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Yanikoski, Richard – New Directions for Institutional Research, 2004
The author examines why educational leaders are voicing increasing support for attending to the moral, ethical, and civic development of college students and what can be done to enhance these efforts.
Descriptors: Student Development, Administrator Attitudes, Advocacy, College Students
Blumenfeld, Henrike K.; Booth, James R.; Burman, Douglas D. – Brain and Language, 2006
This study used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to examine brain-behavior correlations in a group of 16 children (9- to 12-year-olds). Activation was measured during a semantic judgment task presented in either the visual or auditory modality that required the individual to determine whether a final word was related in meaning to one…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Visual Discrimination, Auditory Discrimination, Neurolinguistics
Jones, Marion; Straker, Katherine – Journal of Education for Teaching: International Research and Pedagogy, 2006
For over a decade, school-based mentoring has been employed as a key strategy in initial teacher training programmes. The diversity apparent in training settings as well as trainees' backgrounds raises questions in relation to the mentoring practice and the knowledge base that underpins it. By adopting a phenomenological, social constructivist…
Descriptors: Mentors, Trainees, Investigations, Teacher Characteristics
Serig, Daniel – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2006
The study of metaphor involves numerous fields in recent history from cognitive neuroscience to linguistics. Visual metaphor research occupies an underrepresented area of inquiry. With the development of the cognitive sciences, a cognitive view of metaphoric thinking is emerging. This calls for a reconsideration of visual metaphor in the…
Descriptors: Art Education, Artists, Exhibits, Visual Arts
Johansson, Roger; Holsanova, Jana; Holmqvist, Kenneth – Cognitive Science, 2006
This study provides evidence that eye movements reflect the positions of objects while participants listen to a spoken description, retell a previously heard spoken description, and describe a previously seen picture. This effect is equally strong in retelling from memory, irrespective of whether the original elicitation was spoken or visual. In…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Pictorial Stimuli, Comparative Analysis, Visual Perception
Gruhn, Wilfried – Psychology of Music, 2004
This article presents a very general survey of tracks and trends in music education research in Germany and its roots in the 19th century, where the beginning of empirical music psychology can be traced back to "Tonpsychologie" and perception research of scholars such as Helmholtz, Stumpf, Wundt, and Wellek. Focus areas that are…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music, Foreign Countries, Child Development
Pellicano, Elizabeth; Maybery, Murray; Durkin, Kevin – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2005
Background: Frith and Happe (1994) describe central coherence (CC) as the normal tendency to integrate individual elements into a coherent whole, a cognitive style which varies in the general population. Individuals with autism are at the extreme (weak) end of the continuum of coherence. There has been debate over whether CC is independent from…
Descriptors: Theory of Mind, Cognitive Style, Rhetoric, Autism
Booth, James R.; Burman, Douglas D.; Meyer, Joel R.; Lei, Zhang; Trommer, Barbara L.; Davenport, Nicholas D.; Li, Wei; Parrish, Todd B.; Gitelman, Darren R.; Mesulam, M. Marsel – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2005
Background: Brain activation differences between 12 control and 12 attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) children (9- to 12-year-olds) were examined on two cognitive tasks during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Method: Visual selective attention was measured with the visual search of a conjunction target (red triangle) in a…
Descriptors: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, Attention, Inhibition, Brain
Crippen, Carolyn L. – Journal of Women in Educational Leadership, 2004
Leadership was characterized as patriarchal and hierarchical during the 19th and early 20th centuries. Pioneer women were often not credited with leadership qualities although many, including school teachers, journalists, suffragettes, healthcare workers, and social activists played an important role in the development of Manitoba communities.…
Descriptors: Females, Leadership Qualities, Autobiographies, Foreign Countries
Davidovitch, Nitza; Danziger, Yosefa – Higher Education in Europe, 2006
This study focuses on the attributes of students of Physical Therapy, and compares the profiles of students of Physical Therapy in two institutions of higher learning in Israel, Ben Gurion University (BGU) and the Academic College of Judea and Samaria (ACJS), Israel's largest public academic college. This study focuses on this department, where…
Descriptors: Student Characteristics, Physical Therapy, Foreign Countries, Comparative Analysis
Mildner, Vesna; Sindija, Branka; Zrinski, Karolina Vrban – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2006
The aim of the study was to analyse speech perception of children with cochlear implants (N=29) and children fitted with traditional hearing aids (N=20). One- and two-syllable words were presented auditorily in a forced choice minimal-pair discrimination task. The children repeated the word and pointed to the appropriate picture presented on…
Descriptors: Assistive Technology, Auditory Perception, Deafness, Articulation (Speech)
Swingley, Daniel – Cognitive Psychology, 2005
Infants parse speech into word-sized units according to biases that develop in the first year. One bias, present before the age of 7 months, is to cluster syllables that tend to co-occur. The present computational research demonstrates that this statistical clustering bias could lead to the extraction of speech sequences that are actual words,…
Descriptors: Infants, Language Acquisition, Statistical Bias, Syllables
Cutter-Mackenzie, Amy; Edwards, Suzy – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2006
In recent years discussions surrounding early childhood curriculum has focused on the movement from developmental to sociocultural theory. A further area worthy of investigation involves the role of content in early childhood education, specifically the relationship between content, context and pedagogy. The paper draws on teacher vignettes to…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Early Childhood Education, Course Content, Context Effect
Maldonado, Hector; Romano, Arturo; Merlo, Emiliano; Freudenthal, Ramiro – Learning & Memory, 2005
Several studies support that stored memories undergo a new period of consolidation after retrieval. It is not known whether this process, termed reconsolidation, requires the same transcriptional mechanisms involved in consolidation. Increasing evidence supports the participation of the transcription factor NF-[Kappa]B in memory. This was…
Descriptors: Molecular Biology, Recall (Psychology), Long Term Memory, Animals
Levy, Yonata – Journal of Child Language, 2004
Williams syndrome (WS) is often cited as the prime example within developmental disorders of the dissociation of language from other cognitive skills, particularly from visuo-motor skills. This claim has been responsible for the challenges posed by this population to cognitive theories and to models of language acquisition. Two Hebrew-speaking…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Developmental Disabilities, Genetics, Language Acquisition

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