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Peer reviewedKelley, Karl N. – NACADA Journal, 1996
A three-stage model of academic probation that addresses cognitive, affective, behavioral, and environmental factors is presented. Stages examine precursors to probation (factors inhibiting student performance), reactions to being placed on probation, and coping strategies that predict long-term consequences. A key assumption is that student…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Advising, Academic Probation, Causal Models
Peer reviewedHamilton, V. Lee; And Others – American Educational Research Journal, 1989
The reasons 184 American and 399 Japanese fifth-graders gave for achievement and good conduct in school were compared. Responses of Japanese children may reflect stronger identification with adult authority. Japanese children gave fewer external reasons for actions than their American counterparts. Implications for the study of motivation are…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Childhood Attitudes, Comparative Analysis, Cross Cultural Studies
Peer reviewedRamsey, Elizabeth; And Others – School Psychology Review, 1989
The parent management practices to which a sample of 80 middle-school boys were exposed was examined. Boys were grouped by school adjustment as: (1) internalizers; (2) antisocials; (3) normals/controls; and (4) externalizers. Implications for parenting and the practice of school psychology are discussed. (SLD)
Descriptors: Antisocial Behavior, Child Rearing, Children, Elementary School Students
Peer reviewedScharmann, Lawrence C. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 1988
Examines the influence of both locus of control and three instructional strategies to foster an understanding of the nature of science. Reports that the nature of science was most predictable for a separate process/content/teaching methods and logical thinking ability was the best predictor of the nature of science. (Author/YP)
Descriptors: College Science, Higher Education, Locus of Control, Logical Thinking
Peer reviewedWehmeyer, Michael L. – Education and Training in Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities, 1994
This study evaluated locus of control orientations, perceptions of efficacy, and outcome expectancies of 282 adolescents with mental retardation and compared them to students with learning disabilities and at-risk students. Subjects were found to hold unrealistic understandings and perceptions of causality and excessively external global…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Attribution Theory, Comparative Analysis, Empowerment
Peer reviewedCelano, Marianne P. – Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 1992
Integrates developmental theory with relevant literature on child sexual abuse to differentiate the concept of internal attribution of responsibility. Presents a typology of eight internal attributions of responsibility; potentially adaptive attributions are distinguished from potentially nonadaptive attributions. Implications for mental health…
Descriptors: Accountability, Adolescents, Attribution Theory, Child Abuse
Peer reviewedMarkstrom-Adams, Carol; Adams, Gerald R. – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 1995
To assess possible differences in psychosocial development between African American, American Indian, Mexican American, and white American male and female adolescents, 123 adolescents in grades 10 through 12 were compared for identity, sex role orientation, and locus of control. Some ethnic differences were found, but there were more similarities.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, American Indians, Analysis of Covariance, Blacks
Peer reviewedKeltikangas-Jarvinen, Liisa; Raikkonen, Katri – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 1990
Dimensions of Type A behavior were studied in 990 healthy Finnish adolescents; and conceptualization was clarified in terms of achievement striving, self-concept, and sense of control. The two independent dimensions identified are discussed in terms of healthy adjustment and social maladjustment. (SLD)
Descriptors: Achievement Need, Adjustment (to Environment), Adolescents, Aggression
Peer reviewedReich, John W.; Zautra, Alex J. – Journal of Social Issues, 1991
The complexity of perceived control is illustrated through the Life Events and Aging Project (LEAP), a 12-occasion assessment of predictors and correlates of the mental health of 246 older adults over nearly 5 years. Constructs of perceived control, internality, and personal mastery should be placed in a transactional framework. (SLD)
Descriptors: Aging (Individuals), At Risk Persons, Bereavement, Coping
Peer reviewedWintre, Maxine Gallander; Crowley, Jeannine M. – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 1993
Consultant preference (familiar or expert adult or peer) of 122 male and 125 female Canadian adolescents was examined in relation to self-concept and locus of control. Results reveal significant interaction among age, sex, and consultant choice as well as among self-worth, locus of control, situation, and consultant choice. (SLD)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Age Differences, Consultants, Familiarity
Perry, Raymond P. – Education Canada, 1999
Bernard Weiner and other motivation researchers have explored what happens to students when they try to explain why they succeed or fail. Causal attributions directly affect motivation and make the difference between helpless and mastery-oriented students. Suggestions are offered to educators to help change the attributions of helpless students…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Elementary Secondary Education, Failure, Helplessness
Peer reviewedSlangen-De Kort, Yvonne A. W.; Midden, Cees J. H.; Aarts, Henk; van Wagenberg, F. – International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 2001
Studied adaptive choice behavior of older, independently living persons faced with complications in their houses. The goal was to gain insight into the coping process and its outcome--in terms of assimilative vs. accommodative strategies--and in the role of three determinants on this process. Determinants were perceived self efficacy, importance…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Coping, Independent Living, Individual Development
Peer reviewedCappella, Elise; Weinstein, Rhona S. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2001
In a national, longitudinal database, factors were examined that enabled public school students on a path toward failure to significantly improve reading achievement by high school graduation. Being Caucasian and female, having an internal locus of control, and taking an academic curriculum independently predicted academic resilience.…
Descriptors: Academic Aspiration, Achievement Gains, Cognitive Restructuring, High School Students
Peer reviewedRing, Mary Milleret; Reetz, Linda – Learning Disabilities Research and Practice, 2000
A survey of 35 middle school students with learning disabilities found that students receiving moderate accommodations and adapted grades attributed their highest grade more to effort than did students receiving minimal accommodations and no adapted grades. Boys attributed the factor of teacher helpfulness significantly higher than girls for…
Descriptors: Academic Accommodations (Disabilities), Academic Achievement, Grading, Individual Power
Peer reviewedBarker-Collo, Suzanne L. – Child Abuse & Neglect: The International Journal, 2001
A survey of 126 female survivors of childhood sexual abuse (n=126) found participants reporting abuse by immediate family members and before age 10 tended make internal attributions of blame when they were children. Reports of childhood internal attributions of blame were significantly predictive of overall adult symptomatology and suicide…
Descriptors: Adults, Age, Attribution Theory, Child Abuse


