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Showing 1 to 15 of 27 results Save | Export
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Ashley Rila; Allison L. Bruhn; Alex Pauls – Preventing School Failure, 2025
High rates of teacher praise are associated with positive student outcomes (Royer et al., 2019). Research shows secondary teachers deliver more reprimands than praise (e.g. Floress et al. 2022). Performance feedback (PF) is a strategy used to change teacher behaviors. However, it is unknown if PF targeting praise and reprimands for secondary…
Descriptors: Literature Reviews, Feedback (Response), Intervention, Secondary School Teachers
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Holly R. Weisberg; Christina M. Alaimo; Emily A. Jones – Journal of Developmental and Physical Disabilities, 2025
Sibling relationships may be strained when one sibling is diagnosed with autism and the other is not. The way that siblings interact during play is one indicator of the quality of this relationship. Non-autistic siblings have been taught to encourage play in their autistic siblings, but there is limited literature examining the impact of…
Descriptors: Siblings, Sibling Relationship, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Play
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Sofia Benson-Goldberg; Karen A. Erickson – Perspectives of the ASHA Special Interest Groups, 2025
Purpose: Speech-language pathologists often use praise during intervention to encourage children and manage behaviors. Praise is often believed to promote improved performance. Unfortunately, it is unlikely that praise leads to improved performance, especially during language intervention provided during therapy sessions. Given the widespread use…
Descriptors: Positive Reinforcement, Language Usage, Speech Language Pathology, Speech Therapy
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Kaci Ellis; Nicholas A. Gage; Ashley S. MacSuga-Gage; Carla Schmidt; Holly Lane; Ann Serpahine – Psychology in the Schools, 2025
Performance feedback has been shown to improve teachers' classroom management skills. Typically, a researcher provides the performance feedback, not school-based personnel. Therefore, we investigated the effects of performance feedback on classroom management skills when the feedback is delivered by school-based personnel. We used a concurrent…
Descriptors: Coaching (Performance), Performance, Feedback (Response), Elementary School Teachers
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Guichun Jin; Qiangqiang Wang; Jie Lei; Yu Chen; Shengmin Liu – Psychology in the Schools, 2025
This study aimed to investigate the relationship between effort-reward imbalance and learning engagement and the chain mediating role of academic self-concept and burnout in this relationship. A total of 1030 adolescent students were assessed via the Effort-Reward Imbalance for Learning Scale, the General Academic Self Scale for Adolescents, the…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Learner Engagement, Achievement Gains, Self Efficacy
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Keru Li; Yanyan Li; Yansu Wang; Yunshan Chen; Wanqing Hu – Instructional Science: An International Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2025
The study examined the influence of feedback features on revision uptake in dialogic peer feedback activities, and the moderating effect of self-efficacy and prior knowledge on this relationship. Data were collected over a 10-week course at a comprehensive university in China, involving 29 students and resulting in 242 revision-oriented comments.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Peer Evaluation, Feedback (Response)
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Kristy Hynes; Tracy Gershwin; Jason Robinson; Chrissa Mitchell – Beyond Behavior, 2025
Meaningful student-teacher relationships form a crucial foundation for teachers to deliver effective interventions leading to better outcomes for students with challenging behavior. By implementing simple recommendations for facilitating genuine and intentional interactions with students and regulating their own emotional responses, teachers can…
Descriptors: Teacher Student Relationship, Interaction, Behavior Problems, Student Behavior
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Martha Buell; Stephanie Kuntz – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2025
Decades of research has documented the negative effects of physical punishment, including spanking (Heilmann et al., 2021). Since 1998, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) has endorsed the use of time out from positive reinforcement (TO) as an alternative to corporal punishment (Sege et al., 2018). Despite urging at the federal level…
Descriptors: Child Care, Certification, Punishment, Positive Reinforcement
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Christopher Barton Merica – Strategies: A Journal for Physical and Sport Educators, 2025
The purpose of this article is to share Coach Vermeil's foundational commonsense coaching principles for youth sports coaches, and more broadly health and physical educators, to help create a more positive culture for their team.
Descriptors: Athletic Coaches, Coaching (Performance), Teamwork, Physical Education Teachers
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Suping Liu; Lixin Ren – Prevention Science, 2025
Parental emotion socialization is crucial to children's development, yet emotion-focused parenting programs are scarce in non-Western contexts. In this study, we developed a four-week emotion-focused parenting program based on the principles of emotion coaching for Chinese families with preschool-aged children. This program integrated parent group…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Preschool Children, Parents, Parent Child Relationship
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Joseph Calvin Gagnon; Sungur Gurel; Brian R. Barber; David E. Houchins; Holly B. Lane; Erica D. McCray; Richard G. Lambert – Journal of Emotional and Behavioral Disorders, 2025
To address instructional challenges and poor academic outcomes of youth in juvenile correctional facilities (JCFs), we must understand how and why some teachers are effective and why students are responsive to instruction in these settings. We observed and coded teacher--student instructional interactions from 733 fifteen-minute classroom reading…
Descriptors: Correctional Education, Delinquency, Males, Students
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Hajimu Hayashi; Ayumi Matsumoto; Minehiro Akagawa – European Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2025
This study examined the development of the evaluation of praise that differs in congruence between what the praiser is praising (i.e. effort or ability) and what led the recipient to succeed. Children aged 7 and 8 years (second graders) and 10 and 11 years (fifth graders), as well as adults, made emotional and motivational evaluations about…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Students, Grade 2, Grade 5
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Nazarana Mather; Liesl Scheepers – Turkish Online Journal of Distance Education, 2025
Feedback is one of the most powerful tools for teaching and learning. Providing meaningful feedback to students is of particular importance in an online context as it is a direct way for the facilitator to engage with their students and to provide them with individual, tailored support. This study sought to explore the perceptions of online…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Private Colleges, Facilitators (Individuals), Online Courses
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Linnea Waade Biermann; Anne Sofie Borsch; Nina Langer Primdahl; Signe Smith Jervelund; An Verelst; Ilse Derluyn; Morten Skovdal – Social Psychology of Education: An International Journal, 2025
Learning a new language is a challenge facing most young immigrants and refugees arriving in a new resettlement country. Yet, learning the resettlement country language is critical for the young immigrants and refugees' life chances, in terms of future education, social integration, and participation in the labour market. While literature…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Second Language Learning, Adolescents, Immigrants
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Michael Fowler – Journal of Political Science Education, 2025
Wargames and crisis simulations can be useful pedagogical tools when deliberately used. This paper explores the spectrum of pedagogical objectives; what use are wargames for learning? What types of objectives can they explore? How do you align the learning objectives with the right type of game? The paper leverages Bloom's Taxonomy of learning as…
Descriptors: College Students, College Faculty, Educational Games, Computer Games
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