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Heckhausen, Jutta; Wrosch, Carsten; Schulz, Richard – Psychological Review, 2010
This article had four goals. First, the authors identified a set of general challenges and questions that a life-span theory of development should address. Second, they presented a comprehensive account of their Motivational Theory of Life-Span Development. They integrated the model of optimization in primary and secondary control and the…
Descriptors: Motivation, Individual Development, Research Needs, Models
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Blake, Robert R.; Mouton, Jane Srygley – Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, 1970
The authors foresee a fifth achievement by which men will ultimately be able to work out their differences. Here presented is the Conflict Grid for use in evaluating good or bad ways of ending disputes as a vehicle for creative problem solving in the future. (Author)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Conflict Resolution, Individual Characteristics, Models
Hopkins, John B. – 1976
In this study, 104 primarily indigent primiparous mothers from urban and rural areas and their healthy, full-term neonates were placed in one of four conditions during the normal postpartum lying-in period. Conditions were control, initial contact, rooming-in, and initial contact plus rooming-in. Dependent variables consisted of scores on the…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Hypothesis Testing, Individual Characteristics, Interaction
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Balassone, Mary Lou – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 1991
Research findings and theories regarding adolescent contraceptive use are reviewed to propose an alternative framework relying on social learning theory. Environmental context, cognitive influences, and behavior execution constraints are suggested as the foundation for contraceptive behaviors. The behavioral skills teenagers need to use birth…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Behavior Patterns, Cognitive Processes, Context Effect
McCubbin, Hamilton I.; And Others – 1978
Family stress theory as a framework for family policy and family impact analysis is compatible with, and a logical development within, a broader ecological context of immediate and wider social environments. The central assumption of the family stress framework is that families have the capacity to organize a variety of supports--economic, social,…
Descriptors: Adaptation Level Theory, Behavior Patterns, Family Relationship, Family (Sociological Unit)