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Palfai, Tibor – Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 2004
A number of learning-based interventions for problem drinking have emphasized the importance of behavioral self-control skills to help manage responses to high-risk cues. Self-management interventions typically have been based on the premise that effective self-regulation involves the use of conscious, controlled strategies to override habitual…
Descriptors: Cues, Health Behavior, Alcohol Abuse, Drinking
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Hourihan, Kathleen L.; Taylor, Tracy L. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
On the premise that committing a word to memory is a type of covert action capable of being stopped, this study merged an item-method directed forgetting paradigm with a stop signal paradigm. The primary dependent measure was immediate recall. Indicating that participants were able to countermand the default instruction to remember, there was an…
Descriptors: Models, Recall (Psychology), Retention (Psychology), Memory
Stone, Michael R. – Techniques: Connecting Education and Careers, 2006
In this article, the author talks about gambling and how career and technical education can play a role in gaming education. While the growth of gambling fuels the economy, it can also fuel hidden addiction. Identified by the American Psychiatric Association in its Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of the Mental Disorders as pathological gambling,…
Descriptors: Mental Disorders, Psychopathology, Psychiatry, Consumer Education
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Narvaez, Darcia; Lapsley, Daniel K. – Teacher Educator, 2008
Debating whether or not teachers should teach values addresses the wrong question. Education already is a values-infused enterprise. The larger question is how to train teachers for positive character formation. Two teacher education strategies are presented in this article. A "minimalist" strategy requires teacher educators to make explicit the…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Ethical Instruction, Preservice Teachers, Systems Approach
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Deater-Deckard, Kirby; Petrill, Stephen A.; Thompson, Lee A. – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2007
Background: Individual differences in conduct problems arise in part from proneness to anger/frustration and poor self-regulation of behavior. However, the genetic and environmental etiology of these connections is not known. Method: Using a twin design, we examined genetic and environmental covariation underlying the well-documented correlations…
Descriptors: Twins, Behavior Problems, Persistence, Economically Disadvantaged
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Margetts, Kay – Australian Journal of Early Childhood, 2007
The importance of carefully planned transition programs for children commencing school has been advocated in the literature. These programs should be based on sound principles of transition and reflect the voices of parents, preschool and school staff, and children. A variety of practices exists, and children's participation in transition programs…
Descriptors: Transitional Programs, Gender Differences, Family Characteristics, Child Development
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Flores, Paulette A.; Day, Crystal; Richard, Heather; Horace, Angelique – NHSA Dialog, 2007
Research spanning the fields of social, developmental, and neuropsychology provides cogent and comprehensive evidence that experiences in the very early years of a child's life serve as a foundation for later academic performance, behavior, personality, and social skills. In recent years, researchers have begun to identify complex…
Descriptors: Early Intervention, Mothers, Child Health, Infants
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Tu, Tsunghui; Lash, Martha – Childhood Education, 2007
"Don't tell me no; I tell you no!" is a classic example of a frustrated mother reprimanding her toddler. Certainly, other parents and even teachers of young children experience and/or understand this sentiment as they pursue the slow process of teaching infants and toddlers self-control and self-regulation. This article illuminates how teachers…
Descriptors: Early Intervention, Caregivers, Toddlers, Infants
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Eiden, Rina D.; Edwards, Ellen P.; Leonard, Kenneth E. – Developmental Psychology, 2007
The purpose of this study was to test a conceptual model predicting children's externalizing behavior problems in kindergarten in a sample of children with alcoholic (n = 130) and nonalcoholic (n = 97) parents. The model examined the role of parents' alcohol diagnoses, depression, and antisocial behavior at 12-18 months of child age in predicting…
Descriptors: Role, Kindergarten, Child Rearing, Structural Equation Models
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Marchant, Michelle R.; Solano, Brock R.; Fisher, Adam K.; Caldarella, Paul; Young, K. Richard; Renshaw, Tyler L. – Psychology in the Schools, 2007
There is little research regarding interventions for children with internalizing behaviors in schools, both within classrooms and in nonclassroom environments. In response to this need, a nonclassroom treatment package, consisting of (a) social skills instruction, (b) mediated self-management, and (c) a reinforcement system, was implemented to…
Descriptors: Intervention, Behavior Problems, Self Control, Positive Reinforcement
Honig, Alice Sterling – Brookes Publishing Company, 2010
Research shows that stress in the crucial early years of a child's life can pose dramatic, lasting challenges to development, learning, and behavior. This is the practical book early childhood professionals need to recognize stress in young children--and intervene with proven relief strategies before pressures turn into big problems. Developed by…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Mental Health Workers, Home Visits, Young Children
Young, Susan L. – 1995
The 12 steps of the well-known mutual help group, Alcoholics Anonymous (AA), begin with Step One, admitting powerlessness. Although Step One has helped many problem drinkers and other addicts, its spiritual concepts have been criticized. The possibility of reconceptualizing powerlessness as empowering, not only within AA and its offshoot programs,…
Descriptors: Adults, Alcohol Abuse, Alcoholism, Coping
Mulvihill, Beverly A.; Owen, Margaret Tresch – 1991
This study investigated the relations between different measurements of 33 4-year-olds' compliance and self-control and the relation between the children's cognitive ability and compliance and self-control. The four compliance ratings involved the child's behavior with mother and father in separate puzzle tasks, free play in the child care…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Compliance (Psychology), Context Effect, Parent Child Relationship
Marotz, Barbara – 1983
Three approaches (other than behavioral) for the management of behavior problems in special education are described. Values clarification (attributed to S. G. Simon) is described as a preventative approach emphasizing the student's role in managing him- or herself. Proponents of this approach view many behavior problems as arising from the absence…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Classroom Techniques, Discipline, Elementary Secondary Education
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Kahana, Boaz; Kahana, Eva – Journal of Gerontology, 1975
Several dimensions of impulse control (i.e., delay of gratification, reflectivity, and motor control) were related to intelligence, mental status, and adjustment among 91 institutionalized aged women. The findings suggest that impulse control in its various forms has a consistent and significant relationship with indices of adaptation. (Author)
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Cognitive Tests, Females, Geriatrics
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