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Horn, John L.; Donaldson, Gary – American Psychologist, 1977
Concludes "that the one seemingly serious effort of Baltes and Schaie to contest the points of the Horn-Donaldson criticisms only brings us around to the same sad conclusion: that no matter how one looks at the Schaie data, it suggests that, on the average, there is age decline in many important abilities of intelligence." (Author/JM)
Descriptors: Adult Development, Age Differences, Cohort Analysis, Intelligence Differences
Haswell, Richard H. – 1989
This paper provides additional discussion and interpretation of the original findings of a study examining the development of writing skills across college years. The paper focuses on six interpretive problems from the mass of primary data in an attempt to clarify issues and block off false interpretive trails. The paper discusses: (1) the…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Factor Analysis, Graduate Students, Higher Education
Woolfolk, Anita E. – 1979
Findings from several recent studies suggest that the gender, cultural background and age of observers may influence their perception and evaluation of nonverbal communication. There is ample evidence to warrant using raters of only one sex (preferably female) and only one cultural background when the rating task involves decoding nonverbal…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Classroom Observation Techniques, Cultural Differences, Cultural Influences
Worell, Judith – 1981
A conceptual model is presented to examine the hypothesis that androgyny is advantageous to the psychological well-being of both females and males in American society. A format for the multi-dimensional assessment of both sex-role components and indices of well-being is proposed, and possibilities for exploring the interface between these sets of…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Age Differences, Androgyny, Anxiety