 3.0)." This…
Descriptors: Emotional Disturbances, Intervention, At Risk Students, Elementary Secondary Education
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Armon-Lotem, Sharon; Ohana, Odelya – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2017
The present study explores the vocabulary development of bilingual children when neither of their languages has a minority language status. With both languages having high relative prestige, it is possible to address the impact of exposure variables: age of onset, length of exposure, and frequency of exposure (FoE) to both languages. Parents of 40…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, French, Child Language, Semitic Languages
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Dodge, Kenneth A.; Albert, Dustin – Developmental Psychology, 2012
Ellis et al. (2012) bring an evolutionary perspective to bear on adolescent risky behavioral development, clinical practice, and public policy. The authors offer important insights that (a) some risky behaviors may be adaptive for the individual and the species by being hard-wired due to fitness benefits and (b) interventions might be more…
Descriptors: Psychopathology, Adolescents, Behavior Standards, Public Policy
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Rutter, Barbara; Kroger, Soren; Hill, Holger; Windmann, Sabine; Hermann, Christiane; Abraham, Anna – Brain and Cognition, 2012
Conceptual expansion, one of the core operations in creative cognition, was investigated in the present ERP study. An experimental paradigm using novel metaphoric, nonsensical and literal phrases was employed where individual differences in conceptual knowledge organization were accounted for by using participants' responses to categorize the…
Descriptors: Semantics, Diagnostic Tests, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Schemata (Cognition)
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Pilecki, Brian C.; McKay, Dean – Psychological Record, 2012
The current study compared cognitive defusion with other strategies in reducing the impact of experimentally induced negative emotional states. Sixty-seven undergraduates were assigned to one of three conditions (cognitive defusion, thought suppression, or control) and instructed in standardized approaches relevant to each condition before viewing…
Descriptors: Evidence, Emotional Response, Undergraduate Students, Films
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Weissberg, Robert – Journal of School Choice, 2012
This article presents the author's response to Robert Maranto's review of "Bad Students, Not Bad Schools". The author begins by thanking Professor Maranto for his thoughtful review of his "Bad Students, Not Bad Schools" (2010). Professor Maranto is the first professional educator to acknowledge the book's existence, a fact that says much about…
Descriptors: Reader Response, Intelligence Quotient, Intelligence Differences, Group Behavior
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Marsh, Elizabeth J.; Butler, Andrew C.; Umanath, Sharda – Educational Psychology Review, 2012
Fictional materials are commonly used in the classroom to teach course content. Both laboratory experiments and classroom demonstrations illustrate the benefits of using fiction to help students learn accurate information about the world. However, fictional sources often contain factually inaccurate content, making them a potent vehicle for…
Descriptors: Individual Differences, Course Content, Literary Genres, Cognitive Psychology
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Bockenholt, Ulf – Psychometrika, 2012
In a number of psychological studies, answers to reasoning vignettes have been shown to result from both intuitive and deliberate response processes. This paper utilizes a psychometric model to separate these two response tendencies. An experimental application shows that the proposed model facilitates the analysis of dual-process item responses…
Descriptors: Psychological Studies, Psychometrics, Item Response Theory, Feedback (Response)
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Willingham, Daniel; Daniel, David – Educational Leadership, 2012
Although students vary in their abilities and interests, "hyper-individualizing" the curriculum in an attempt to accommodate these differences is not the best way to help each student excel, write Willingham and Daniel. Drawing on educational research, the authors give examples of several cognitive must haves (things that the cognitive system…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Individual Differences, Educational Research, Feedback (Response)
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Silva, Catarina; Montant, Marie; Ponz, Aurelie; Ziegler, Johannes C. – Cognition, 2012
Emotion effects in reading have typically been investigated by manipulating words' emotional valence and arousal in lexical decision. The standard finding is that valence and arousal can have both facilitatory and inhibitory effects, which is hard to reconcile with current theories of emotion processing in reading. Here, we contrasted these…
Descriptors: Empathy, Spanish, Children, Emotional Response
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