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Peer reviewedBellas, Marcia L.; Toutkoushian, Robert K. – Review of Higher Education, 1999
A study using data from 14,614 full-time faculty examined total work hours, research productivity, and allocation of work time among teaching, research, and service. The study found variation in time expenditures and research output influenced by gender, race/ethnicity, and marital/parental status, but findings were also sensitive to definitions…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Definitions, Faculty Publishing, Faculty Workload
Peer reviewedWigle, Stanley E.; Kostelnik, Joyce – Rural Educator, 1999
A survey of 124 African-American high school juniors and seniors in the rural South investigated factors related to interest in teaching as a career. Approximately one-third of participants indicated an interest in teaching; 75% of the rest were interested in health care professions or owning their own business. Nine data tables summarize results.…
Descriptors: Black Students, Career Choice, Family Influence, High School Students
Peer reviewedEvans, Robert J.; Bickel, Robert; Pendarvis, Edwina D. – Gifted Child Quarterly, 2000
A survey of 125 musically gifted adolescents, 123 parents, and 88 teachers found students believed their success was due to inborn ability and hard work, parents attributed their children's musical accomplishments to encouragement provided by family and friends, and teachers attributed students' musical development to innate talent, hard work, and…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Family Influence, Gifted, Locus of Control
Peer reviewedWeir, Kyle N. – Adoption Quarterly, 2000
Examines the developmental, familial, and peer deterrents that form barriers to adoption placement, based on interviews with 17 teen mothers in a residential facility. Analyzes responses based on an Eriksonian developmental model, and notes the role of family "cutoffs" and "re-admissions" and peer pressure as deterrents to…
Descriptors: Adolescent Attitudes, Adolescent Development, Adolescents, Adoption
Peer reviewedCaspard, Pierre – Paedagogica Historica, 1998
Examines the educational system in France, addressing the interests and roles of the family and communals. Evaluates the roles of three major institutional actors that took part in the emergence and organization of the educational systems: (1) the Church; (2) the State; and (3) the industrial bourgeoisie. (CMK)
Descriptors: Church Role, Educational Demand, Educational History, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedFisherkeller, JoEllen – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 1997
Situates three young adolescents in their home, neighborhood, school, and peer cultures and analyzes their uses and interpretations of television contextually. Qualitative differences are found in their everyday learning within television culture as compared with their learning in local culture, although learning about social power across cultures…
Descriptors: Culture, Early Adolescents, Educational Environment, Family Influence
Peer reviewedRandolph, Suzanne; Koblinsky, Sally A.; Roberts, Debra D. – Journal of Negro Education, 1996
Examines the potential influence of family and community variables on the development of children in violent neighborhoods and reviews research on the prevalence and effects of children's exposure to community violence. It presents strategies for developing and empirically testing culturally specific interventions to promote positive developmental…
Descriptors: Black Students, Child Development, Community Influence, Family Influence
Peer reviewedMarjoribanks, Kevin; Mboya, Mzobanzi – Educational Studies, 1997
Examines relationships between environmental contexts, sibling structure, immediate family settings, and students' affective characteristics. Finds that immediate family settings have a stronger effect on student affect than family environmental contexts and that there are gender-related differences in the nature of the relationships between…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Attribution Theory, Children, Emotional Development
Peer reviewedMerkens, Hans; Classen, Gabriele; Bergs-Winkels, Dagmar – Zeitschrift fur Padagogik, 1997
Tests a theoretical model for the constitution of the self among adolescents in a cross-cultural, comparative study. Examines the impact of schools and families, as institutions and networks of interaction, on the self of adolescents. Based on data from three sample surveys from an East/West study of adolescent students. (DSK)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Child Development, Cross Cultural Studies, Educational Environment
Peer reviewedSavage, Hallie E. – Infant-Toddler Intervention: The Transdisciplinary Journal, 1997
Discusses the goals of early intervention for infants born with a cleft or craniofacial anomaly, which include facilitating feeding, counseling the family regarding expectations for growth and development, and identifying the nature and extent of family resources required. Program features of effective intervention are described. (Author/CR)
Descriptors: Child Development, Cleft Palate, Cultural Differences, Early Intervention
Peer reviewedSydow, Debbie L.; Sandel, Robert H. – Community College Journal of Research and Practice, 1998
Describes a study conducted to determine the reasons behind the high rate of student attrition at Mountain Empire Community College in Virginia. Work demands and family conflicts were found to be the primary causes of drop out, conclusions that led to the formation of a task force and a student retention plan to improve persistence. (KC)
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Community Colleges, Family Influence, High Risk Students
Peer reviewedBiblarz, Timothy J.; Raftery, Adrian E. – American Journal of Sociology, 1999
Tracks the relationship between alternative family structures and children's educational and occupational success over four decades (1960s-1990s) using four nationally representative surveys. Addresses the discrepancies observed in the literature on the effects of family structure on children. States that the findings are most consistent with an…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Comparative Analysis, Employment Level, Family Influence
Peer reviewedChase-Lansdale, P. Lindsay; And Others – Child Development, 1994
Examined the parenting practices in 99 young, low-income, African American multigenerational families through home-based observations of grandmothers, young mothers, and the mothers' 3-year-old children. Residence with grandmothers was found to have negative consequences on the quality of both mothers' and grandmothers' parenting. (MDM)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Black Mothers, Blacks, Child Rearing
Peer reviewedCashwell, Craig S. – Journal of Humanistic Education and Development, 1995
Examines the relationship between family cohesion, family adaptability, student satisfaction with family, and self-esteem in 619 middle school students. Analysis indicates that within the specified model, family satisfaction was the strongest predictor of student self-esteem, and that eighth- grade students reported a significantly lower level of…
Descriptors: Early Adolescents, Family Environment, Family Influence, Grade 6
Peer reviewedHenry, Bill; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1996
Examined the relations between family characteristics, childhood temperament, and convictions for violent and nonviolent offenses at age 18. Found that family factors were associated with both violent and nonviolent offenses, whereas childhood temperament was associated primarily with convictions for violent offenses. Results suggest potentially…
Descriptors: Adolescent Attitudes, Adolescents, Antisocial Behavior, At Risk Persons


