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Peer reviewedGiven, Barbara K. – Educational Leadership, 2000
In the brain, five modules or systems (emotional, cognitive, physical learning, social, and reflective) wax and wane in influencing our thoughts and behavior. Emotionally, socially, and physically comfortable students attuned to the content being taught learn relatively easily. Focusing solely on cognitive learning is counterproductive. (MLH)
Descriptors: Brain, Classroom Environment, Elementary Secondary Education, Emotional Experience
Peer reviewedIrani, Tracy – International Journal of Educational Technology, 2000
Describes a study that examined the effect of direct experience on traditional aged college students' attitudes, perceptions and intentions toward distance education. Used a repeated measures design, set up to measure before and after effects of direct experience and peer influences on a sample of undergraduates. (Contains 26 references.)…
Descriptors: Distance Education, Higher Education, Measurement Techniques, Peer Influence
Peer reviewedSwain, Jon – Gender and Education, 2002
Explored the role of clothing in expressing individual and collective identity among preadolescent English students. Results found that a relaxed enforcement of school uniforms created space for students to use clothing to gain recognition, generate common bonds, and share interests within peer groups. Clothing and footwear were used as an…
Descriptors: Clothing, Dress Codes, Foreign Countries, Interpersonal Relationship
Peer reviewedHawkins, D. Lynn; Pepler, Debra J.; Craig, Wendy M. – Social Development, 2001
Examined peer intervention in bullying among 58 first through sixth graders, using naturalistic observations on school playgrounds. Found that peers were present during 88 percent of bullying episodes and intervened in 19 percent. Interventions toward the bully were more likely to be aggressive. Interventions toward the victim or the dyad were…
Descriptors: Aggression, Bullying, Children, Elementary School Students
Peer reviewedPleydon, Anne P.; Schner, Joseph G. – Adolescence, 2001
Young female offenders (n=29) and female high school students (n=47) were compared in terms of delinquent behavior and relationships with their best female friend and peer group. Results indicated friendships of delinquent and nondelinquent female adolescents are essentially similar despite higher levels of peer pressure among delinquents. (BF)
Descriptors: Adolescent Behavior, Adolescents, Behavior Problems, Delinquency
Peer reviewedMartin, Carol Lynn; Fabes, Richard A. – Developmental Psychology, 2001
Examined whether preschool children's play-partner choices were stable over time and how they influenced behavior. Found that partner preferences were highly sex differentiated and stable over time. Identified two types of consequences of partner choice: a binary effect that influenced differences between the sexes and a social dosage effect that…
Descriptors: Individual Differences, Longitudinal Studies, Peer Influence, Peer Relationship
Peer reviewedDuncan, Greg J.; Boisjoly, Johanne; Kremer, Michael; Levy, Dan M.; Eccles, Jacque – Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 2005
Past research suggests that congregating delinquent youth increases their likelihood of problem behavior. We test for analogous peer effects in the drug use and sexual behavior of male (n = 279) and female (n = 435) college students, using data on the characteristics of first-year roommates to whom they were randomly assigned. We find that males…
Descriptors: Drug Use, High Schools, Females, College Students
Pierce, K. M. – High School Journal, 2006
Taken from a larger study about life in high school classrooms from students' perspectives, this paper discusses how study participants pinpointed individual classrooms as the nerve centers in students' high school experiences. Punctuating the swirls of movement within school days, individual class periods contain clues about how students…
Descriptors: Interaction, Classroom Environment, High School Students, Peer Influence
Peer reviewedAronson, Joshua – Educational Leadership, 2004
Childhood environment and skills are important factors that contribute to the achievement gap of students, but blaming only the preschool years for low achievement will not solve the problem. Ample funding of schools and transformative power of teachers and peers can rid the student of the gap.
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Low Achievement, Academic Achievement, Disadvantaged Environment
DuBois, David L.; Silverthorn, Naida – Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, 2004
We investigated deviant peer associations as a mediator of the influences of general and peer-oriented self-esteem on problem behavior using data from a 2-year longitudinal study of 350 young adolescents. Measures of problem behavior included substance use (alcohol use, smoking) and antisocial behavior (fighting, stealing). Using latent growth…
Descriptors: Early Adolescents, Substance Abuse, Antisocial Behavior, Behavior Problems
Baillie, Lynne; Lovato, Chris Y.; Johnson, Joy L.; Kalaw, Cecilia – American Journal of Health Behavior, 2005
Objective: To explore the transitional phase between experimental and regular smoking from the perspective of teens. Method: Narrative analysis of semistructured, individual interviews. Results: The need to belong and immediate social gain are major themes influencing teen smoking decisions. Conclusions: Our findings have significance for public…
Descriptors: Prevention, Public Health, Peer Influence, Smoking
Howes, Carollee; Wishard, Alison Gallwey – Zero to Three (J), 2004
A direct pathway to children's literacy forms through the development of shared meaning. Proto-narrative construction and social pretend play with peers can be important tools in children's developing emergent literacy. Early child-care programs provide relatively little unstructured time. To reemphasize shared meaning in the lives of children,…
Descriptors: Play, Emergent Literacy, Teaching Methods, Literacy Education
Center for Child and Family Policy, Duke University (NJ1), 2008
The Duke University School Research Partnership (SRP) Office was developed with support from the Office of the Provost and the Center for Child and Family Policy. Begun in 2006 as the Duke Office for Research in Schools (DORIS), the SRP Office is an integral part of the work of the Center for Child and Family Policy. The SRP Office facilitates…
Descriptors: Focus Groups, Adolescents, Program Development, Program Evaluation
Hanushek, Eric A.; Rivkin, Steven G. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2008
Sizeable achievement differences by race appear in early grades, but substantial uncertainty exists about the impact of school quality on the black-white achievement gap and particularly about its evolution across different parts of the achievement distribution. Texas administrative data show that the overall growth in the achievement gap between…
Descriptors: Racial Segregation, Racial Composition, Academic Achievement, Labor Market
Kolko, David J.; Dorn, Lorah D.; Bukstein, Oscar; Burke, Jeffrey D. – Journal of Child and Family Studies, 2008
This study compares 6-11-year-old, clinically referred boys and girls diagnosed with Oppositional Defiant Disorder, either with (ODD + CD, n = 40) or without Conduct Disorder (ODD only; n = 136), to a matched sample of healthy control children (HC; n = 69). Multiple informants completed intake diagnostic interviews and self-reports to evaluate…
Descriptors: Females, Self Efficacy, Adolescents, Psychological Patterns

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