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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1 to 15 of 3,475 results
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James, Karin H.; Jones, Susan S.; Swain, Shelley; Pereira, Alfredo; Smith, Linda B. – Developmental Science, 2014
How objects are held determines how they are seen, and may thereby play an important developmental role in building visual object representations. Previous research suggests that toddlers, like adults, show themselves a disproportionate number of planar object views--that is, views in which the objects' axes of elongation are perpendicular or…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Visual Perception, Bias, Perceptual Motor Coordination
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Buckingham, Louisa – TESOL Quarterly: A Journal for Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages and of Standard English as a Second Dialect, 2014
This study investigates how a group of 30 multilingual academics, all users of English as an additional language (EAL) working at a private university in Oman, acquired discourse community membership in their disciplines through publishing in English, and the strategies they use to sustain the level of literacy needed to disseminate their research…
Descriptors: Multilingualism, College Faculty, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning
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Nash, Paul; Stuart-Hamilton, Ian; Mayer, Peter – Educational Gerontology, 2014
Measures of attitudes to ageing typically examine only explicit attitudes, treating attitude holders as a homogeneous group with regards to education levels. Implicit attitudes (i.e., the immediate attitudinal response before conscious processes amend that attitude to an explicit attitude) have been less commonly examined. The current study…
Descriptors: Nursing Education, Attitude Measures, Aging (Individuals), Patients
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Cooper, Richard P.; Ruh, Nicolas; Mareschal, Denis – Cognitive Science, 2014
Human control of action in routine situations involves a flexible interplay between (a) task-dependent serial ordering constraints; (b) top-down, or intentional, control processes; and (c) bottom-up, or environmentally triggered, affordances. In addition, the interaction between these influences is modulated by learning mechanisms that, over time,…
Descriptors: Behavior, Serial Ordering, Intention, Influences
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White, Peter A. – Cognitive Science, 2014
It is argued that causal understanding originates in experiences of acting on objects. Such experiences have consistent features that can be used as clues to causal identification and judgment. These are singular clues, meaning that they can be detected in single instances. A catalog of 14 singular clues is proposed. The clues function as…
Descriptors: Cues, Evaluative Thinking, Identification, Attribution Theory
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Harrison, Bronwyn A.; Mayo-Wilson, Evan – Research on Social Work Practice, 2014
Randomized controlled trials are considered the gold standard for evaluating social work interventions. However, published reports can systematically overestimate intervention effects when researchers selectively report large and significant findings. Publication bias and other types of reporting biases can be minimized through prospective trial…
Descriptors: Social Work, Research, Bias, Research Problems
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Burnett, Cathy; Merchant, Guy; Pahl, Kate; Rowsell, Jennifer – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2014
This article deconstructs the online and offline experience to show its complexities and idiosyncratic nature. It proposes a theoretical framework designed to conceptualise aspects of meaning-making across on- and offline contexts. In arguing for the "(im)materiality" of literacy, it makes four propositions which highlight the complex…
Descriptors: Literacy, Vignettes, Opinions, Bias
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Tienken, Christopher – AASA Journal of Scholarship & Practice, 2014
Pundits and bureaucrats use the results from international tests, particularly the PISA, to make claims about the quality of the public education system in the United States and make policy recommendations. In this article I argue, with evidence, that the scores and rankings from PISA are not important and that they cannot give policy makers or…
Descriptors: Achievement Tests, Comparative Analysis, Educational Assessment, Educational Quality
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Farini, Federico – Journal of Peace Education, 2014
This article aims to offer both a theoretical contribution and examples of practices of trust building in peace education; the article presents an empirical analysis of videotaped interactions in the context of peace education activities in international groups of adolescents. The analysis regards two international summer camps promoted by the…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Summer Programs, Peace, Trust (Psychology)
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Segev, Elad; Cahan, Sorel – Assessment in Education: Principles, Policy & Practice, 2014
Selection to programmes for gifted students in Israel, performed in the second grade, relies on raw ability and achievement test scores, irrespective of age, thereby ignoring the well-known effect of within-grade age differences on test scores. Employing the entire cohort of third graders of legal age (67,366 students, 1.4% of whom were enrolled…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Age Differences, Academically Gifted, Special Education
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Tholin, Jörgen – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 2014
This paper examines whether the Swedish steering documents for English-language education are ethnically biased, that is, whether Swedish culture and language or "Swedishness" are used as norms when teaching and assessing students. To examine whether such bias exists, the central curricula and syllabi from 1994 and 2000, as well as local…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Foreign Countries
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Robinson-Cimpian, Joseph P. – Educational Researcher, 2014
This article introduces novel sensitivity-analysis procedures for investigating and reducing the bias that mischievous responders (i.e., youths who provide extreme, and potentially untruthful, responses to multiple questions) often introduce in adolescent disparity estimates based on data from self-administered questionnaires (SAQs). Mischievous…
Descriptors: Response Style (Tests), Bias, Adolescents, Questionnaires
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Massaro, Davide; Castelli, Ilaria; Sanvito, Laura; Marchetti, Antonella – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2014
This study investigated two different expressions of the so-called curse of knowledge in primary school children: hindsight bias and outcome bias. Further, it explored the possible predictive function of false belief understanding in reducing these biases. Ninety-one children aged 7, 9, and 11 years (middle- to upper-middle class) were…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Bias, Beliefs, Theory of Mind
Shields, David Light – Phi Delta Kappan, 2014
While subdued forms of everyday prejudice may seem harmless, appearances can be deceiving. Such commonplace prejudices form the foundation upon which more extreme acts of prejudice build. And they also leave us vulnerable to costly errors of judgment that can have tragic consequences. That is why addressing prejudice in the classroom is as crucial…
Descriptors: Bias, Stereotypes, Social Discrimination, Teacher Role
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Côté, Sébastien; Bouffard, Thérèse; Vezeau, Carole – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2014
Background: It is well established that children's self-evaluation bias of competence is related to the quality of parent-child emotional relationship. Such biases are linked to children's academic functioning and achievement. Links have also been established between the quality of parent-child emotional relationship and children's…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Competence, Bias, Self Evaluation (Individuals)
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