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Boghossian, Peter – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2002
Addresses and extends R. Garlikov's discussion (1998) of A. Rud's (1997) criticism of the Socratic dialogue to cover general notions of power and shows how these may affect Socratic discourse. In Socratic pedagogy the adverse effects of power are reduced, and the focus shifts from people to propositions. (SLD)
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Power Structure, Teacher Student Relationship, Teaching Methods
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Cannici, James P.; And Others – Journal of Offender Counseling, Services & Rehabilitation, 1989
Followed inmates (N=120) at coeducational federal correctional institution while incarcerated to determine changes in ego-strength. Found significant increases among females. Whites had higher ego-strength than non-Whites at time of initial incarceration and at discharge. Results suggest that women may develop sense of autonomy after being…
Descriptors: Correctional Institutions, Personal Autonomy, Prisoners, Racial Differences
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Fagenson, Ellen A. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1992
Responses from 46 proteges (46 percent of sample) and 54 nonproteges (54 percent) in high technology service companies revealed that proteges have significantly higher needs for power and achievement. No differences appeared in need for autonomy or affiliation. Proteges' gender was not a significant factor. (SK)
Descriptors: Achievement Need, Affiliation Need, Individual Power, Mentors
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Wegner, Daniel M. – Psychological Review, 1994
A theory of ironic processes of mental control is proposed to account for the intentional and counterintentional effects that result from efforts at self-control of mental states. The theory holds that an attempt to control the mind introduces operating and monitoring processes that work together and separately. (SLD)
Descriptors: Behavior, Cognitive Processes, Discipline, Personal Autonomy
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Kapp, Marshall B. – Death Studies, 1993
Compares American secular emphasis on individual rights and autonomous decision-making in "right to die" context with traditional emphasis on obligation in Orthodox Judaism. Explicates approach of Conservative and Reform Judaism to decision-making about life-sustaining medical treatments and considers proper balance and relative influence of…
Descriptors: Death, Decision Making, Euthanasia, Jews
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Firestone, Robert W. – Death Studies, 1993
Proposes that death anxiety is related to degree of individuation and self-actualization. Sees concerns about death increasing as people relinquish defenses, reach new levels of differentiation of self, and expand their lives and personal power. Notes that therapeutic progress poses existential dilemma. (Author/NB)
Descriptors: Anxiety, Coping, Death, Individual Power
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Granello, Darcy Haag; Beamish, Patricia M. – Journal of Mental Health Counseling, 1998
Critiques the codependency construct as it is currently applied and examines how the concept is used to blame and label women. The construct ignores economic and social reality, perpetuates victim-blaming, and uses the male emphasis on individuation and autonomy as normative. Codependency is reframed as a sense of social connectedness and…
Descriptors: Females, Personal Autonomy, Psychological Characteristics, Resilience (Personality)
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Berkson, Gershon – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 1998
Three studies analyzed stimulus feedback and the concept of control with three children and two adults having autism. The first study explored feedback from spinning tops, while the second and third emphasized control of various stimuli including spinning tops. Results indicate that autistic individuals' common interest in spinning tops is…
Descriptors: Adults, Autism, Behavior Patterns, Children
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Qualls, Sara Honn – Family Relations, 1997
The greatest difficulties for caregiving families are transitions of autonomy. This article focuses on the roles that family therapists can play at key moments in the post-childrearing phases of the family life cycle when someone's capacity for autonomy is changing. (MKA)
Descriptors: Caregiver Role, Family Counseling, Family Relationship, Personal Autonomy
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Bates, Inge; Bloomer, Martin; Hodkinson, Phil; Yeomans, David – Journal of Education and Work, 1998
Explores the relationship between progressivism, vocationalism, and General National Vocational Qualifications (GNVQs), concluding that GNVQs are not unequivocally progressive. Suggests that the cultural context of controlled vocationalism is antithetical to progressive tendencies toward learner autonomy. (SK)
Descriptors: Educational Change, Foreign Countries, Ideology, Personal Autonomy
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Bloomer, Martin – Journal of Education and Work, 1998
Interviews with 102 British vocational students, 43 in General National Vocational Qualifications courses, indicated that knowledge and its sources are treated reductively in GNVQs. Although student projects, activity-based learning, and participative inquiry can be progressive, students' learning experiences were not liberating and did not…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ideology, Personal Autonomy, Student Attitudes
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Spinner-Halev, Jeff – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2005
Liberal theorists often link autonomy and identity together, since, these liberals argue, an education that bestows a particular identity on children undermines their autonomy. The charge of schools ought to be to teach children to be open to a variety of identities. Encounters with diversity and cosmopolitanism are good, since they encourage…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Educational Philosophy, Student Diversity, Ideology
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Hasebe, Yuki; Nucci, Larry; Nucci, Maria S. – Child Development, 2004
One hundred seventy U.S. (M=16.1 years) and 125 middle-class Japanese (M=16.6 years) adolescents completed a questionnaire assessing perceptions of who (adolescent or parent) controls the personal, conventional, prudential, and overlapping domain behaviors of the adolescent. Participants also completed an inventory assessing self-reported…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Psychopathology, Adolescents, Personal Autonomy
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Olssen, Mark – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2005
This article seeks to demonstrate a particular application of Foucault's philosophical approach to a particular issue in education: that of personal autonomy. The paper surveys and extends the approach taken by James Marshall in his book "Michel Foucault: Personal Autonomy and Education." After surveying Marshall's writing on the issue I extend…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Educational Philosophy, Theory Practice Relationship, General Education
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Dagovitz, Alan – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2004
Liberal attempts to defend faith schooling have been conditional on the ability of faith schools to serve as a context for individual choice. A recent critique of these attempts claims that religious parents would find such moderate faith schooling unacceptable. This article sets forth a new liberal defence of faith schools drawing heavily on the…
Descriptors: Religion, Personal Autonomy, Political Attitudes, Religious Education
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