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Showing 1 to 15 of 23 results Save | Export
Mincey, Barrett; Maldonado, Nancy – Online Submission, 2011
Criminologists, lawmakers, policymakers, educators, and others discuss juvenile delinquency and recidivism and note the relationship to adult offending and cost factors. Poverty, peer relations, family life, and school are risk factors that have been linked to define the problem of juvenile crime. The purpose of this phenomenological study was to…
Descriptors: Recidivism, Sanctions, Delinquency, Residential Programs
Sims, David P. – National Center on Performance Incentives, 2009
Many school accountability programs, including the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act are built on the premise that the threat of sanctions attached to failure will produce higher student achievement. However, the stigma associated with failing schools and the expected costs of possible future sanctions may lead experienced teachers to leave these…
Descriptors: Experienced Teachers, Accountability, Teaching Experience, Secondary Schools
Finnigan, Kara S. – Online Submission, 2005
The study examines the relationship between principal leadership and teacher expectancy within Chicago's accountability context. Current school accountability policies assume that the threat of sanctions will motivate teachers to improve. The study uses expectancy theory, which suggests that any impact on motivation will be constrained by…
Descriptors: Low Achievement, Instructional Leadership, Accountability, Principals
Hofer, Manfred – 1987
Results of four experiments concerning the way young people interpret an intended or expressed sanction (praise or blame) from a teacher are presented. The intention of the four studies was to expose the flaws in Meyer's 1984 attempted explanations of such interpretation, in which sanctions are paradoxically received by the student as an…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Discipline, Sanctions, Secondary Education
Walsh, Kevin; Cowles, Milly – 1984
The act of disciplining children cannot be based upon merely "putting a stop" to negative actions by means of reactionary techniques of control. If educators begin to consider discipline as a major aspect of the educational aim of socialization of children, significant contributions toward their moral and social development will take place.…
Descriptors: Discipline, Elementary Education, Moral Development, Sanctions
Mincey, Barrett; Maldonado, Nancy; Lacey, Candace H.; Thompson, Steve D. – Online Submission, 2007
This qualitative study conducted in urban Miami, Florida, explored the essence of juvenile delinquency and recidivism: its causes, its relations to communities, the roles of families, and the myriad roles of residential treatment programs at rehabilitating young offenders. Data were collected from nine young adult participants who had satisfied…
Descriptors: Young Adults, Residential Programs, Sanctions, Recidivism
McLaughlin, H. James – 1992
Teachers' attempts to establish and maintain authority in their classrooms give rise to one of the essential tensions of teaching: reconciling caring and controlling. This paper examines sociopolitical questions about the nature of classroom authority and the uses of power to understand this tension. The first part presents an overview of the…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Classroom Techniques, Conflict Resolution, Discipline
Liggett, Lee B. – 1980
The courts have established that students have a right to due process when they are suspended from school for disciplinary reasons, since suspension involves depriving the student of his entitlement to an education. When grade reduction is used for punishing absence or tardiness or to discourage unacceptable behavior, must due process also be…
Descriptors: Attendance, Civil Rights, Court Litigation, Discipline Policy
Hyman, Ronald T. – 1993
Opposition to corporal punishment in the United States has increased over the last 2 decades. This paper explores the legal implications of the maltreatment of children in schools, particularly corporal punishment. Despite the general opposition to corporal punishment, several issues must still be resolved. The first of these is one of definition:…
Descriptors: Child Welfare, Compliance (Legal), Corporal Punishment, Discipline Policy
Masel-Walters, Lynne – 1978
In spite of the negative aspects of her determination to be the sole motivator, controller, and martyr for the birth control movement, Margaret Sanger was a positive social force in testing and denouncing the Comstock law. The law, named for Anthony Comstock, a postal inspector who had lobbied Congress to forbid the distribution of obscene…
Descriptors: Censorship, Contraception, Federal Legislation, Females
Anderson, Lee; Finnigan, Kara; Price, Tiffany; Adelman, Nancy; Cotton, Lynyonne; Donnelly, Mary Beth – 2003
This paper presents national 2000-01 data from charter schools and charter-school authorizers in the United States regarding the various stages of the accountability process: the charter application stage, the monitoring stage, and the sanctions stage. The larger accountability context of public schools and its impact on charter schools are also…
Descriptors: Accountability, Charter Schools, Educational Assessment, Educational Policy
Habiby, Raymond – 1988
There are many impediments to the development of political science as a true academic discipline in the Arab world. Each nation has its own ideological and political framework, and freedoms are determined within this framework. To operate outside this framework is considered an attack on the legality of the system and a possible threat to national…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Arabic, Censorship, Faculty
Freeman, James T. – 1981
While the field of forensic psychology has emerged as a recognized discipline, psychologists who work within institutional settings frequently feel frustration in dealing with inmates for whom they have had no responsibility or input during the critical pre-trial, trial and sentencing decision-making process. The roles and ways in which psychology…
Descriptors: Correctional Rehabilitation, Criminal Law, Criminals, Decision Making
Bray, Nathaniel J. – 1999
Calls for greater accountability in higher education have prompted responses from most faculty and administrators that self-regulation is the answer. This paper takes a quantitative approach to examining how administrative behavior is regulated, applying a social control perspective to the issues of sanctioning, detecting, and deterring deviance.…
Descriptors: Administrator Behavior, Administrator Role, Behavior Standards, Codes of Ethics
Mather, John H. – Journal of Podiatric Medical Education, 1979
Some broad problems involved in the assessment of competence in the health professions are defined. They include defining competence, the continuum of health professions education, the process of credentialing, internal/external evaluations, elements of controls on physicians' performance, monitoring process, and maintenance of competence. (MLW)
Descriptors: Accreditation (Institutions), Certification, Competence, Competency Based Education
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