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Smallwood, Jonathan; Schooler, Jonathan W. – Psychological Bulletin, 2006
This article reviews the hypothesis that mind wandering can be integrated into executive models of attention. Evidence suggests that mind wandering shares many similarities with traditional notions of executive control. When mind wandering occurs, the executive components of attention appear to shift away from the primary task, leading to failures…
Descriptors: Attention Control, Attention Span, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes
Codjoe, Henry – Intercultural Education, 2006
This paper focuses on the educational experiences of African-Canadian youth in Canada. Traditionally, the tendency is to emphasize the poor academic performance of black students or issues and problems related to reasons for academic failure or to stereotype them as "loud, lazy, muscular, criminal, athletic, dumb, deprived, dangerous,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, African American Influences, Cultural Background, Academic Achievement
Krause, Tom – School Administrator, 2005
Mandated state testing, college entrance exams and their perceived need for higher and higher grade point averages have raised the anxiety levels felt by many of the average students. Too much focus is placed on state test scores and college entrance standards with not enough focus on the true level of the students. The author contends that…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Academic Failure, Achievement Tests, Scores
Friedman-Nimz, Reva – Understanding Our Gifted, 2006
Perfectionism, which the author defines as beliefs and behaviors associated with high expectations for one's performance, is not necessarily detrimental. Many successful people demonstrate perfectionism that the author labels "functional." They set goals that are attainable, based on realistic self-knowledge. When planning a new venture they focus…
Descriptors: Gifted, Teacher Role, Self Efficacy, Anxiety
SmithBattle, Lee – Prevention Researcher, 2003
Teenage mothers are acutely aware of the conventional wisdom on early childbearing: namely, that teen mothers' futures are bleak and that their children's development is compromised. This view, while supported by early research, has been tempered by more recent studies. After briefly reviewing trends in teen birthrates, this article highlights the…
Descriptors: Mothers, Early Parenthood, Adolescents, Labeling (of Persons)
Garrett, Richard – EDUCAUSE Quarterly, 2004
In February 2000, with much fanfare, the British government announced funding of 62 million British Pounds ($113 million) for a national, commercial e-university called United Kingdom e-University (UKeU). The initiative was touted as an innovative response to the perceived opportunities and threats of online higher education--in the form of U.S.…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Student Recruitment, Electronic Learning
Turner, Haley Crisp – Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment, 2006
The Young Children's Achievement Test (YCAT; Hresko, Peak, Herron, & Bridges, 2000) is an individually administered achievement test designed to evaluate preschool, kindergarten, and first-grade children for risk of school failure. The test is comprised of five subtests specifically intended to assess general information, reading, mathematics,…
Descriptors: Young Children, Achievement Tests, Test Reviews, Academic Failure
Lee, Kyunghwa; Walsh, Daniel J. – Journal of Early Childhood Research, 2004
This article examines how an American preschool teacher's practice and her views of her practice for children considered at-risk for later academic failure are constrained by her cultural contexts. The research is framed by a cultural psychology and draws on an 18-month ethnographic and interpretive biographic study of Anita, an experienced…
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Preschool Teachers, Psychology, At Risk Persons
Mocombe, Paul C. – Race, Ethnicity & Education, 2006
Studies on the acting white hypothesis--the premise that black students purposefully do poorly in school and on standardized tests because of racialized peer pressure--to explain the black-white achievement gap have not been able to negate the fact that a "burden of acting white" exists for some black students, even though it is not prevalent…
Descriptors: Urban Areas, Academic Failure, Standardized Tests, African American Students
Goerge, Robert; Cusick, Gretchen R.; Wasserman, Miriam; Gladden, Matthew – Chapin Hall Center for Children, 2007
After-school programs for adolescents may be a way to promote positive youth development, and thus, it is important to understand what impact after-school programs can have on the educational achievement of high school students. Chicago's After School Matters (ASM) program offers an exceptional opportunity to study whether an after-school program…
Descriptors: Program Effectiveness, High School Students, Student Characteristics, Job Skills
Skyrme, Gillian – Studies in Higher Education, 2007
This article draws on findings from a longitudinal study of Chinese international students beginning study in a New Zealand university, and focuses on the very different experience of two students in relation to a single course and its assessment requirements, as they sought ways to negotiate identities as university students in their new setting.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Guidance, Interaction, Speech Skills
Wells, Marcia I. – Journal of College Student Retention: Research, Theory & Practice, 2007
A qualitative study using grounded theory was conducted to examine the reasons that a sample of undergraduate baccalaureate nursing students withdrew from their nursing programs. The sample consisted of 11 nursing students who left generic baccalaureate nursing programs located in an urban area of a southeastern state. A semi-structured interview…
Descriptors: Intervention, Academic Failure, Student Attrition, Nursing Education
Hong, Saahoon; Bart, William M. – International Journal of Special Education, 2007
Cognitive effects of chess instruction on students at risk for academic failure was examined. Thirty-eight students, from three elementary schools, participated in this study. The experimental group received a ninety-minute chess lesson once per week over a three-month period; and the control group students regularly attended school activities…
Descriptors: Experimental Groups, Control Groups, School Activities, Academic Failure
Reima Al-Jarf – Online Submission, 2007
The present study reports results of an experiment in which the author and her students at King Saud University (KSU) in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia shared an online grammar course with a professor and his students at Umm Al-Qura University (UQU) in Makkah, Saudi Arabia using www.makkahelearning.net. The experiment proved to be a total failure. The…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Institutional Cooperation, Grammar, Electronic Learning
Coalition for Evidence-Based Policy, 2008
This paper proposes a new bipartisan initiative to strengthen the effectiveness of U.S. social programs by focusing funds within each program on research-proven projects, practices, and strategies ("interventions"). The proposal seeks neither an increase nor decrease in overall program funding; rather, its central aim is to maximize the…
Descriptors: Poverty, Crime Prevention, Program Effectiveness, Budgeting

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