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Showing 2,911 to 2,925 of 4,749 results
Peer reviewedByrd, Diana M.; Gholson, Barry – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1985
This study was designed to explore relations among reading skills, metareading, memory, and metamemory. Interactions among these skills were investigated as related to reading ability, operativity, and grade level. The effects of experience, operativity, and metacognition on reading and memory skills were discussed. (Author/DWH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis, Elementary Education, Grade 2
Peer reviewedSlife, Brent D.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1985
A test of whether metacognition is a separate factor from cognition was conducted by measuring the effects of metacognitive factors in problem solving, while attempting to hold relevant cognitive factors constant. Learning disabled subjects were less skilled in metacognition with respect to knowledge about cognition and regulation of cognition.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis, Educational Research, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedCovington, Martin V.; Omelich, Carol L. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1985
Shame is a global emotion that shares an ability-linked component (humiliation) and an effort-linked component (guilt). Effort was found to increase humiliation via inability ascriptions because a combination of high effort and failure implies low ability. Conversely, high effort was found to decrease the guilt component of shame. (Author/DWH)
Descriptors: Academic Ability, Academic Failure, Achievement Need, Attribution Theory
Peer reviewedDe Corte, Erik; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1985
The influence of changes in wording of simple arithmetic problems without affecting semantic structure on the level of difficulty for primary-grade students was investigated. Data analysis produced results that rewording the problem so that the semantic relations are made more explicit facilitates the construction of an appropriate mental…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Difficulty Level, Elementary School Students, Primary Education
Peer reviewedWolf, Fredric M.; Savickas, Mark L. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1985
This study examines the relationship between adolescents' time perspective and attributions for achievement. Measures of time perspective (continuity, optimism, pessimism, and utilization) and attributions (ability, effort, context, and luck) independently assessed for success and failure were administered to 10th graders. Implications for…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Failure, Attribution Theory, Grade 10
Peer reviewedTennyson, Robert D.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1985
This study focused on the transition in memory between conceptual knowledge formation and procedural knowledge development. The first variable--display time interval--controlled the amount of instructional display time of each interrogatory example; the second variable--content sequence--sequenced examples according to response-sensitive decision…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Computer Assisted Instruction, Concept Formation, Concept Teaching
Peer reviewedBjorklund, David F.; Weiss, Sara C. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1985
Young children were grouped according to socioeconomic status determined by their parents' educational level (college, high school, or less). Subjects were assigned tasks on sets of pictures which could be organized on the basis of taxonomic or complementary relations. There were no significant differences in level of recall or clustering.…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Style, Family Environment, Family Influence
Peer reviewedPeters, Ellen E.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1985
Representational and transformational visual imagery instructions were manipulated within two passage types (name and occupation), along with no-strategy control instructions for each passage type. Transformational imagery instructions were effective on the more difficult to remember name passages. Representational imagery instructions were not…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Grade 8, Imagery, Junior High Schools
Peer reviewedLorch, Robert F., Jr.; Lorch, Elizabeth Pugzles – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1985
College subjects were required to read and recall an expository text. They recalled information about fewer topics if they were randomly ordered and the introductory paragraph was uninformative. Subjects recalled information about more topics if the text contained topic sentences. Readers used representation of a text's topic structure to guide…
Descriptors: College Students, Cues, Higher Education, Learning Strategies
Peer reviewedMitman, Alexis – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1985
Instructions between 12 third-grade teachers and their students were coded by observers who also rated the quality of teacher instruction. Questionnaires measured teachers' perception and attitudes. Teachers showing more concern for lower achieving students also received lower ratings on their teaching quality. (Author/BS)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Classroom Observation Techniques, High Achievement, Individual Differences
Peer reviewedHorn, Thelma Sternberg – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1985
This study examined the relationship between five softball coaches' feedback and changes in their female athletes' self-perceptions of competence; performance control; and expectancy for success. Multivariate regression analyses showed players' psychosocial growth was a function of both players' skill and the coaches' response to player…
Descriptors: Athletes, Athletic Coaches, Competence, Feedback
Peer reviewedHoward, George S.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1985
The accuracy of various evaluation methods for assessing teacher effectiveness was investigated. College instructors (n=43) were rated by students, colleagues, trained classroom raters, former students, and themselves. Results indicate these methods to be more valid than prior research would suggest. (BS)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Evaluation Methods, Higher Education, Interrater Reliability
Peer reviewedValencia, Richard R.; Rankin, Richard J. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1985
Content bias of the McCarthy Scales of Children's Abilities (MSCA) was investigated with dominant English- and dominant Spanish-speaking Mexican American preschoolers. The identified item bias (mostly against the Spanish language group) is discussed in terms of information overload on memory as influenced by language differences in word length and…
Descriptors: Intelligence Tests, Item Analysis, Language Dominance, Language Processing
Peer reviewedLicht, Barbara G.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1985
This study compared the causal attribution by sex for academic failures of 38 learning disabled and 38 nondisabled elementary school students. The relationship between different attributional tendencies and a reading persistence task were also examined. (BS)
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Attribution Theory, Comparative Analysis, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedReichardt, Charles S. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1985
The results of Seaver's (1973) quasi-experimental study of the effects of teacher expectancies on student achievement based on older sibling performance are reinterpreted as a regression artifact. That this rival explanation has not been recognized in the literature is probably due to the effects of researcher expectancies. (Author/BS)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Data Interpretation, Elementary Education, Expectation


