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Keppler, Lynne – Instructor, 1996
Elementary teachers can use weather folklore to help students explore and discover facts about weather. An experiment with woolly bear caterpillars examines whether their stripes can predict what kind of winter weather there will be. A investigation about moon halos and rain gives students experience setting up investigations based on questions…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Experiential Learning, Folk Culture, Hands on Science
Enderle, Jerry, Ed. – School Planning and Management, 2000
Discusses what education and schools may be like 10 years into the future in school design, community buildings, security, and technology. Forecasts examine how schools will return to their roots in the community, why technology will change the lives of students and teachers, and how security will largely rely on issues of school design and…
Descriptors: Educational Facilities Design, Educational Technology, Elementary Secondary Education, Prediction
Peer reviewedHenry, John W.; Campbell, Constance R. – Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 1999
Examined gender differences in the consistency of attributions over time, general attributional style, and explanations for performance in a college course. Student surveys showed no differences in general attributional style by gender, nor interactions between gender and accuracy in predicting course performance on participants' perceptions of…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attribution Theory, College Students, Higher Education
Peer reviewedHoeksma, Jan B.; Knol, Dirk L. – Multivariate Behavioral Research, 2001
Makes the case that hierarchical linear models or longitudinal multilevel models are a better alternative than standard regression models for empirical tests of predictive developmental hypotheses. Describes a multivariate longitudinal model linking developmental data to a criterion and presents an example from a study of the prediction of infant…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Case Studies, Development, Hypothesis Testing
Tonneau, Francois; Arreola, Fara; Martinez, Alma Gabriela – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2006
In studies of function transformation, participants initially are taught to match stimuli in the presence of a contextual cue, X; the stimuli to be matched bear some formal relation to each other, for example, a relation of opposition or difference. In a second phase, the participants are taught to match arbitrary stimuli (say, A and B) in the…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Cues, Objective Tests, Classical Conditioning
Herrero, Juan; Gracia, Enrique – Journal of Community Psychology, 2004
This article aims to examine determinants of social integration in the community among college students. Two-wave panel data from an undergraduate student sample (N = 310) was used to explore the effects of multiple sets of variables (personal, interpersonal, and situational) on social integration in the community. Structural equation analysis…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Social Integration, Self Esteem, Structural Equation Models
Fischhoff, Baruch; Gonzalez, Roxana M.; Lerner, Jennifer S.; Small, Deborah A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2005
The authors examined the evolution of cognitive and emotional responses to terror risks for a nationally representative sample of Americans between late 2001 and late 2002. Respondents' risk judgments changed in ways consistent with their reported personal experiences. However, they did not recognize these changes, producing hindsight bias in…
Descriptors: Priming, Psychological Studies, Emotional Response, Risk
van de Rijt, Arnout; Macy, Michael W. – Social Forces, 2006
A division of labor is mediated by exchange of valued goods and services. We use social exchange theory to extend this principal to "labors of love." Sexual activity in a close personal relationship seems outside the domain of bargaining and exchange. Nevertheless, we explore the possibility that this most intimate of human relations is influenced…
Descriptors: Evidence, Interpersonal Attraction, Interpersonal Relationship, Sexuality
Chambers, Elisha A.; Schreiber, James B. – Gender and Education, 2004
This study examined the relationship between extracurricular activities and academic achievement for girls with different ethnic backgrounds in eighth and tenth grade. Participants include 4382 American girls (78% Caucasian, 9% Latina, 7% African American and 6% Asian Pacific Islander). It was expected that in-school academic organized activities…
Descriptors: Grade 8, Grade 10, Prediction, Pacific Islanders
Sappington, John; Kinsey, Kimberly; Munsayac, Kirk – Teaching of Psychology, 2002
College students resist required reading assignments. Likewise, faculty are reluctant to quiz on reading assignments for fear of evoking disapproval. Measurement of reading compliance allows instructors to demonstrate a connection between reading preparation and subsequent success on final exams. The first study suggested that self-reports of…
Descriptors: Reading Tests, Reading Assignments, College Students, Teacher Effectiveness
Dorans, Neil J. – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2004
Score equity assessment (SEA) is introduced, and placed within a fair assessment context that includes differential prediction or fair selection and differential item functioning. The notion of subpopulation invariance of linking functions is central to the assessment of score equity, just as it has been for differential item functioning and…
Descriptors: Prediction, Scores, Calculus, Advanced Placement
Shivpuri, Smriti; Schmitt, Neal; Oswald, Frederick L.; Kim, Brian H. – Journal of College Student Development, 2006
College admissions tests predict college performance well, particularly first year grade point average (GPA; Kuncel, Hezlett, & Ones, 2001, 2004). However, noncognitive measures may add to the incremental validity of cognitive measures in that they will assess a broader range of college performance dimensions and reduce racial subgroup differences…
Descriptors: Individual Differences, Academic Achievement, College Entrance Examinations, Grade Point Average
Boseovski, Janet J.; Lee, Kang – Developmental Psychology, 2006
Two experiments examined young children's use of behavioral frequency information to make behavioral predictions and global personality attributions. In Experiment 1, participants heard about an actor who behaved positively or negatively toward 1 or several recipients. Generally, children did not differentiate their judgments of the actor on the…
Descriptors: Experimental Psychology, Prediction, Association (Psychology), Personality Traits
Jansen, Paul G. W.; Vinkenburg, Claartje J. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2006
The authors investigated trends over a 13-year period in the predictive validity of assessment center data for objective career advancement for a sample of 456 academic graduates. Using year of entry and tenure as controls, findings from research into managerial effectiveness and development were confirmed with respect to the importance of…
Descriptors: Prediction, Predictor Variables, Careers, Success
Rai, Roshan; Mitchell, Peter – Child Development, 2006
Do young children appreciate the importance of access to premises when judging what another person knows? In Experiment 1, 5-year-olds (N=31) were sensitive to another person's access to premises when predicting that person's ability to point to a target after eliminating alternatives in a set of 3 cartoon characters. Experiment 2 replicated the…
Descriptors: Inferences, Cartoons, Young Children, Access to Information

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