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Peer reviewedRamazanoglu, Caroline – Language and Communication, 1993
Comments to a previous article focusing on power and method in linguistic research or more specifically on empowering research participants. (VWL)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Empowerment, Ethics, Language Research
Peer reviewedRickford, John R. – Language and Communication, 1993
Comments to a previous article focusing on power and method in linguistic research or more specifically on empowering research participants. (VWL)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Empowerment, Ethics, Language Research
Peer reviewedSchiffrin, Deborah – Language and Communication, 1993
Comments to a previous article focusing on power and method in linguistic research or more specifically on empowering research participants. This comment suggests that understanding research talk can be facilitated by knowing something about the larger group of speech activities of which it is but one normal representative form. (VWL)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Empowerment, Ethics, Language Research
Peer reviewedToolan, Michael – Language and Communication, 1993
Comments to a previous article focusing on power and method in linguistic research or more specifically on empowering research participants. (VWL)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Empowerment, Ethics, Language Research
Peer reviewedCameron, Deborah; And Others – Language and Communication, 1993
Responds to various positive and negative comments on an article focusing on power and method in linguistic research and describing a method for empowering research participants. (VWL)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Empowerment, Ethics, Language Research
Peer reviewedMcWhirter, Ellen Hawley – Journal of Counseling and Development, 1991
Examines use of empowerment as central component of counseling and as criterion for evaluating counseling interventions. Discusses definitions of empowerment across several perspectives and proposes definition of empowerment in context of counseling. Presents potentially empowering and disempowering aspects of counseling. Highlights measurement…
Descriptors: Counseling Effectiveness, Counseling Techniques, Empowerment, Evaluation Criteria
Peer reviewedWehmeyer, Michael L. – Focus on Autism and Other Developmental Disabilities, 1999
Describes a functional model of self-determination as a dispositional characteristic of individuals. The model has been used to conduct research to examine the effect of self-determination on the lives of people with disabilities, to describe the development of self-determination, and to design interventions to promote self-determination.…
Descriptors: Adults, Children, Disabilities, Empowerment
Peer reviewedCrawford, Patricia A. – Childhood Education, 2000
Introduces this theme issue on teacher education and professional development of school personnel in the 21st century. Illustrates how power struggles and other obstacles within the education system can sabotage efforts to provide professional development opportunities. Asserts that the complexities of teacher education will increase in the 21st…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Professional Development, Teacher Education, Teacher Empowerment
Peer reviewedHamalainen, Kauko; Kauppi, Antti – Lifelong Learning in Europe, 2000
Critical questions should be asked about educational evaluation so that it can contribute to development and change. Self- and stakeholder evaluation provide important data. Since the goal of evaluation is to define the value of what is assessed, it is important to use different lenses and methods. (SK)
Descriptors: Educational Assessment, Empowerment, Evaluation Methods, Institutional Evaluation
Argyris, Chris – Harvard Business Review, 1998
Discusses why there has been little growth in empowerment over the past 30 years. Suggests that executives often work against empowerment both consciously and unconsciously and that they often do not seem to want what they say they need. Makes some recommendations that may help executives think more sensibly about empowerment. (JOW)
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Administrator Behavior, Adults, Empowerment
Peer reviewedWilkinson, Adrian – Personnel Review, 1998
The literature on empowerment in organizations lacks discussion of problems in implementing it or of the conditions needed for success. It is often assumed to be a universal solution appropriate to all organizations. (SK)
Descriptors: Business Administration, Empowerment, Organizational Change, Organizational Effectiveness
Peer reviewedHyman, Jeff; Cunningham, Ian – International Journal of Training and Development, 1998
Line managers in empowering (n=58) and nonempowering (n=37) British companies were compared. Although "empowered" managers felt better equipped to supervise, they appeared undertrained and unmotivated to develop staff. "Empowerment" was often indistinguishable from work intensification. (SK)
Descriptors: Administrators, Empowerment, Foreign Countries, Job Training
Peer reviewedChristopher, Suzanne; Dunnagan, Tim; Duncan, Stephen F.; Paul, Lynn – Family Relations, 2001
Describes the use of transformative learning theory to evaluate a family-empowerment project focusing on life skills (N=34). Results reveal evidence of transformative learning outcomes such as an empowered sense of self and new connections with others. Participants also spoke of factors built into the program designed to foster transformative…
Descriptors: Daily Living Skills, Empowerment, Family Programs, Program Evaluation
Peer reviewedFrymier, Ann Bainbridge; And Others – Communication Education, 1996
Describes how empowerment was conceptualized in a study as a form of motivation which can exist as a state or a trait. States that the long-range goal, for which this research was a first step, is to understand the role of communication in the process of empowerment. Conducts two studies to develop and refine the learner empowerment measure. (PA)
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Empowerment, Higher Education, Learning Processes
Peer reviewedMuno, Ann; Keenan, Lynn D. – Social Work in Education, 2000
Article discusses the After-School Girl's Leadership Program in Seattle designed to foster positive development in girls. Their ideas and concerns are at the center of the curriculum, and they are able to experience the power of positive peer support. The program empowers them to address the environmental concerns that impede development.…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Adolescent Development, Adolescents, Females


