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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 3,256 to 3,270 of 6,672 results
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King, Alison; Staffieri, Anne; Adelgais, Anne – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1998
A study involving 58 seventh graders in same-gender dyads in three mutual peer tutoring conditions demonstrates that tutorial interaction can be structured so that same-ability age mates can scaffold each other's higher order thinking and learning. Scaffolding is not necessarily restricted to situations in which one partner is more knowledgeable…
Descriptors: Grade 7, Junior High School Students, Junior High Schools, Peer Relationship
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Horn, Elizabeth M.; Collier, William G.; Oxford, Julie A.; Bond, Charles F., Jr.; Dansereau, Donald F. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1998
The impact of individual differences on the performance of roles of learner and learning facilitator was studied during dyadic cooperative learning with 80 college students in same-sex groups of 4. The learner role accounted for more than 70% of the variance in total recall. The influence of cognitive and rapport factors is discussed. (SLD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Cooperative Learning, Higher Education
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Bhargava, Alok – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1998
The scores on cognitive tests and school examinations of approximately 110 Kenyan children aged 6-9 years were analyzed, and a model was formulated. Certain measures of biological development and grade level are important predictors of scores on higher order cognitive tests. Household socioeconomic status is also positively associated with…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Tests, Elementary Education
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Thorkildsen, Theresa A.; Nicholls, John G. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1998
Thirty classes of fifth graders (n=536) were surveyed to see if their criteria for academic success, beliefs about the causes of success, and perceptions of teachers' expectations involved the coordination of personal values and contextual norms. Beliefs about causes of success have some relation to personal identities and students'…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Achievement Need, Attribution Theory, Beliefs
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Wentzel, Kathryn R. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1998
The supportive relationships of 167 sixth graders with parents, teachers, and peers were examined in relation to motivation at school. Relations of perceived support from parents, teachers, and peers to student motivation differed depending on the source of support and motivational outcome. Peer support was a positive predictor of prosocial goal…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Grade 6, Intermediate Grades, Middle Schools
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Wolters, Christopher A. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1998
Self-report data from 115 college students provided evidence that students regulate their levels of effort in academic tasks by using a variety of cognitive, volitional, and motivational strategies, and that their use of strategies varies across motivational problems. Relationships of motivational regulation to goal orientation, cognitive…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, College Students, Goal Orientation, Grades (Scholastic)
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Schraw, Gregory; Nietfeld, John – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1998
The general monitoring skill hypothesis states that skilled adult learners monitor their comprehension using domain-general metacognitive knowledge and domain-specific knowledge. Results with 192 undergraduates indicate that monitoring skills are correlated across multiple domains and that individuals may possess separate monitoring skills for…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Higher Education
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Spires, Hiller A.; Donley, Jan – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1998
Ninth graders (n=30 and n=39) who learned to use a prior knowledge activation (PKA) strategy consistently outperformed students in a main-idea strategy treatment group (n=25 and n=43) and those in a no-instruction control group (n=24 and n=44) on application-level questions but not on literal-level questions. (SLD)
Descriptors: Grade 9, High Schools, Junior High Schools, Learning Strategies
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Metsala, Jamie L.; Brown, Gordon D. A.; Stanovich, Keith E. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1998
Presents a meta-analysis of spelling-to-sound regularity effects in individuals with reading disabilities and reading-level comparison groups. The clear effect of word regularity for individuals with reading disabilities, which did not differ from the word regularity effects for individuals at reading levels, is discussed relative to classic…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Phonology, Reading Difficulties, Spelling
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Lonigan, Christopher J.; Burgess, Stephen R.; Anthony, Jason L.; Barker, Theodore A. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1998
Phonological sensitivity was examined in 238 children ages two to five years from middle-to-upper-income families and 118 children from lower-income families across different levels of linguistic complexity. Overall, results indicated an increase in phonological sensitivity with age, as well as increasing stability and significant social class…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Linguistic Competence, Low Income, Phonology
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Correa, Jane; Nunes, Terezinha; Bryant, Peter – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1998
Development of the concept of division was studied in two experiments involving a total of 124 5-, 6-, and 7-year-old students in England. Partitive tasks, more similar to sharing, were easier than quotitive tasks, suggesting that children's initial understanding of division might be based on the action schema of sharing. (SLD)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Concept Formation, Division, Elementary School Students
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Zohar, Dov – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1998
A study with 118 high school students tested the hypothesis that anxiety concerning examinations covering different subjects (the Scholastic Assessment Test) is an additive function of dispositional text anxiety and the anticipated results of individual tests. Results indicate that the anxiety associated with different exams is an incremental…
Descriptors: College Entrance Examinations, Expectation, High School Students, High Schools
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Berninger, Virginia W.; Vaughan, Katherine; Abbott, Robert D.; Brooks, Allison; Abbott, Sylvia P.; Rogan, Laura; Reed, Elizabeth; Graham, Steve – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1998
Poor spellers in second grade (N=128) participated in sessions that included direct instruction in the alphabet principle, modeling of different approaches for developing connections between spoken and written words, and practice in composing. Results of this multilayered approach are discussed, including evidence that training in spelling…
Descriptors: Educational Psychology, Grade 2, Letters (Alphabet), Literacy Education
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Graham, Sandra; Taylor, April Z.; Hudley, Cynthia – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1998
Two studies examined middle school students' achievement values by using peer-nomination procedures. Nominations of peers whom participants admired, respected, and wanted to be like were summed to create a values index. The usefulness of peer-nomination procedures as a methodology for studying values and implications for understanding the plight…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Achievement Need, Adolescent Attitudes, Black Students
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McInerney, Dennis M.; Hinkley, John; Dowson, Martin; Van Etten, Shawn – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1998
Discusses a study in which the similarities and differences between Aboriginal Australian, Anglo Australian, and immigrant Australian students' learning-goal orientations were measured. Previous research posits that children embrace different learning goals according to their culture. In contrast, findings indicate that the profiles of all…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Achievement Need, Cultural Influences, Educational Psychology
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