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Peer reviewedNeumann, Anna – American Educational Research Journal, 1995
This interpretive case study examined how members of a college culture (faculty and administrators) experienced change related to the entry of a new college president, and how the president himself changed as a result. The relationship between established community members and the new president is explored in five phases. (SLD)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cognitive Processes, College Administration, College Faculty
Peer reviewedSwatton, Peter – Research Papers in Education, 1995
British students completed assessments examining the extent to which they could control variables and ways factors like question format and context affected their test performance. Factors within the questions, rather than skills themselves, led to large variations in facility. Aspects of the questions themselves were the most significant…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Elementary School Students, Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Methods
Peer reviewedSigelman, Carol K.; Waitzman, Kara A. – Child Development, 1991
Children of 5, 9, and 13 years of age were asked to allocate resources in hypothetical situations in which norms of equity, equality, or need were applicable. Young children were insensitive to the contextual information, whereas older children appropriately tailored their decisions to the situation. (BC)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Behavior Standards, Context Effect, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedOddy, Robert N.; And Others – Journal of Documentation, 1992
An understanding of where a user is in a research project (the research script) combined with an understanding of the discourse-level features of empirical abstracts (as revealed by lexical clues) can improve information retrieval. An information retrieval system which takes situational and linguistic factors into account is proposed. (47…
Descriptors: Context Clues, Context Effect, Discourse Analysis, Information Retrieval
Peer reviewedvon Wright, Johan – Learning and Instruction, 1992
The development of reflective processes and the role of self-reflection in learning are examined. It is suggested that analysis of levels of conceptions or psychological processes through the phenomenographic method may clarify the development of metacognitive beliefs. Learning to use metacognitive knowledge and training reflective skills are…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Cognitive Ability, Concept Formation, Context Effect
Peer reviewedCleves, Ivor – Mathematics in School, 1991
A survey of mathematics teachers was conducted to determine the value, advisability, and feasibility of using the workplace as a context for teaching mathematics. Results indicated that of the respondents, few were aware of published materials in this area, most felt that workplace-related materials were relevant and aimed at lower level students,…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Education Work Relationship, Instructional Materials, Mathematical Applications
Wiggins, Grant – Phi Delta Kappan, 1993
Two key assumptions of conventional test design--the compartmentalization of knowledge and the decontextualization of knowing--are false. Because competent performance requires both context and judgment, it is senseless to test for mastery as an unvarying response to unambiguous stimuli. Test-makers must link their tests to the tasks, contexts,…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Elementary Secondary Education, Misconceptions, Performance
Parker, Stephanie A. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1993
Since 1988, National Center for School Leadership at University of Illinois has systematically explored what school leaders can do to enhance classroom teaching and student learning. Articles in this section focus on NCSL findings and illuminate connections between leadership and reform. Researchers assumed leadership is multidimensional, student…
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Context Effect, Cooperation, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedBurnaford, Gail; And Others – Middle School Journal, 1994
Consists of three sections bound together by a common theme and reference list. The first section, by Gail Burnaford, addresses teacher action research as essential for motivating students and giving teachers a voice in curriculum. Section 2, by James Beane, explores common assumptions behind action research and integrative curriculum. Section 3,…
Descriptors: Action Research, Context Effect, Curriculum Development, Educational Environment
Clinchy, Evans – Phi Delta Kappan, 1995
Although one national goal proposes that all Americans will have all knowledge necessary to compete in a global economy and exercise citizenship responsibility, others fail to explain how children incarcerated in standards-driven schools will make sense of the world. The microsociety school approach radically recontextualizes in-school learning by…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Citizenship Responsibility, Context Effect, Democratic Values
Peer reviewedHallett, Michael A.; Rogers, Robert – Evaluation and Program Planning, 1994
This article promotes the use of contextual constructionism in evaluation research. The call for truth in sentencing in Tennessee (and across the country) is used to illustrate the conflict among stakeholders that arises from program evaluation and to show how their multiple realities make a contextual constructionist approach pertinent. (SLD)
Descriptors: Context Effect, Crime, Evaluation Methods, Evaluation Research
Peer reviewedFinegold, M.; Gorsky, P. – International Journal of Science Education, 1991
The consistency, if any, with which force concepts are used by individual students in different, but closely related, contexts was investigated. A total of 534 university and high school students were tested to elicit their beliefs about the forces acting on various objects. Students' beliefs about the forces acting on objects at rest and in…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Context Effect
Peer reviewedAsendorpf, Jens B. – Developmental Psychology, 1990
Analyzed the situational specificity of the differential development of inhibition in three social settings. Inhibition toward strangers was stable during the preschool and kindergarten years, even for an unselected sample of children. Inhibition toward peers showed a lower stability over the same age period, indicating differential and…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Elementary School Students, Factor Structure, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedNelson, F. Howard – International Journal of Educational Reform, 1992
Debunks eight misconceptions concerning U.S.'s alleged "lavish" spending on education in comparison to other countries. The share-of-national-income approach and measures of per pupil spending are frequently misinterpreted and often exclude education need and education resource cost. Nations with an expensive, highly productive labor…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Context Effect, Cost Effectiveness, Economic Factors
Peer reviewedSansone, Carol; Berg, Cynthia A. – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 1993
Describes a model of adaptation to the environment across the life span. Proposes that an individual's performance in an activity is affected not only by cognitive capacity but also by perceptions and definitions of the activity. Empirical support for the model, based on a survey of individuals' everyday experiences and on laboratory studies, is…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Adults, Age Differences, Behavior Change


