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Pellicer, Leonard O.; Stevenson, Kenneth R. – Executive Educator, 1987
The key to an employee-supported evaluation system is involving a significant majority of those affected in the planning process. This article describes the development of a new evaluation system for 200 administrators and supervisiors based on attitude surveys and a large administrator-dominated steering committee. (MLH)
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Attitude Measures, Boards of Education, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedMethen, Amena Al; Wilkinson, William J. – Research in Science and Technological Education, 1986
Discusses a study in Kuwait which focused on students' ability to pick out appropriate teaching behaviors and teacher personality characteristics. Responses from high school students (N=210) corresponded closely with findings from similar perception studies. (ML)
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Perception, Science Education, Science Teachers
Peer reviewedCrittenden, Jerry B.; And Others – American Annals of the Deaf, 1986
Deaf children (N=52) were administered a videotaped presentation of a vocabulary test under one of five conditions: Total Communication (TC) with audio; TC without audio; Manual Communication (MC) with no mouth movement; Oral Communication (OC) with audio; and OC without audio. Modes using MC or TC yielded performances significantly superior to OC…
Descriptors: Audio Equipment, Comparative Analysis, Deafness, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedPiland, William E. – Community/Junior College Quarterly of Research and Practice, 1984
Describes a study comparing the opinions of students, teachers, and administrators in five Illinois community colleges concerning the objectivity of student evaluations of instruction, the seriousness with which students undertake instructional evaluation, the impact of student evaluations on instructors' performance, and the use of student…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Community Colleges, Evaluation Utilization, Reliability
Peer reviewedPressley, Michael; And Others – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1984
Ten- to thirteen-year-old children selected either the objectively more effective keyword method or the naturalistic context method for learning vocabulary meanings. Concludes that, even in the absence of explicit performance feedback, children can be induced to reflect on their use of strategies and their outcomes on subsequent cognitive actions.…
Descriptors: Children, Decision Making, Decision Making Skills, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedMcGowan, Ronald J.; Johnson, Dale L. – Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences, 1984
Observational measures of mother-child interaction, home environment, demographic variables, and maternal attitudes were used in developing two causal models for classroom and achievement test performance for 86 Mexican American children. Mothers most strongly promoted academic competence by serving as appropriate role models and encouraging an…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Child Rearing, Early Childhood Education, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedD'Amico, Ronald – Sociology of Education, 1984
Research results that showed that high school employment may foster high school achievement is explained by a congruence hypothesis, which holds that there is a correspondence between the personality traits promoted and rewarded by employers and those traits promoted and rewarded by teachers. (Author/RM)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Class Rank, Dropouts, Educational Research
Peer reviewedArrington, Larry R. – Journal of the American Association of Teacher Educators in Agriculture, 1985
Three hundred eighty-five secondary vocational agriculture students were given questionnaires to determine (1) demographic characteristics of senior vocational agriculture students in Florida high schools; (2) student attitudes about the program; (3) student, school, and program variables related to those attitudes. Conclusions and recommendations…
Descriptors: Agricultural Education, Career Guidance, Demography, Grade 12
Peer reviewedFischhoff, Baruch; MacGregor, Donald – Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 1986
Reports on study that used set of measures for characterizing performance with different databases and set of hypotheses for predicting search difficulties based on cognitive processes involved in decision-making aspects of information search. Highlights include confidence assessment, system design criteria, transparency, metatransparency, and…
Descriptors: Databases, Decision Making, Graphs, Information Systems
Peer reviewedBalson, Paul M.; And Others – Journal of Educational Technology Systems, 1986
Describes the final investigation of a sequential series of studies to determine whether videodisc technology is educationally effective and cost efficient. The study compared training time, posttest success, student stress, and student satisfaction in U.S. Army paramedic students in a nonvideodisc control group and limited-access and full-access…
Descriptors: Allied Health Personnel, Comparative Analysis, Cost Effectiveness, Intermode Differences
Clark, Richard E.; Voogel, Alexander – Educational Communication and Technology, 1985
Presents evidence to establish that instructional technology applications often result in transfer of training failures, which are attributed to inappropriate mixing of behaviorist and cognitive instructional design models. Specific suggestions are made for instructional design prescriptions that support different levels of transfer for different…
Descriptors: Behavioral Objectives, Educational Technology, Failure, Individual Differences
Peer reviewedFisher, Thomas H.; And Others – Educational Measurement: Issues and Practice, 1985
The new Florida Master Teacher Program in which the state provides bonuses directly to qualified teachers is described. Three measurement issues in implementing the program are discussed: (1) evaluating a teacher's classroom performance; (2) evaluating a teacher's subject area knowledge; and (3) combining scores to determine which teachers…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Incentives, Job Performance, Merit Pay
Peer reviewedWolfe, Joseph; Roberts, C. Richard – Simulation and Games, 1986
Describes a longitudinal study designed to determine whether a positive correlation exists between the economic performance of college seniors in a business decision-making simulation (The Business Management Laboratory) and business career success 5 years later as measured by salary level, salary improvement, promotions, and job satisfaction.…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Business Administration Education, Correlation, Educational Games
Peer reviewedHambrick-Dixon, Priscilla Janet – Developmental Psychology, 1986
Investigates whether an experimentally imposed 80dB (A) noise affected psychomotor, serial memory words and pictures, incidental memory, visual recall, paired associates, perceptual learning, and coding performance of five-year-old Black children attending day care centers near and far from elevated subways. (HOD)
Descriptors: Black Youth, Cognitive Processes, Day Care Centers, Early Childhood Education
Peer reviewedOberg, Terry J. – Journal of Educational Public Relations, 1986
Desribes the case of Carlos Bueno, a fictional elementary school principal who transforms a racially troubled school into a model of cooperation and excellence. Bueno is later appointed principal of an unruly junior high school, with disastrous results. Readers are asked to study Bueno's failure and decide the beleaguered superintendent's best…
Descriptors: Administrator Evaluation, Administrator Role, Case Studies, Discipline Problems


