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Budd, John M. – Library Quarterly, 2006
Criticisms of library and information science (LIS) research abound and most focus on method, in the broad sense. This article examines the discourse on LIS from the standpoint of rhetoric and argument. Rhetorical and argumentative strategies are used in almost all formal communication, and these strategies themselves communicate purpose and point…
Descriptors: Information Science Education, Persuasive Discourse, Information Science, Library Research
Herbert-Cheshire, Lynda; Higgins, Vaughan – Journal of Rural Studies, 2004
Rural development policy and practice in the "advanced" Western nations is based increasingly on community-led strategies that seek to manage risk and facilitate change at the local level with minimal direct state intervention. It is widely assumed that such development strategies enable local people to have a greater say in transforming…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Rural Development, Risk, Governance
Callanan, Maureen A. – Child Development, 2006
Harris and Koenig make a compelling case for the importance of adult "testimony" and its influence on children's developing conceptions of topics in science and religion. This commentary considers how their analysis relates to constructivist and sociocultural theories and discusses several ways in which Harris and Koenig's arguments help to debunk…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Sciences, Religion, Constructivism (Learning)
Westen, Drew; Weinberger, Joel – American Psychologist, 2005
This paper presents replies to comments published by M. S. Schulz and R. J. Waldinger, J. M. Wood and M. T. Nezworski, and H. N. Garb and W. M. Grove on the original article by D. Westen and J. Weinberger. Schulz and Waldinger (2005) make the important point that just as researchers can capitalize on the knowledge of experienced clinical observers…
Descriptors: Clinical Psychology, Psychometrics, Clinical Experience, Evaluation Research
Ryan, Thomas G. – International Journal of Testing, 2006
Arguably, performance assessment is an integral element of all human educative endeavors. It is the centerpiece of the standards-based reforms movement of the 1990s and continues to be a dominant feature of curriculum planning today. Using performance assessment as a lens, this article addresses the concerns and cautions offered by seminal…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Performance Based Assessment, Criticism, Academic Achievement
Chajut, Eran; Lev, Shlomo; Algom, Daniel – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2005
The Stroop effect is psychology's classic measure gauging the selectivity of attention to individual attributes of complex stimuli. The emotional Stroop effect gauges the influence on behavior of threat and emotional stimuli. The former taps central/executive processes abstracted from particular stimulus contexts, whereas the latter taps automatic…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Visual Learning, Measures (Individuals), Visual Discrimination
Ohanian, Susan – School Administrator, 2005
George Packer, a New Yorker staff writer, points to the danger of clarity, observing that seemingly simple and tough-minded words blow out as much smoke as the jargon of the Pentagon of decades past. Nowhere is this smoke thicker and trickier than in the lingo the corporate-politico-media squad uses when talking about public schools. At first…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Public Schools, Criticism, Public School Teachers
Watras, Joseph – American Educational History Journal, 2004
Seeking to distance themselves from the educational patterns they dislike, some contemporary advocates of academic studies overlooked an important problem that they share with the progressives they criticize. For example, Diane Ravitch blamed the absence of academics in schools on what she called the progressive educators' efforts to provide…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Progressive Education, Relevance (Education), Student Interests
Van Heertum, Richard – Policy Futures in Education, 2006
Critique of the current order of things is a necessary starting point for any project for radical change. Without an analysis of what is wrong, it is hard to convince anyone that change is necessary. And yet critique alone rarely inspires people to act. We need something to fight for as well as against. The article looks at the centrality of hope…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Consciousness Raising, Change Strategies, Social Change
Finke, Laurie; Johnson, Barbara; Leitch, Vincent B.; McGowan, John; Williams, Jeffrey J. – College English, 2003
Literature anthologies are part of the furniture of English departments. Like the putty or gunmetal-gray file cabinet that one might have gotten new or used, they are not a showpiece of academic decor, but it would be hard to imagine work spaces without them. Indeed, they are omnipresent, amassed on the shelves of campus bookstores, weighing down…
Descriptors: Literature Appreciation, Anthologies, English Departments, Literary Criticism
Shaw, Daniel Joseph – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2001
Arguably, the profoundest classical treatment of literary truth, and by extension, of truth in the arts, can be found in Aristotle's "Poetics." But as the writings of two twentieth-century theorists show, Aristotle's insights can be taken in very different ways. In this essay, the author contrasts John Hospers's anti-cognitivist reading of…
Descriptors: Semantics, Internet, Ethics, Authors
Garrett, Richard – EDUCAUSE Quarterly, 2004
In February 2000, with much fanfare, the British government announced funding of 62 million British Pounds ($113 million) for a national, commercial e-university called United Kingdom e-University (UKeU). The initiative was touted as an innovative response to the perceived opportunities and threats of online higher education--in the form of U.S.…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Student Recruitment, Electronic Learning
Risner, Doug – Research in Dance Education, 2002
This article explores the ways in which gay male presence and contribution to dance education in the US is minimised in order to legitimate male participation and to gain wider social acceptance of dance. Current muted discourses regarding homosexuality in dance pedagogy are not only shortsighted, but also unwittingly reproduce narrow stereotypes…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Criticism, Group Unity, Homosexuality
Strain, Phillip S.; Joseph, Gail E. – Journal of Positive Behavior Interventions, 2004
The field of early intervention has long been involved in a heated debate between proponents of behavioral teaching strategies and professionals against it. This debate has become more focused and clearly more relevant to the quality of services afforded to young children with special needs because more of these youngsters are being served in…
Descriptors: Early Intervention, Young Children, Positive Reinforcement, Special Needs Students
Ginsburg, Golda S.; Siqueland, Lynne; Masia-Warner, Carrie; Hedtke, Kristina A. – Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 2004
Accumulating evidence indicates that family/parenting behaviors are associated with the etiology of anxiety disorders in children. This article critically reviews what is known about how family/parenting behaviors have been measured in this literature and presents findings from studies examining the relation between family/parenting constructs and…
Descriptors: Family Involvement, Child Rearing, Etiology, Anxiety

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