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Showing 1 to 15 of 18 results Save | Export
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Pons, Philip E.; Burnett, Dana D.; Williams, Mitchell R.; Paredes, Tisha M. – Community College Enterprise, 2017
The purpose of this qualitative study was to discover the motivational factors influencing part-time faculty employment within the community college from the perspective of the part-time faculty. The study examined these reported motivational factors for differences influenced by age, gender, and employment status. A survey was distributed to a…
Descriptors: Part Time Faculty, Community Colleges, Employment Opportunities, Employment Level
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Yang, Pei-Jung; Lamb, Michael E. – Applied Developmental Science, 2014
The present study examined child and school factors that might foster classroom behavioral engagement during the first year at school in a sample of 67 typically developing British 4-year-olds. The children were followed for 9 months from the summer before enrollment through the first 7 months of school. Our findings showed that effortful control…
Descriptors: Performance Factors, Influences, Classroom Environment, Child Behavior
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Colburn, Michael; Fox, Daniel E.; Westerfelt, Debra Kay – College and University, 2011
Prospective graduate students select a graduate program as a result of a multifaceted decision-making process. This study examines the selection criteria that part-time MBA students used in selecting a program at a private university. Further, it analyzes the methods by which the students first learned of the MBA program. The authors posed the…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Course Selection (Students), Evaluation Criteria, Performance Factors
Latta, Marcia Sloan – ProQuest LLC, 2010
With declining state support, increased financial need on the part of the fastest growing demographic sections of the population, and public policy that discourages major increases in tuition for public higher education, the only logical source of additional finances for public colleges and universities is increased private funding through…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Financial Needs, Public Colleges, Income
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Nicholls, John G.; Miller, Arden T. – Developmental Psychology, 1985
Kindergarten through eighth-grade children were presented with two revisions (luck and skill) of the Matching Familiar Figures Test. Questioning about performance of hypothetical others revealed four levels of differentiation of luck and skill. These levels showed parallels with age-related changes in conceptions of difficulty, effort, and…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Age Differences, Attribution Theory, Children
Banziger, George; Drevenstedt, Jean – 1981
Age is often used to explain performances by older people that may be judged substandard in comparison with those of younger people. To explore age as a possible causal attribution, descriptions of task performances by young (aged 30) and old (aged 70) women were judged by young (N=352) and old (N=96) female subjects on four attributions, i.e.,…
Descriptors: Ability, Achievement, Adult Development, Age Differences
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Banziger, George; Drevenstedt, Jean – Journal of Gerontology, 1982
Descriptions of task performances by young and old women were judged by young (N=352) and old (N=96) women on Weiner attributions of ability, effort, task difficulty, and luck, and on chronological age. Found age more strongly endorsed for failure of the older, and success of the younger person. (Author/RC)
Descriptors: Achievement, Age Differences, Attitudes, Attribution Theory
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Kuttler, Ami Flam; Parker, Jeffrey G.; La Greca, Annette M. – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, 2002
Used hypothetical vignettes to examine 384 preadolescents' understanding of gossip in varying circumstances. Found that children correctly labeled talk about nonpresent others as gossip and considered it inappropriate. Skepticism was higher for gossip than for firsthand information and was greatest with cues suggesting that speakers were…
Descriptors: Adolescent Attitudes, Age Differences, Attribution Theory, Cognitive Development
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Frieze, Irene Hanson; Snyder, Howard Nelson – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1980
Children from a Catholic elementary school were interviewed to determine what they saw as probable causes for success or failure in four situations: a school testing situation an art project, playing football, and catching frogs. Causal explanations were found to differ across the four situations. (Author/GDC)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Achievement, Age Differences, Attribution Theory
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Ray, Glen E.; Cohen, Robert – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, 2000
Studied 8- and 11-year-olds as evaluators of peer group entry and limited resources. Found older children evaluated peers more positively than did younger for limited resources conflicts. Found all children evaluated the focal peer's intentions during group entry more negatively than intentions during limited resources and evaluated peer responses…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attribution Theory, Childhood Attitudes, Children
McBride, Angela Barron; Austin, Joan Kessner – 1980
The social psychology literature largely ignores attribution patterns made by both sexes of differing generations on an activity with salience for both sexes. "Parenting" is an activity with such salience. In estimating parental success for stimulus situations involving parent-child interactions, undergraduates and their parents were virtually…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attribution Theory, Child Rearing, Factor Analysis
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Kalish, Charles W. – Cognition, 2002
Three experiments explored the conditions under which inductive inferences about people were made by children and adults. Results indicated that children often predicted that people would behave differently in the future than they did in the past. Younger children limited predictions of consistency to non-psychological events. Older children…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Attribution Theory, Behavior Patterns
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Schunk, Dale H.; Rice, Jo Mary – Journal of Experimental Education, 1984
Children with language deficiencies in grades two through four received instruction in listening comprehension. One-half of the children in each grade verbalized explicit strategies prior to applying them to questions. Strategy self-verbalization led to high self-efficacy across grades and promoted performance among third and fourth graders.…
Descriptors: Achievement Gains, Age Differences, Aptitude Treatment Interaction, Attribution Theory
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Metz, Kathleen E. – Cognition and Instruction, 1998
Compared kindergartners', third graders', and undergraduates' understanding and attribution of randomness. Found that kindergartners' interpretations were deterministic or outside the determinancy-indeterminancy frame. Most third graders had some grasp of randomness; their interpretations were less dominated by false attribution of determinism…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attribution Theory, Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis
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Thompson, Ross A. – Developmental Psychology, 1987
Second graders, fifth graders, and college students heard 12 stories that varied systematically by situational domain, outcome, and causal attribution. Students were asked to infer the story character's emotion at the end of the story and give reasons for it. Contributions and limitations of Weiner's attribution-emotion model are assessed in light…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attribution Theory, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Development
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