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Au, Raymond C. P.; Watkins, David A.; Hattie, John A. C. – Educational Psychology, 2010
The aim of the present study is to explore a causal model of academic achievement and learning-related personal variables by testing the nature of relationships between learned hopelessness, its risk factors and hopelessness deficits as proposed in major theories in this area. The model investigates affective-motivational characteristics of…
Descriptors: Learning Problems, Causal Models, Self Efficacy, Academic Achievement
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Poehlmann, Julie; Dallaire, Danielle; Loper, Ann Booker; Shear, Leslie D. – American Psychologist, 2010
Approximately 1.7 million children have parents who are incarcerated in prison in the United States, and possibly millions of additional children have a parent incarcerated in jail. Many affected children experience increased risk for developing behavior problems, academic failure, and substance abuse. For a growing number of children,…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Substance Abuse, Institutionalized Persons, Correctional Institutions
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Mills, Rosemary S. L.; Imm, Gorette P.; Walling, Bobbi R.; Weiler, Hope A. – Developmental Psychology, 2008
The purpose of this study was to characterize cortisol response and regulation associated with shame responding in early childhood and to examine how general the relation between shame and cortisol is. It was predicted that children responding to task failure with shame would show a larger and more prolonged cortisol response than other children.…
Descriptors: Infants, Infant Behavior, Children, Gender Differences
Turner, Jeannine E.; Husman, Jenefer – Journal of Advanced Academics, 2008
In the face of shame, students may need to turn the global focus of their failures into more discrete behaviors that they can control. Instructors can facilitate this process by informing students of specific behaviors they can enact to support successful achievement, including study and volitional strategies. Students' use of multiple study and…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Learning Strategies, Student Motivation, Metacognition
Spencer, Renee – MENTOR, 2007
Recognizing that some early endings are unavoidable, the author maintains that many mentor-mentee relationships quickly dissolve due to factors that may be avoidable, such as disappointment and dissatisfaction with the relationship. Findings from a range of research studies are offered. Higher levels of program support may be required for matches…
Descriptors: Mentors, Interpersonal Relationship, Failure, Conflict
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Vasconcelos, Marco; Urcuioli, Peter J.; Lionello-DeNolf, Karen M. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2007
We report six unsuccessful attempts to replicate the "work ethic" phenomenon reported by Clement, Feltus, Kaiser, and Zentall (2000). In Experiments 1-5, pigeons learned two simultaneous discriminations in which the S+ and S- stimuli were obtained by pecking an initial stimulus once or multiple (20 or 40) times. Subsequent preference tests between…
Descriptors: Work Ethic, Animals, Stimuli, Preferences
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Zentall, Thomas R.; Singer, Rebecca A. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2007
Vasconcelos, Urcuioli, and Lionello-DeNolf (2007) report the results of five experiments that fail to replicate the results of our within-trial contrast study (Clement, Feltus, Kaiser, & Zentall, 2000) and suggest that our results may represent a Type I Error. We believe that this conclusion is not warranted because (a) there is considerable…
Descriptors: Replication (Evaluation), Failure, Behavioral Science Research, Reliability
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Vasconcelos, Marco; Urcuioli, Peter J.; Lionello-DeNolf, Karen M. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2007
Zentall and Singer (2007) challenge our conclusion that the work-ethic effect reported by Clement, Feltus, Kaiser, and Zentall (2000) may have been a Type I error by arguing that (a) the effect has been extensively replicated and (b) the amount of overtraining our pigeons received may not have been sufficient to produce it. We believe that our…
Descriptors: Replication (Evaluation), Failure, Behavioral Science Research, Reliability
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Hartman, Jennifer L.; Listwan, Shelley Johnson; Shaffer, Deborah Koetzle – Journal of Offender Rehabilitation, 2007
This paper examines men and women methamphetamine (meth) users who participated in a community-based drug court. The treatment of female drug users is a particularly salient issue because of the concerns with relapse and recidivism. For the current study, we studied the impact of the drug court by gender on a group of high-risk/high-need meth…
Descriptors: Drug Use, Stimulants, Courts, Gender Differences
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Fryer, James W.; Elliot, Andrew J. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2007
The present research examined the nature of stability and change in achievement goal endorsement over time, using 4 complementary data-analytic approaches (differential continuity, mean-level change, individual-level change, and ipsative continuity). Three longitudinal studies were conducted in college classrooms; in each study, achievement goals…
Descriptors: Failure, Achievement Need, Longitudinal Studies, Anxiety
Yule, Valerie – Educational Magazine, 1974
Provides case studies of Australian children who fail for social reasons. The role of social factors operating within the schools is stressed along with the lost curriculum. That factors operating in school failure are in fact social problems is suggested. [Available from Publications Branch, Education Department of Victoria, 234 Queensberry…
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Accountability, Case Studies, Disadvantaged
Hoare, D. E; Yeaman, E. J. – Universities Quarterly, 1971
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Failure, Higher Education, Interviews
Cubbage, Kent T. – ProQuest LLC, 2009
The Great Books hold a special place in scholarly and academic lore in America. Study of the Great Books and liberal education in general were the foundation of a college education since the colonial times, but yielded to electives and other academic trends during the early portion of the twentieth century. By the 1930s, several men sought to…
Descriptors: General Education, Educational Finance, College Curriculum, Educational History
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Helf, Shawnna; Cooke, Nancy L.; Flowers, Claudia P. – Preventing School Failure, 2009
Schools face many decisions on how to maximize instructional time and provide support for students who are at risk for failure in reading. Instructional grouping plays an important role. The authors used a true group experimental design to compare 2 grouping conditions--1:1 (1 tutor to 1 student) and 1:3 (1 tutor to 3 students)--on the reading…
Descriptors: At Risk Students, Reading Difficulties, Reading Failure, Reading Achievement
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Venter, Elza; Rambau, Eunice – South African Journal of Education, 2011
Self care is one of the options for parents in need of after school care for their children. In certain studies self care is seen as detrimental to development and academic performance, but in other studies children do fairly well notwithstanding their latchkey situation--self care could teach young people a sense of personal responsibility and…
Descriptors: Literacy, Academic Achievement, Latchkey Children, Low Income
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