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Grimes, Lynn – Learning Disability Quarterly, 1981
The article explores attribution theory and the concept of learned helplessness in teaching learning disabled individuals. Suggestions are given for areas of future research with learning disabled populations. The discussion includes current teaching techniques which may be related to the self regulatory behaviors and perception of personal…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Helplessness, Learning Disabilities, Literature Reviews

Hains, Anthony A.; Herrman, Leo P. – Journal of Adolescence, 1989
Examined social cognitive skills in aggressive and nonaggressive delinquent youths with high or low behavioral functioning. Found significant interaction on problem-solving skills, with higher functioning, non-aggressive youths performing better than lower functioning counterparts; no differences occurred within aggressive groups. (Author/NB)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Aggression, Attribution Theory, Cognitive Ability
Brock, Herman B.; Kowitz, Gerald T. – 1980
The research literature on learned helplessness in exceptional children is reviewed and the authors' efforts to identify and retrain learning disabled (LD) children who have characteristics typical of learned helplessness are reported. Twenty-eight elementary aged LD children viewed as "learned helpless" were randomly assigned to one of four…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Attribution Theory, Elementary Education, Exceptional Child Research
Baxley, Gladys B. – 1979
To assess hyperactive children's perceptions of drug treatment, a Causal Attribution Questionnaire was developed and introduced as a series of brief stories about "make believe" children to 36 hyperactive males (6 to 13 years) and a comparison group of 35 males. Results showed that the older the child in terms of chronological age, the greater the…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attribution Theory, Drug Therapy, Elementary Education
Janoff-Bulman, Ronnie – 1978
Two types of self-blame were investigated: characterological self-blame, corresponding to the popular negative view of self-blame; and behavioral self-blame, representing a positive attempt to reestablish a belief in control. Results of a questionnaire completed by rape crisis centers located across the country attest to the pervasiveness of…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Behavior Patterns, Crime, Females
Dienstbier, Richard A. – 1975
Cheating behavior has been found to relate to emotion-attribution explanations. Prior research with second-grade children has indicated that increased self-control occurs in a watching task when the child's emotional response is attributed to internal rather than external actions. In the present study, freshman women (N=221) took a reading…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Behavior Patterns, Cheating, College Students
Kreutzer, Jeffrey S.; And Others – 1980
For many years researchers have investigated the relationship between alcohol consumption and human aggression. A "policy-capturing" methodology was used to determine how judgments of responsibility for aggressive behavior are influenced by information about a person's alcohol consumption, sex, and degree of injury to a victim. Male subjects (N=8)…
Descriptors: Aggression, Alcoholism, Attribution Theory, Behavior Patterns
Knight, Bruce Allen – Gifted Education International, 1995
Gifted students' perceptions of an internal or external locus of control (LOC) and the effect on their behavior is discussed. Research is reviewed that shows that gifted students who are proficient academically or in other areas believe they have an internal locus of control, while underachieving gifted students perceive an external LOC. (CR)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attribution Theory, Elementary Secondary Education, Gifted