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Soliday, Elizabeth; Garofalo, John P.; Rogers, Debra – Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, 2004
The effects of a widely used expressive writing intervention on adolescents' somatic symptoms, distress, and positive psychological functioning were evaluated. Eighth-grade (n = 106) students were randomly assigned to write about either an emotional or a neutral topic for 3 consecutive days. Students completed measures of somatic symptoms, medical…
Descriptors: Grade 8, Psychological Patterns, Essays, Adolescents
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Schwartz, Robert M. – Reading Teacher, 2005
Guided reading lessons are a powerful context for beginning reading instruction, particularly for children who struggle with initial literacy learning. Providing immediate responses to students' oral reading of partially familiar texts requires teachers to make complex and highly skilled decisions. This decision process is based on knowledge of…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Elementary School Students, Teaching Methods, Beginning Reading
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Selby, Jane – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, 2004
It is impossible to teach well or conduct good research without some personal sense of involvement. Without attending to these apparently extraneous emotional aspects our work is impoverished. At the same time it is the needs of indigenous peoples as subjects in research and teaching which are paramount. The author touches on the relevance of…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Intercultural Communication, Teacher Researchers, Emotional Response
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Jones, Diane Carlson; Newman, Jodi Burrus; Bautista, Shenna – Social Development, 2005
This research examined the effects of three factors (friendship, gender, and topic of teasing) on adolescents' predicted emotional reactions to hypothetical teasing episodes regarding appearance and academic competence. The 8th graders (n = 131) in Study 1 made predictions regarding the negative emotions and humor experienced when teasing occurred…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Early Adolescents, Friendship, Humor
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Martin, Rebecca M.; Green, James A. – Social Development, 2005
Mothers' emotion talk, children's emotion talk, and children's understanding of emotion were examined in 50 mother-child dyads at 41 months. Language measures included total emotion words, unique emotion words, labels, explanations, and different types of explanations. Children's emotion understanding was assessed for labeling, situation, and…
Descriptors: Mothers, Females, Preschool Children, Males
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Edwards, Dana; Gfroerer, Kelly; Flowers, Claudia; Whitaker, Yancey – Professional School Counseling, 2004
Previous research using adult subjects suggests that social interest affects an individual's coping resources. The purpose of this research was to examine empirically the relationship of social interest and coping skills in young children. Data collected from 127 elementary students were used to test a structural equation model that examined the…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Social Influences, School Counselors, Self Confidence
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Sadler, Troy D. – Journal of Biological Education, 2005
Evolutionary theory serves as the fundamental cornerstone to all life science; yet students frequently possess misconceptions regarding evolution or resist learning the idea altogether. This study, which emerged from a larger project focused on informal reasoning, explores how college students' conceptions of evolutionary theory affect their…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), Evolution, Genetics, Biology
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Huttunen, Rauno; Heikkinen, Hannu L. T. – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2004
In this article, the processes of recognition within education are discussed. Frequently, recognition is reduced to polite behaviour or etiquette. Another narrow view of recognition is, behaviouristically speaking, to regard it as mere feedback. We claim that authentic recognition is a different matter. Receiving recognition, as Charles Taylor has…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Educational Practices, Professional Recognition, Attitudes
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McDowell, Liz; White, Su; Davis, Hugh C. – European Journal of Engineering Education, 2004
Assessment in engineering disciplines is typically oriented to demonstrating competence in specific tasks. Even where assessments are intended to have a formative component, little priority may be given to feedback. Engineering departments are often criticized, by their students and by external quality reviewers, for paying insufficient attention…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Student Evaluation, Formative Evaluation, Program Effectiveness
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Watson, Kathy; Baranowski, Tom; Thompson, Debbe – Health Education Research, 2006
Perceived self-efficacy (SE) for eating fruit and vegetables (FV) is a key variable mediating FV change in interventions. This study applies item response modeling (IRM) to a fruit, juice and vegetable self-efficacy questionnaire (FVSEQ) previously validated with classical test theory (CTT) procedures. The 24-item (five-point Likert scale) FVSEQ…
Descriptors: Self Efficacy, Ethnic Groups, Questionnaires, Likert Scales
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El-Sheikh, Mona – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2005
Background: Children's emotional responses and physiological reactivity to conflict were examined as mediators and moderators in the associations between exposure to parental marital conflict and child adjustment and cognitive problems. Method: One hundred and eighty elementary school children participated. In response to a simulated argument,…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Females, Emotional Response, Family Characteristics
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Jenvald, Johan; Morin, Magnus – Simulation & Gaming, 2004
The article presents an approach to emergency response training that combines simulation of hazardous environmental factors with extensive registration of the activities in a training scenario. Simulation enhances realism by exposing the trainees to representations of hazards without putting them at risk. Registration generates data that describe…
Descriptors: Emergency Programs, Foreign Countries, Training Methods, Simulation
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Alexander, Helen; Macdonald, Elspeth; Paton, Sandra – Children & Society, 2005
Previous studies suggest that around 30 per cent of children may witness domestic abuse, by which we mean physical or mental violence perpetrated by men on women. This paper reports the views of older children--a group from which there is little direct evidence available. Ninety-eight percent of pupils in a Scottish Secondary School consented to…
Descriptors: Adolescent Attitudes, Secondary School Students, Family Violence, Foreign Countries
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Gentzler, Amy L.; Contreras-Grau, Josefina M.; Kerns, Kathryn A.; Weimer, Barbara L. – Social Development, 2005
Parent-child communication regarding children's negative emotions and coping were examined in a sample of 75 5th graders (53% boys) and their mothers and fathers. We predicted that emotionally open communication between a parent and his or her child would be related to children's use of constructive coping strategies. Parents reported on how they…
Descriptors: Mothers, Coping, Grade 5, Fathers
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Barrett, M. Scott; Bornsen, Susan E.; Erickson, Sheri L.; Markey, Vern; Spiering, Kerri – Communication Teacher, 2005
Although large class sizes are nothing new, they are becoming more widespread, even though many studies show affective, cognitive, and behavioral learning decreases as the physical distance between students and instructor increases; moreover, immediacy, defined as the directness of interaction between people, is also often diminished as class size…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Class Size, Student Attitudes, Interaction
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