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Hellman, Chan M.; Fuqua, Dale R.; Worley, Jody – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2006
The Survey of Perceived Organizational Support (SPOS) is a unidimensional measure of the general belief held by an employee that the organization is committed to him or her, values his or her continued membership, and is generally concerned about the employee's well-being. In the interest of efficiency, researchers are often compelled to use a…
Descriptors: Reliability, Generalization, Employee Attitudes, Beliefs
O'Rourke, Norm – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2004
The Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression (CES-D) Scale is among the most commonly used measures of depressive symptomatology. Despite this, a paucity of research has been undertaken to examine the psychometric properties of responses to this scale. This meta-analytic study examined previously published studies of caregiving to identify…
Descriptors: Measures (Individuals), Psychometrics, Generalization, Depression (Psychology)
Yoder, Janice D.; Kahn, Arnold S. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2003
We challenge researchers to consider sex and gender as a marker for possible social contextual differences. Disappointed by both philosophical and empirical attempts to find coherence in research making gender comparisons, we selectively review studies showing both context-specific similarities between women and men where overall comparisons found…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Social Environment, Gender Differences, Intervention
Kohnert, Kathryn – Brain and Language, 2004
Two consecutive treatments were conducted to investigate skill learning and generalization within and across cognitive-linguistic domains in a 62-year-old Spanish-English bilingual man with severe non-fluent aphasia. Treatment 1 was a cognitive-based treatment that emphasized non-linguistic skills, such as visual scanning, categorization, and…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Bilingualism, Generalization, Skill Development
Leenen, Iwin; Van Mechelen, Iven – Psychometrika, 2004
This paper proposes a multidimensional generalization of Coombs' (1964) parallelogram model for "pick any/'n'" data, which result from each of a number of subjects having selected a number of objects (s)he likes most from a prespecified set of "n" objects. In the model, persons and objects are represented in a low dimensional space defined by a…
Descriptors: Intervals, Simulation, Mathematical Models, Data Analysis
Daly, Edward J., III; Chafouleas, Sandra M.; Persampieri, Michael; Bonfiglio, Christine M.; LaFleur, Kristy – Journal of Behavioral Education, 2004
The purpose of the current study was to examine blending and segmenting of phonemes as an instance of small, textual response classes that students learn to combine to produce whole word reading. Using an A/B/A/B design, a phoneme segmenting and blending condition that included differential reinforcement for response classes at the level of…
Descriptors: Phonemes, Emergent Literacy, Behavior Modification, Generalization
Luhmann, Christian C.; Ahn, Woo-kyoung – Psychological Review, 2005
This paper comments on the response offered by Cheng and Novick to Luhmann and Ahn's initial comments on Cheng's and Cheng and Novick's previous articles. Cheng and Novick argue that people's willingness to generalize across contexts contradicts our hypothesis. They argue that previous studies demonstrate that participants generalize their…
Descriptors: Criticism, Reader Response, Generalization, Hypothesis Testing
Hall, D. Geoffrey; Belanger, Julie – Developmental Science, 2005
An important source of information about a new word's meaning (and its associated lexical class) is its range of reference: the number of objects to which it is extended. Ninety toddlers (mean age = 37 months) participated in a study to determine whether young children can use this information in word learning. When a novel word was presented with…
Descriptors: Toys, Cues, Form Classes (Languages), Toddlers
Poulin-Dubois, Diane; Frenkiel-Fishman, Sarah; Nayer, Samantha; Johnson, Susan – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2006
It has been proposed that infants can form global categories such as animate and inanimate objects (Mandler, 2004). The inductive generalization paradigm was used to examine inferences made by infants about the bodily, motion, and sensory capabilities of people and animals. In Experiment 1, 14-month-old infants generalized bodily and sensory…
Descriptors: Infants, Motion, Inferences, Animals
Fay, Temple H. – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2002
Given three points in the plane, interest is in the locus of all points for which the sum of the distances to the given points is a prescribed constant. These curves turn out to be sixth degree polynominals in x and y , and thus are complicated. However, it turns out that often there is a point, within the triangle formed by the three given…
Descriptors: Geometric Concepts, Mathematics Instruction, Geometry, Generalization
Roberts, Charles E. – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2003
This note contains material to be presented to students in a first course in differential equations immediately after they have completed studying first-order differential equations and their applications. The purpose of presenting this material is four-fold: to review definitions studied previously; to provide a historical context which cites the…
Descriptors: Equations (Mathematics), Calculus, Problem Solving, Mathematics Instruction
Wright, Anthony A. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2007
Rhesus monkeys were trained and tested in visual and auditory list-memory tasks with sequences of four travel pictures or four natural/environmental sounds followed by single test items. Acquisitions of the visual list-memory task are presented. Visual recency (last item) memory diminished with retention delay, and primacy (first item) memory…
Descriptors: Memory, Test Items, Familiarity, Inhibition
Baldy, Elise – International Journal of Science Education, 2007
Today's method of teaching the concept of falling bodies in French physics classes is ineffective, not only because it ignores the physical aspect of the phenomenon by addressing only its mathematical aspect, but also because it does not take into account students' initial conceptions, which are often incompatible with scientific knowledge. The…
Descriptors: Validity, Concept Formation, Grade 9, Science Instruction
Wong, Connie S.; Kasari, Connie; Freeman, Stephanny; Paparella, Tanya – Research and Practice for Persons with Severe Disabilities (RPSD), 2007
For children with autism, acquiring and generalizing new skills can be particularly difficult and may be affected by child characteristics. Forty-one preschool children with autism were recruited from an existing early intervention program and then randomized to one of two treatments, a targeted intervention for symbolic play skills or one for…
Descriptors: Early Intervention, Teaching Methods, Rewards, Play
Burke, Maurice J.; Hodgson, Ted R. – Mathematics Teacher, 2007
With the help of technology and a basic high school algebra method for finding the vertex of a quadratic polynomial, students can develop and prove the formula for least-squares lines. Students are exposed to the power of a computer algebra system to generalize processes they understand and to see deeper patterns in those processes. (Contains 4…
Descriptors: Algebra, Secondary School Mathematics, High School Students, Mathematical Formulas

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