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Penney, Dawn – Asia-Pacific Journal of Health, Sport and Physical Education, 2013
This paper draws on concepts from contemporary education policy sociology to explore the prospective interpretation, contextualisation and enactment of Health and Physical Education in the Australian Curriculum. Analysis examines the dynamic between characteristics of official texts and the contexts in which responses will be made. The paper…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Physical Education, Health Education, Educational Policy
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Travers, Brittany G.; Powell, Patrick S.; Mussey, Joanna L.; Klinger, Laura G.; Crisler, Megan E.; Klinger, Mark R. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2013
The present studies examined implicit contextual cueing in adolescents and adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). In Study 1, 16 individuals with ASD and 20 matched individuals with typical development completed a contextual cueing task using stimulus-identity cues. In Study 2, 12 individuals with ASD and 16 individuals with typical…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adults, Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders
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Kloos, Heidi; Sloutsky, Vladimir M. – Developmental Science, 2013
The current study investigates the degree to which preschoolers can engage in causal inferences in a blocking paradigm, a paradigm in which a cue is consistently linked with a target, either alone (A-T) or paired with another cue (AB-T). Unlike previous blocking studies with preschoolers, we manipulated the causal structure of the events without…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Inferences, Cues, Adults
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Mihaly, Kata; McCaffrey, Daniel; Sass, Tim R.; Lockwood, J. R. – Education Finance and Policy, 2013
We consider the challenges and implications of controlling for school contextual bias when modeling teacher preparation program effects. Because teachers are not randomly distributed across schools, failing to account for contextual factors in achievement models could bias preparation program estimates. Including school fixed effects controls for…
Descriptors: Teacher Education Programs, Teacher Education, Program Evaluation, Context Effect
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Wheeler, Jessica R.; Clare, Isabel C. H.; Holland, Anthony J. – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2013
Background: While several validated measures of the life circumstances of people with intellectual disabilities (ID) have been developed, this stream of research has not yet been well integrated with environmentally oriented criminological theory to explain offending among people with ID. In this study, we attempt to provide a preliminary…
Descriptors: Mental Retardation, Crime, Criminals, Questionnaires
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Mok, Peggy P. K. – Language and Speech, 2013
This study tests the output constraints hypothesis that languages with a crowded phonemic vowel space would allow less vowel-to-vowel coarticulation than languages with a sparser vowel space to avoid perceptual confusion. Mandarin has fewer vowel phonemes than Cantonese, but their allophonic vowel spaces are similarly crowded. The hypothesis…
Descriptors: Vowels, Articulation (Speech), Mandarin Chinese, Sino Tibetan Languages
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Sobol, James J.; Wu, Yuning; Sun, Ivan Y. – Crime & Delinquency, 2013
This study provides a partial test of Klinger's ecological theory of police behavior using hierarchical linear modeling on 1,677 suspects who had encounters with police within 24 beats. The current study used data from four sources originally collected by the Project on Policing Neighborhoods (POPN), including systematic social observation,…
Descriptors: Police, Behavior, Behavior Theories, Crime
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Siebert, Sabina; Martin, Graeme – Education & Training, 2013
Purpose: The dominant variance theory approaches to researching business school reputations are based on a positivistic hypothetico-deductive research methodology and do not adequately take into account either the different levels and types of contexts in which business schools operate or the diversity of stakeholder interests. The aim of this…
Descriptors: Reputation, Business Administration Education, Stakeholders, Research Methodology
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Kerrigan, Iona S.; Adams, Wendy J. – Cognition, 2013
The pattern of shading across an image can provide a rich sense of object shape. Our ability to use shading information is remarkable given the infinite possible combinations of illumination, shape and reflectance that could have produced any given image. Illumination can change dramatically across environments (e.g. indoor vs. outdoor) and times…
Descriptors: Lighting, Geometric Concepts, Time, Geographic Location
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Cogan, Elizabeth; Parker, Scott; Zellner, Debra A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2013
Three studies investigated the effects of extreme context stimuli and categorization on hedonic contrast by having subjects judge the attractiveness of faces. Experiment 1 demonstrated hedonic contrast in both directions by using 2 sets of stimuli presented in different orders. Preceding moderately unattractive faces with moderately attractive…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Attraction, Aesthetics, Classification, Visual Stimuli
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Maienschein, Jane; Wellner, Karen – Science & Education, 2013
It might seem that an embryo is an embryo, and that there would be a fact of the matter. That seems especially true with respect to the way embryos are presented in textbooks, including high school biology textbooks. This paper looks at three co-existing, competing, and often conflicting views of embryos. Then with a close study of twentieth…
Descriptors: Embryology, Biology, Textbooks, Student Attitudes
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Carlson, Katy – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2013
Three self-paced reading experiments explored the processing of "only" and its interaction with context. In isolated sentences, the focus particle "only" predicts an upcoming contrast. Ambiguous replacive sentences (e.g., "The curator embarrassed the gallery owner in public, not the artist") with "only" on the subject or object showed faster…
Descriptors: Individualized Reading, Pacing, Form Classes (Languages), Role
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Plath, Jenny Aino; Felsenberg, Johannes; Eisenhardt, Dorothea – Learning & Memory, 2012
During extinction animals experience that the previously learned association between a conditioned stimulus (CS) and an unconditioned stimulus (US) no longer holds true. Accordingly, the conditioned response (CR) to the CS decreases. This decrease of the CR can be reversed by presentation of the US alone following extinction, a phenomenon termed…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Entomology, Stimuli, Responses
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Rogerson, Mark D.; Gottlieb, Michael C.; Handelsman, Mitchell M.; Knapp, Samuel; Younggren, Jeffrey – American Psychologist, 2012
Responds to the comments by Pomerantz and Sisti and Baum-Baicker on the current authors' original article, "Nonrational processes in ethical decision making". Pomerantz (2012) further explicated one interpersonal and contextual factor--the perceived characteristics of the recipient of any act. He cited evidence that these characteristics affect…
Descriptors: Guidelines, Ethics, Decision Making, Context Effect
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Mercer, Sarah – ELT Journal, 2012
An individual's mindset about the perceived malleability of ability or intelligence is known to strongly influence a person's other beliefs, behaviours, and motivation. This article seeks to provide justification for holding a "growth" mindset in the domain of foreign language learning. It discusses contemporary understandings of ability and…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Second Language Learning, Talent, Language Skills
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