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Allen B. Pope Jr. – ProQuest LLC, 2020
This study examined resource high school students' self-concept and the effect that it has on academic achievement in a rural school district in low country South Carolina. This study examined the self-concept model of the Piers-Harris 3. In the Piers Harris 3 model, the researcher examined six self-concept domains. These six self-concept domains…
Descriptors: High School Students, Self Concept, Academic Achievement, Rural Schools
Shechtman, Zipora; Silektor, Anat – Roeper Review, 2012
This study, conducted in Israel, examined the social and emotional difficulties of gifted children, in comparison with nongifted children. The gifted children were further compared in two educational settings: segregated classes and pull-out programs. The 974 participants were from the fifth to twelfth grades. The dependent variables included…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Foreign Countries, Empathy, Interpersonal Competence
van der Meulen, Rachel T.; van der Bruggen, Corine O.; Spilt, Jantine L.; Verouden, Jaap; Berkhout, Maria; Bögels, Susan M. – Child & Youth Care Forum, 2014
Background: Gifted children learn differently compared to their peers in several ways. However, their educational needs are often not met in regular schools, which may result in underachievement and social-emotional and behavioral problems. A pullout program, the "Day a Week School" (DWS), was offered to gifted children in 25 elementary…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Academically Gifted, Resource Room Programs, Elementary School Students

Yauman, Beth E. – Learning Disability Quarterly, 1980
The study investigated the relatonship between degree or extent of special education participation and measured self-concept with 45 third-grade male students divided into three groups (students in self-contained LD classes, students provided individual tutoring, and a control group of students from regular classes). (Author/PHR)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Learning Disabilities, Mainstreaming, Males

Sheare, Joseph B. – Psychology in the Schools, 1978
Experimental group consisted of learning disabled children in regular classes with resource room interventions. Control group consisted of non-learning disabled children stratified by sex and classrooms. The resource based program did not result in significant changes in either self-concept or peer acceptance after one year for the LD group.…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Learning Disabilities, Peer Acceptance

Coleman, J. Michael – Learning Disability Quarterly, 1983
Self-concept scores of 138 mildly handicapped preadolescents in resource or self-contained settings were compared to those of 46 regular class students whose teachers endorsed the need for special education. Relatively higher scores were found for special education students, suggesting beneficial social effects of partial instructional…
Descriptors: Labeling (of Persons), Mild Disabilities, Mother Attitudes, Peer Relationship

Williams, Sol – School Arts, 1981
Outlines the benefits of using art activities with special education students. Part of a theme issue on art for special needs students. (SJL)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Body Image, Disabilities, Elementary Secondary Education
Svec, Henry – 1984
To investigate self-concept, 50 learning disabled adolescents from a regular high school who were receiving resource room assistance were given the Situation Specific Subject Competence Test for self-concept. Their scores were compared with 50 learning disabled adolescents from a self-contained program. The adolescents from the self-contained…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Learning Disabilities, Mainstreaming, Resource Room Programs
Head, Daniel N. – Education of the Visually Handicapped, 1979
Self-concept scores from 62 blind and low-vision adolescents were compared across the predominant class placements for the visually impaired (residential, resource room, itinerant). (Author/CL)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Blindness, Exceptional Child Research, Mobile Clinics

Vaughn, Vicki L.; And Others – Gifted Child Quarterly, 1991
A meta-analysis was conducted on nine experimental studies dealing with pull-out programs for gifted students in grades one through nine. Results indicate that pull-out programs in gifted education have significant positive effects on achievement, critical thinking, and creativity, but not on student self-concept. (Author/JDD)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Creativity, Critical Thinking, Elementary Secondary Education

Bourque, Joanne; Li, Anita K. F. – Canadian Journal of Special Education, 1987
Sixty gifted students (ages 9-11) were studied to identify differences in perceived competence, social adjustment, and peer relations between those in regular classrooms and those in segregated settings. Regular-classroom subjects reported greater perceived cognitive competence while segregated subjects were rated more positively by their teachers…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Elementary Education, Gifted, Interpersonal Competence
Morrison, Gale M. – Learning Disabilities Research, 1985
The self-perceptions of students were compared to parallel ratings by their teachers for four groups of subjects: 69 nondisabled, 18 learning-disabled-resource room, 25 learning-disabled-resource room, and 33 learning-disabled special class students. Results varied according to which teacher and students, which setting, and which aspect of self…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Disabilities, Mainstreaming, Resource Room Programs
Pearl, Linda F. – Techniques, 1987
Toward Affective Development (TAD), a 191-lesson program designed to stimulate psychological and affective development for third- through sixth-graders, can be used in special education, resource rooms, and remedial settings. TAD's five sections encompass: openness to experience, effects of emotions, group dynamics, individuality, and conflict…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Curriculum, Disabilities, Humanistic Education

Albinger, Peggy – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1995
This qualitative study analyzed unstructured, open-ended interviews with 11 children in grades 1 through 6 identified as having specific learning disabilities. Analysis suggested that the children fabricated stories about where they went during resource time, not being able to read, and being called names and feeling bad about themselves.…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Interviews, Labeling (of Persons), Learning Disabilities

Forman, Ellice Ann – Learning Disability Quarterly, 1988
The effects of social support and school placement on 51 learning-disabled elementary and secondary students were assessed. Students with higher levels of perceived social support scored higher in general self-worth, athletic competence, scholastic competence, and behavioral conduct than students with fewer social supports. School placement was…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Friendship, Helping Relationship, Learning Disabilities
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