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Miller, William R.; Rose, Gary S. – American Psychologist, 2010
Responds to M. Stanton's comments on the current author's original article. One of the puzzles of motivational interviewing is why it works at all. How can it be that an individual interview or two yields change in a long-standing problem behavior even without any effort to alter social context? The time involved is such a tiny part of the…
Descriptors: Intervention, Behavior Modification, Interviews, Behavior Change
Underhill, Jenni; McDonald, Jared – Mentoring & Tutoring: Partnership in Learning, 2010
Transformation policies in South Africa have seen higher education come under increasing pressure to broaden participation from historically under-represented groups. This article focuses on the University of Johannesburg, South Africa, as a newly merged institution that is in the process of transforming from a formerly segregated academic…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Tutors, Tutoring
Anderson, Jim; Anderson, Ann; Friedrich, Nicola; Kim, Ji Eun – Journal of Early Childhood Literacy, 2010
The purpose of this article is to examine developments in the area of family literacy over the last decade. Acknowledging the bifurcation that has occurred in the field of family literacy, as well as changing conceptions of literacy and of families, we review naturalistic studies of literacy embedded and enacted in communities and families across…
Descriptors: Family Literacy, Literacy Education, Teaching Methods, Literature Reviews
Mejia D., Andres – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2008
Traditionally, philosophical inquiry into pedagogical issues has occurred far from the classrooms in which pedagogy materialises. However, an organised form of inquiry into issues of a normative nature (about what ought to be done pedagogically) and of an analytic nature (about the meaning of pedagogical concepts), making use of ideas obtained in…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Research Methodology, Philosophy, Scientists
Leynes, P. Andrew; Phillips, Michelle C. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2008
The source monitoring framework (SMF; M. K. Johnson, S. Hashtroudi, & D. S. Lindsay, 1993) posits that source monitoring can be supported by varying degrees of recollection. Source judgments were made for words heard at study (male or female voice) followed by remember/know (RK) judgments in order to assess differences in degrees of recollection…
Descriptors: Memory, Recall (Psychology), Responses, Cognitive Processes
Warren, Tessa; McConnell, Kerry; Rayner, Keith – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2008
Plausibility violations resulting in impossible scenarios lead to earlier and longer lasting eye movement disruption than violations resulting in highly unlikely scenarios (K. Rayner, T. Warren, B. J. Juhasz, & S. P. Liversedge, 2004; T. Warren & K. McConnell, 2007). This could reflect either differences in the timing of availability of different…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Context Effect, Reading, Credibility
Mou, Weimin; Xiao, Chengli; McNamara, Timothy P. – Cognition, 2008
Two experiments investigated participants' spatial memory of a briefly viewed layout. Participants saw an array of five objects on a table and, after a short delay, indicated whether the target object indicated by the experimenter had been moved. Experiment 1 showed that change detection was more accurate when non-target objects were stationary…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Memory, Spatial Ability, Visual Stimuli
Sederberg, Per B.; Howard, Marc W.; Kahana, Michael J. – Psychological Review, 2008
The authors present a new model of free recall on the basis of M. W. Howard and M. J. Kahana's temporal context model and M. Usher and J. L. McClelland's leaky-accumulator decision model. In this model, contextual drift gives rise to both short-term and long-term recency effects, and contextual retrieval gives rise to short-term and long-term…
Descriptors: Models, Memory, Decision Making, Recall (Psychology)
Howard, Marc W.; Kahana, Michael J.; Sederberg, Per B. – Psychological Review, 2008
Space does not allow us to make detailed rebuttals to Davelaar, Usher, Haarmann, and Goshen-Gottstein's criticisms of the temporal context model's (TCM-A's) ability to account for dissociations between immediate and delayed recall nor to explain how TCM could account for list discrimination experiments. We agree that future work is needed to reach…
Descriptors: Models, Recall (Psychology), Context Effect, Short Term Memory
Dyndahl, Petter – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2008
In this article, the aim is to address different forms of relationship between deconstruction, as coined by Jacques Derrida, and research perspectives on music education. Deconstruction represents a radical departure from Western ontology from Plato onward and its essentialistic notions of the metaphysics of presence. Instead, Derrida claims that…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music, Research Methodology, Reputation
Senyshyn, Yaroslav – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2008
An aesthetic distinction between good music and the good in music is crucial for a philosophy of music education. Ultimately, it is not the music's fault, as it were, that someone may view it as being "not good" in either a social or aesthetic context. Regardless of how music is colored it remains an entity unto itself and thus untouched by our…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music, Educational Philosophy, Context Effect
Charme, Stuart; Horowitz, Bethamie; Hyman, Tali; Kress, Jeffrey S. – Journal of Jewish Education, 2008
"Jewish identity" has been a central concern both in the realm of research about American Jewry and to American Jewish educational programming, but what it means and how to best study it have come under question in recent years. In this article, four scholars describe the ways they understand Jewish identity among American Jews and how they study…
Descriptors: Jews, Research Methodology, Models, Ethnicity
Risko, Evan F.; Blais, Chris; Stolz, Jennifer A.; Besner, Derek – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2008
Proportion compatible manipulations are often used to index strategic processes in selective attention tasks. Here, a subtle confound in proportion compatible manipulations is considered. Specifically, as the proportion of compatible trials increases, the ratio of complete repetitions and complete alternations to partial repetitions increases on…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Reaction Time, Stimuli, Attention
Kuipers, Jan-Rouke; La Heij, Wido – Journal of Memory and Language, 2008
Basic-level picture naming is hampered by the presence of a semantically related context word (compared to an unrelated word), whereas picture categorization is facilitated by a semantically related context word. This reversal of the semantic context effect has been explained by assuming that in categorization tasks, basic-level distractor words…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Semantics, Classification, Vocabulary Development
Anderson, Kristin L. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2008
M. P. Johnson's (1995) proposal that there are two qualitatively distinct types of intimate partner violence--intimate terrorism and situational couple violence--has been an influential explanation for disparate findings on sex symmetry in domestic violence. This study examines whether this typology increases our ability to explain variations in…
Descriptors: Family Violence, Marital Status, Females, Surveys

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