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Showing 2,296 to 2,310 of 9,143 results Save | Export
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Chapin, June R. – Educational Horizons, 1999
Review of service-learning research shows that, although sustained involvement improves civic development, few schools require substantial service hours. Sensitivity to type of placement makes a difference. Problems of definition and measurement of diverse activities hinder research interpretation. (SK)
Descriptors: Citizenship Responsibility, Educational Research, Research Problems, Secondary Education
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Ramanujam, P. R. – Indian Journal of Open Learning, 2000
Discusses the lack of a link between quality assurance and research in distance teaching institutions in India and in other developing countries. Focuses on two sets of quality requirements for distance open learning and recommends that institutions focus on research and not only dissemination of existing knowledge. (Author/LRW)
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Distance Education, Foreign Countries, Information Dissemination
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Polizzi, Kenneth G.; Steitz, Jean A. – Educational Gerontology, 1998
Review of studies using the Aging Semantic Differential to measure attitudes toward the elderly identified problems: familiarity and variety of objects, men-only design, and age of the instrument. Ways to refine it include updating adjectives and their positions, identifying attitudinal objects, and accounting for gender differences. (SK)
Descriptors: Aging (Individuals), Attitude Measures, Research Problems, Semantic Differential
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Rodgers, Robert; Jensen, Jason L. – Public Administration Review, 2001
Looks at criticisms of public administration research: (1) knowledge in the field is not being accumulated, and (2) the research has low quality. Proposes meta-analysis as a solution to the first problem. Suggests that quality judgments should be based on knowledge cumulation, which acknowledges the value of all research methods. (Contains 48…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Meta Analysis, Public Administration, Research Methodology
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Bloom, Paul; German, Tim P. – Cognition, 2000
Presents two reasons for abandoning the false belief task as a methodology for theory of mind: (1) passing the false belief task requires ability other than theory of mind; and (2) theory of mind need not entail the ability to reason about false beliefs. Concludes with an alternative conception of the role of the false belief task. (Author)
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Research Methodology
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Peng, Chao-Ying Joanne; So, Tak-Shing Harry; Stage, Frances K.; St. John, Edward P. – Research in Higher Education, 2002
Examined use and interpretation of logistic regression in leading higher education journals. Found increasingly sophisticated use for a wide range of topics; however, there continued to be confusion over terminology. Sample sizes did not always achieve a desired level of stability in parameters estimated, and discussion of results in terms of…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Higher Education, Regression (Statistics), Research Problems
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Slavin, Robert E. – Educational Leadership, 2001
In the May 2001 "Educational Leadership," Stanley Pogrow wrote another article attacking the Success for All program and comprehensive reform. SFA has been highly evaluated in numerous studies and by 52 individual researchers. Pogrow is a competitor who believes his own program (Higher Order Thinking Skills) has been slighted. (Contains…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Jealousy, Misconceptions, Program Effectiveness
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Houston-Price, Carmel; Nakai, Satsuki – Infant and Child Development, 2004
This paper considers possible problems researchers might face when interpreting the results of studies that employ variants of the preference procedure. Infants show a tendency to shift their preference from familiar to novel stimuli with increasing exposure to the familiar stimulus, a behaviour that is exploited by the habituation paradigm. This…
Descriptors: Infants, Familiarity, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Preferences
McWilliam, Erica; Lee, Alison – Australian Educational Researcher, 2006
This paper takes up the question of the way in which "the problem with educational research" is represented. It takes as its point of departure two recent views on "the problem"--one expressed by an educational journalist and one presented by the Australian Council of Deans of Education. It locates these within a larger frame…
Descriptors: Fantasy, Educational Research, Problem Solving, Disadvantaged
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Einarsdottir, Johanna – European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 2007
Methodological and ethical challenges that researchers face when they conduct research with children are the focus of this article. The discussion is based on a study conducted with 2-6-year-old children in Iceland, where the purpose was to shed light on children's perspectives on their early childhood settings. The study is built on the…
Descriptors: Research Problems, Ethics, Research Methodology, Childhood Attitudes
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Pena, Elizabeth D. – Child Development, 2007
In cross-cultural child development research there is often a need to translate instruments and instructions to languages other than English. Typically, the translation process focuses on ensuring linguistic equivalence. However, establishment of linguistic equivalence through translation techniques is often not sufficient to guard against…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Linguistics, Validity, Child Development
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Korthagen, Fred A. J. – Educational Research and Evaluation, 2007
Increasingly, teachers--but also parents and politicians--voice dissatisfaction with the divide they experience between research and practice and the resulting minimal impact of teacher education (Ashton, 1996; Barone, Berliner, Blanchard, Casanova, & McGowan, 1996). The problem seems to be perennial. More than a century ago, John Dewey pointed…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Theory Practice Relationship, Research Problems, Research Utilization
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Mertens, Donna M. – American Journal of Evaluation, 2007
Should the Russians be included in the evaluation and, if so, how can that be done? Based on the axiological assumption that the social justice theory of ethics leads to an awareness of the need to redress inequalities by giving precedence, or at least equal weight, to the voice of the least advantaged groups in society who may not have sufficient…
Descriptors: Community Involvement, Justice, Ethics, Critical Theory
Belfield, Clive – Education and the Public Interest Center, 2009
A report from the School Choice Demonstration Project examines issues concerning the funding formula used for the Milwaukee Parental Choice Program (MPCP). It finds that the program generates a net saving to taxpayers in Wisconsin but imposes a significant fiscal burden on taxpayers in Milwaukee. However, these findings depend significantly on how…
Descriptors: Funding Formulas, School Choice, Demonstration Programs, Program Effectiveness
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Hagermoser Sanetti, Lisa M.; Kratochwill, Thomas R. – School Psychology Review, 2009
Treatment integrity (also referred to as "treatment fidelity," "intervention integrity," and "procedural reliability") is an important methodological concerning both research and practice because treatment integrity data are essential to making valid conclusions regarding treatment outcomes. Despite its relationship to validity, treatment…
Descriptors: Intervention, Research Methodology, Models, Validity
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