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Yael Sidi; Rakefet Ackerman – Educational Psychology Review, 2024
When faced with challenging thinking tasks accompanied by a feeling of uncertainty, people often prefer to opt out (e.g., replying "I don't know", seeking advice) over giving low-confidence responses. In professions with high-stakes decisions (e.g., judges, medical practitioners), opting out is generally seen as preferable to making…
Descriptors: Instructional Design, Decision Making, Metacognition, Knowledge Management
Hatch, Emily – Journal of General Music Education, 2022
Music surrounds us and students have plenty of experience in passive listening. However, they need to be deliberately taught how to deeply and critically listen to music. The National Core Arts Standards do not specifically measure listening as a skill but to evaluate musical works, critical listening skills are essential. This article outlines…
Descriptors: Music Education, Listening Skills, Skill Development, Classroom Environment
Collins, Belva C.; Lo, Ya-yu; Park, Gwitaek; Haughney, Kathryn – TEACHING Exceptional Children, 2018
Response-prompting procedures are a form of systematic direct instruction based on the principles of ABA. Researchers have identified six specific and distinct response-prompting procedures for teaching both academic and functional skills: (1) graduated guidance; (2) most-to-least prompting; (3) system of least prompts; (4) progressive time delay;…
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, Prompting, Direct Instruction, Teaching Methods
Swinford, Ashleigh – Teaching Children Mathematics, 2016
With rigor outlined in state and Common Core standards and the addition of constructed-response test items to most state tests, math constructed-response questions have become increasingly popular in today's classroom. Although constructed-response problems can present a challenge for students, they do offer a glimpse of students' learning through…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Problem Solving, Responses
Rabideau, Lindsey K.; Stanton-Chapman, Tina L.; Brown, Tiara S. – Young Exceptional Children, 2018
The most researched and effective practice for instructing children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is applied behavior analysis (ABA; Baer, Wolf, & Risley, 1968; Reichow, 2012; Smith & Eikeseth, 2011; Virués-Ortega, 2010). ABA is a scientific approach to systematic instruction, data collection, and data analysis based on observable…
Descriptors: Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Teaching Methods, Behavior Modification
Haegele, Justin A.; Park, Seung Yeon – Strategies: A Journal for Physical and Sport Educators, 2016
Research suggests that school-aged individuals with intellectual disabilities (ID) tend to be less physically active than their typically developing peers (e.g., Shields, King, Corbett, & Imms, 2014). While these students can be successful in acquiring motor and sport-related skills during physical education, they tend not to use those skills…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disability, Generalization, Leisure Time, Physical Activities
Stockall, Nancy; Dennis, Lindsay R.; Rueter, Jessica A. – Young Exceptional Children, 2014
Most children are able to successfully develop and use social skills in the context of interactions with peers and significant adults. Moreover, the ability to interact successfully with peers is crucial in establishing and maintaining viable social relationships. For children with disabilities, like pervasive development disorder (PDD),…
Descriptors: Intervention, Play, Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders
McCormac, Mary E. – Professional School Counseling, 2015
Bullying continues to be a pervasive problem in schools and requires a schoolwide approach. This article describes the action research process used to examine the impact of a 4-year, K-5 school bullying prevention and intervention. The school counselors collaborated with students, staff, and parents to implement the program, and collected and…
Descriptors: Bullying, Longitudinal Studies, Elementary Schools, Elementary School Students
Pawlina, Shelby; Stanford, Christie – Young Children, 2011
Challenges, mistakes, and problems are inherent every day in learning activities and social interactions. How children think about and respond to those difficult situations has an impact on how they see themselves as being able to shape their own learning and on how they handle the next problem that comes their way. Building resilience means…
Descriptors: Self Efficacy, Problem Solving, Creative Thinking, Teaching Methods
National Assessment Governing Board, 2013
To what extent can young people analyze the pros and cons of a proposal to develop a new source of energy? Construct and test a model or prototype? Use the Internet to find and summarize data and information in order to solve a problem or achieve a goal? The exploding growth in the world of technology and the need to answer questions similar to…
Descriptors: Technology Uses in Education, Technological Literacy, Information Technology, Engineering
Thomas, Brett W.; Roberts, Mark W. – Journal of Child and Family Studies, 2009
Sibling conflict can rise to the level of a clinical problem. In Phase 1 a lengthy behavioral role-play analog sampling child reactions to normal sibling conflicts was successfully shortened. In Phase 2 normal children who lacked sibling conflict resolution skills were randomly assigned to a Training or Measurement Only condition. Training…
Descriptors: Siblings, Play, Conflict, Assertiveness
Mueller, Michael M.; Palkovic, Christine M.; Maynard, Cynthia S. – Psychology in the Schools, 2007
Errorless learning refers to a variety of discrimination learning techniques that eliminate or minimize responding to incorrect choices. This article describes experimental roots of errorless learning and applied errorless strategies. Specifically, previous research on stimulus fading, stimulus shaping, response prevention, delayed prompting,…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, School Psychologists, Discrimination Learning, Pervasive Developmental Disorders
Ruef, Michael B.; Openden, Daniel; Harris, Kathleen C.; Nefdt, Nicolette; Elmensdorp, Sharon; Robinson, Suzanne – Education and Training in Developmental Disabilities, 2009
With the large number of students with autism entering the educational system, the need for empirically supported treatment (EST) in the classroom and special education teachers with training in autism and ESTs is necessary now more than ever. This paper describes a collaborative model between 2 universities aimed at providing teacher-candidate…
Descriptors: Delivery Systems, Graduate Students, Autism, Family Involvement
Kovaleski, Joseph F. – School Psychology Review, 2007
This invited commentary on the series of articles regarding the state of the extant research and practice concerning the implementation of response to intervention (RTI) will focus on the following issues: (a) what constitutes a comprehensive service delivery system that uses RTI as its driving principle; (b) the dependent measure by which the…
Descriptors: Delivery Systems, Intervention, Learning Disabilities, Responses
Daly, Edward J., III; Martens, Brian K.; Barnett, David; Witt, Joseph C.; Olson, Stephanie C. – School Psychology Review, 2007
Response to intervention (RTI) involves ongoing evaluation of children's responsiveness to different levels of evidence-based interventions as a basis for eligibility determination. If students fail to make expected rates of progress, instruction is changed and, in most cases, intensified. Based on behavior-analytic models of effective instruction…
Descriptors: Intervention, Transfer of Training, Instructional Materials, Basic Skills
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