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Sarah L. Woulfin; Britney Jones – Journal of Educational Change, 2024
COVID-19 shocked the education system, disrupting the policies and practices of special education over multiple school years. This essay brings together the institutional logics perspective and racialized organization theory to first examine aspects of special education and then describe how leaders and teachers can improve special education to…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Special Education, Special Education Teachers
Meghan B. Buchanan – International Journal of Leadership in Education, 2024
In this article, I present the construct of scared leadership as a theoretical explanation for the gradual decrease in courageous behavior as educators move from the classroom to campus and district level leadership. Scared leadership is a construct that can be used in future work to better understand and articulate the relationship between fear…
Descriptors: Leadership Styles, Fear, Public Education, School Culture
Harun Küçükballi; Tülay Kars Fertelli – Health Education Research, 2024
This randomized controlled study was conducted to investigate effects of face-to-face education and tele-education given to individuals with atrial fibrillation (AF) taking oral anticoagulants on their medication compliance and satisfaction levels. The study sample comprised 150 individuals. Of them, 50 were assigned to the control group, 50 to…
Descriptors: Distance Education, In Person Learning, Rating Scales, Heart Disorders
Mascaro, Olivier; Kovács, Ágnes Melinda – Developmental Science, 2022
How do people learn about things that they have never perceived or inferred--like molecules, miracles or Marie-Antoinette? For many thinkers, trust is the answer. Humans rely on communicated information, sometimes even when it contradicts blatantly their firsthand experience. We investigate the early ontogeny of this trust using a non-verbal…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Infants, Learning Processes, Inferences
Willis, Malachi; Nelson-Gray, Rosemery O. – Journal of American College Health, 2022
Objective: Undergraduate women are more likely to comply with unwanted sexual behavior if they have experienced sexual coercion from their partner. We investigated whether the severity and frequency of sexual coercion was associated with sexual compliance. Participants: A sample of 195 female university students in committed relationships.…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Females, Sexuality, Sexual Abuse
King, Elizabeth J.; Rozek, Laura; Lin, Ann Chih; Hicken, Allen; Jones, Pauline; Aleksandrova, Ekaterina; Meylakhs, Peter; Nambunmee, Kowit; Tardif, Twila – Health Education & Behavior, 2022
Control of the COVID-19 pandemic requires significant changes in people's health behaviors. We offer this multidisciplinary perspective on the extent of compliance with social distancing recommendations and on coping with these measures around the globe in the first months of the pandemic. We present descriptive data from our survey of 17,650…
Descriptors: Health Behavior, COVID-19, Pandemics, Coping
O'Handley, Roderick D.; Dufrene, Brad A.; Wimberly, Joy – Journal of Behavioral Education, 2022
Many teachers struggle to implement behavioral interventions in the classroom with sufficient treatment integrity. One way to support teachers' intervention implementation is through bug-in-the-ear (BITE) training, a training format in which a school-based consultant provides teachers real-time prompts and immediate performance feedback as…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Student Behavior, Inservice Teacher Education, Intervention
Jennifer L. Cox – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Despite initiatives to support women in STEM, men still outnumber women in math-intensive fields, and women in mathematics express that they are "on the outside looking in." Prior mathematics anxiety research has investigated links to performance, and neuroscientists, psychologists, and educational researchers have found gender…
Descriptors: Mathematics Anxiety, Gender Differences, Social Influences, Student Experience
Perez, Rosemary J. – New Directions for Higher Education, 2021
While working towards tenure, faculty members are rewarded for enacting ideal worker norms (Acker, 1990) or prioritizing work resulting in high levels and quality of production over other components of one's life. Striving to meet ideal worker norms has real costs to faculty members who may experience high levels of stress, negative health…
Descriptors: Family Work Relationship, Experienced Teachers, Tenure, Norms
van Berkel, Sheila R.; Groeneveld, Marleen G.; van der Pol, Lotte D.; Linting, Mariëlle; Mesman, Judi – Developmental Psychology, 2023
This study applies a "within-family, age-snapshot design" to investigate differences between siblings in the development of compliance during the preschool years by disaggregating situational, within-family, and between-family effects. The aim of the study was to investigate the relation between sibling differences in compliance and the…
Descriptors: Siblings, Preschool Children, Compliance (Psychology), Birth Order
Simcoe, Sarah Mae; Gilmour, John; Garnett, Michelle S.; Attwood, Tony; Donovan, Caroline; Kelly, Adrian B. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2023
The Questionnaire for Autism Spectrum Conditions (Q-ASC; Attwood, Garnett & Rynkiewicz, 2011) is one of the few screening instruments that includes items designed to assess female-specific ASD-Level 1 traits. This study examined the ability of a modified version of the Q-ASC (Q-ASC-M; Ormond et al., 2018) to differentiate children with and…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Questionnaires, Symptoms (Individual Disorders), Autism Spectrum Disorders
Jonathan Keirre Adams – ProQuest LLC, 2023
The human component of information systems represents a critical and high-impact target for cyberattacks. Firms address these threats through various means, including security awareness training, security policy monitoring, security controls, and enforcement. Even the most robust technical controls have limits. Consequently, elevating user…
Descriptors: Computer Security, Information Security, Intention, Information Systems
Xinxin Sun – Grantee Submission, 2023
Noncompliance to treatment assignment is widespread in randomized trials and presents challenges in causal inference. In the presence of noncompliance, the most commonly estimated effect of treatment assignment, also known as the intent-to-treat (ITT) effect, is biased. Of interest in this setting is the complier average causal effect (CACE), the…
Descriptors: Compliance (Psychology), Randomized Controlled Trials, Maximum Likelihood Statistics, Computation
Howie, Mark – Australian Educational Researcher, 2020
Motivated by my attendance at the 2017 AARE conference and Jane Kenway's 2017 AARE Honorary Life Membership Award, and framed through the case of an event staged by students, this paper seeks to contribute to a 'grassroots' challenging of predominant bureaucratic managerialism in discourses of educational leadership, teaching and school…
Descriptors: Principals, Compliance (Psychology), Affordances, Neoliberalism
Hand, Michael – Theory and Research in Education, 2020
The question of the necessity of school punishment was raised, but not satisfactorily answered, in an exchange some time ago between John Wilson and James Marshall. Wilson argued that social interaction in schools must be governed by rules and that rules only exist if violations of them are normally punished. Marshall objected that there are some…
Descriptors: Punishment, Discipline, Behavior Problems, Standards