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Emmons, Christine L.; Baskerville, Ruth – Journal of Education for Students Placed at Risk, 2005
In a national education climate where change is the only constant, Norman S. Weir Elementary School has maintained and expanded the reform efforts that have resulted in striking academic achievement and improved school climate. Despite changes in administration and staffing, a highly professional and committed staff has continued the…
Descriptors: Social Development, Educational Change, Academic Achievement, Educational Improvement
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Lichten, William – Developmental Review, 2004
The law of intelligence is presented in test independent form. Mental abilities, physical brain size, and infant motor capacity follow the same law of growth from birth to adolescence. Mental growth is independent of race, "SES" or the Flynn effect. The vitality of the mental age scale calls for a reexamination of Wechsler's deviation IQ. This…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Cognitive Ability, Intelligence Quotient, Brain
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Fleming, James J.; Overstreet, Dawn V.; Chappe, Stephanie L. – Current Issues in Catholic Higher Education, 2006
The "Boston College Questionnaire about the Undergraduate Experience" (BCQ)" arose from a growing need to gather reliable evidence about the impact of the undergraduate experience on students who attend Catholic colleges and universities in the United States. Although abundant sources of data exist that tell us who our students are when they…
Descriptors: Questionnaires, Undergraduate Students, Student Experience, Catholic Schools
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Wray, Jo – Developmental Science, 2006
Cardiac disease is the most common congenital defect in children, affecting between 3 and 10 in every 1000 live births. While significant advances in medical and surgical management have resulted in increasing numbers of survivors, it is also recognized that there is a growing population of children living with neurological impairment and lowered…
Descriptors: Neurological Impairments, Heart Disorders, Infants, Adolescents
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Huang, Yi-Ching – Educational Research and Reviews, 2007
The purpose of this qualitative research was to understand the perceptions of Taiwanese teachers of the effects of a study group on their professional growth in the workplace. This case study employed the following data collection techniques: (1) informal observations and interviews, (2) focus group interview, (3) semi-structured individual…
Descriptors: High Schools, Females, Focus Groups, Clubs
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Magolda, Marcia B. Baxter – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2007
Innovative educational practice reveals the secrets to enabling complex learning and self-authorship.
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Theory Practice Relationship, Higher Education, Self Actualization
Urch, Kakie – 1995
The violence of any literacy acquisition in the contact zone between the powered, the disempowered, and the empowered is never clearcut. But, nevertheless, calls to theory literacy from the late 70s and early 80s have been answered with a rush. Michael Berube writes that "graduate school in English seems to have a very bad effect on people…
Descriptors: English Departments, Graduate Students, Graduate Study, Higher Education
Paulston, Rolland G.; Liebman, Martin – 1992
This essay demonstrates how the creation of cognitive maps by academics, as well as those individuals and social groups who want their "mininarratives" included in social discourses, will move social research away from modernist and positivist failings, and open a dialogue among diverse social players. Cognitive maps are visual imageries depicting…
Descriptors: Cognitive Mapping, Cultural Influences, Higher Education, Intellectual Development
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Williams, David L. – Science and Children, 1975
Stresses the importance of learner involvement, and adult patience and understanding, for a child's success in learning and consequently in living. (EB)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Discovery Learning, Elementary Education, Intellectual Development
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Gaitnotti, G.; And Others – Linguistics, 1975
Results of a verbal sound and meaning discrimination test to check the hypothesis of Alajouanine et al.--that two types of paraphasics can be distinguished, phonemic and semantic--are discussed. The former are impaired in tests of auditory language discrimination, the latter show regression of the semantic values apparent in their linguistic…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Auditory Perception, Comprehension, Intellectual Development
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Luria, A. R. – Linguistics, 1975
Considering Jakobson's theory that speech disorders involve defects in paradigmatic or in syntagmatic operations, and that these two categories result in different defects, this question was examined: does the syntagmatic group suffer from defects not only in contextual generation of active speech but also in comprehension of grammatical…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Auditory Perception, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension
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Renner, John W.; Lawson, Anton E. – Journal of College Science Teaching, 1975
Describes an investigation undertaken to evaluate whether or not the Purdue experimental program, through its concrete curricular materials and inquiry-oriented procedures, had been successful in promoting formal reasoning abilities in its students. Results indicated that concrete curricular materials and problems can promote the development of…
Descriptors: College Science, Curriculum Development, Educational Research, Higher Education
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Crockett, Bruce K.; And Others – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1975
Children were tested on the WPPSI and Stanford-Binet and after three years they were tested on the WISC. Results indicate that the WISC scores were significantly higher than the two other tests. The results of the various subtests of the three tests are compared and discussed. (SE)
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Processes, Disadvantaged Youth, Enrichment Activities
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Lawson, Anton E.; And Others – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 1975
Showed that Piagetian measures of formal reasoning ability are significantly related to achievement, aptitude, and knowledge of the processes of science in a sample of college freshman and sophomore elementary education majors. (MLH)
Descriptors: Achievement, College Science, Educational Research, Higher Education
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Schwartz, Judah L. – National Elementary Principal, 1975
By analyzing analogy questions, supports the notion that ability tests can predict school achievement because the two types of testing are very similar. (DW)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Elementary Secondary Education, Intellectual Development, Intelligence
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