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Remizova, Alisa; Rudnev, Maksim – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2020
The justifiability scale (JS) is widely used to measure individual and country differences in moral attitudes. However, the validity of the instrument has been barely assessed. The current study addressed the concurrent and content validity of four popular JS items (justifiability of homosexuality, suicide, prostitution, and euthanasia). A sample…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Content Validity, Attitude Measures, Foreign Countries
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Falk, Dean – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2020
Recent allegations that pediatrician Hans Asperger legitimized Nazi policies, including forced sterilization and child euthanasia, are refuted with newly translated and chronologically-ordered information that takes into account Hitler's deceptive 'halt' to the T4 euthanasia program in 1941. It is highly unlikely that Asperger was aware of the T4…
Descriptors: War, World History, Authoritarianism, Biographies
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McGrew, Sarah – Cognition and Instruction, 2022
This study explored expertise in searching for online information on a contentious historical and political question. Fact checkers, historians, and college students thought aloud while conducting online research on the question, "Did Margaret Sanger, the founder of Planned Parenthood, support euthanasia?" Analyses of screen recordings…
Descriptors: Online Searching, Expertise, College Students, Historians
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Chong, Alice Ming-Lin; Fok, Shiu-Yeu – Death Studies, 2013
This article reports the validation of the Chinese version of an expanded 31-item Euthanasia Attitude Scale. A 4-stage validation process included a pilot survey of 119 college students and a randomized household survey with 618 adults in Hong Kong. Confirmatory factor analysis confirmed a 4-factor structure of the scale, which can therefore be…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Attitude Measures, Death, Test Validity
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Medler, Scott – Advances in Physiology Education, 2019
Frogs are routinely used in physiology teaching laboratories to demonstrate important physiological processes. There have been recent directives that promote the use of the anesthetic MS-222 (tricaine methanesulfonate), rather than lowering body temperature with a cold water bath to prepare reptiles and amphibians for physiological experiments or…
Descriptors: Animals, Motor Reactions, Anesthesiology, Physiology
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Witte, Tracy K.; Correia, Christopher J.; Angarano, Donna – Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 2013
Veterinarians have an increased risk for suicide compared with the general population, yet there is little consensus regarding why this might be. We hypothesized that veterinarians become relatively fearless about death due to their repeated exposure to euthanasia. Accordingly, we predicted that there would be a positive relationship between…
Descriptors: Death, Fear, Veterinary Medical Education, Medical Students
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Machado, Gisele F.; Melo, Guilherme D.; Perri, Silvia H. V.; Fernandes, Fernando V.; Moraes, Olívia C.; Souza, Milena S.; Grano, Fernanda G.; Silva, José E. S.; Nunes, Cáris M. – Journal of Biological Education, 2017
Animal experimentation is a controversial topic, especially among the general public and the scientific community. Thirty-eight undergraduate students attending the College of Veterinary Medicine--São Paulo State University in the municipality of Araçatuba, São Paulo, Brazil, were followed up between 2008 and 2011 and were asked to complete an…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Veterinary Medical Education, Questionnaires
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Wainman, Bruce C.; Cornwall, Jon – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2019
Around the world, the recent introduction of assisted death laws has meant that undertaking medical assistance in dying (MAID) is now an option for some persons wishing to end their life. Some of these people donate their bodies to medical science, and by doing so have created a new route from which donor programs can now receive bodies. Such…
Descriptors: Donors, Human Body, Death, Medicine
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Jamrichová, Valéria; Zamborová, Katarína – Language Learning in Higher Education, 2016
A learner-centred approach puts students amidst the learning process and helps them become involved in that process. It provides an opportunity for students to choose and direct the course of the lesson. This approach is especially appropriate when dealing with ethical concerns that might be sensitive issues. When it comes to the sources for the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Medical Education, Ethics, Student Centered Learning
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Ceylan, Özge; Topsakal, Ünsal Umdu – Journal of Education and Training Studies, 2018
This research was carried out to reveal the bioethical values that special, talented students have about the socioscientific issues that they may encounter in everyday life. Scanning model was used in the research from quantitative research methods. The study's working group is composed of special talented fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, and…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Ethics, Biology, Student Attitudes
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Beaudoin-Ryan, Leanne; Goldin-Meadow, Susan – Developmental Science, 2014
Stem-cell research. Euthanasia. Personhood. Marriage equality. School shootings. Gun control. Death penalty. Ethical dilemmas regularly spark fierce debate about the underlying moral fabric of societies. How do we prepare today's children to be fully informed and thoughtful citizens, capable of moral and ethical decisions? Current approaches…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Thinking Skills, Logical Thinking, Nonverbal Communication
Gewertz, Catherine – Education Week, 2012
Brittany Rollins is hanging out a lot at the local animal shelter this year. Delving into the issue of pet euthanasia and writing about it will help her earn English/language arts credits toward graduation. The 17-year-old senior at Newfound Regional High School, in the rural central New Hampshire town of Bristol, is part of one of the most…
Descriptors: Competence, Teaching Methods, Knowledge Level, Nontraditional Education
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Jamaludin, Azilawati; Chee, Yam San; Ho, Caroline Mei Lin – Computers & Education, 2009
This paper examines how pre-university students shared and constructed knowledge in the context of GP (general paper) by interacting through individual virtual characters across five cycles of enactive role play sessions. Contextualized scenarios on the topic of euthanasia were developed in "Second Life". Role-playing the virtual characters…
Descriptors: Death, Data Analysis, Virtual Classrooms, Ethics
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Chong, Alice Ming-lin; Fok, Shiu-yeu – Death Studies, 2005
This article reports the findings of a cross-sectional study that compared the attitudes of 618 respondents of a general household survey and a random sample of 1,197 physicians toward different types of euthanasia in Hong Kong. The general public was found to agree with active euthanasia and non-voluntary euthanasia and was neutral about passive…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Physicians, Physical Disabilities, Death
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Hyde, Michael J.; McSpiritt, Sarah – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2007
Our project is intended to supplement and extend research that emphasizes how the rhetoric informing the euthanasia debate admits a call of conscience and how this call would have us act heroically as we acknowledge what is arguably some particular truth that is at work in the debate (e.g., only God has the right to take a life). The relationship…
Descriptors: Death, Debate, Public Opinion, Ethics
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