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Descriptor
Author
Publication Type
Showing 1,906 to 1,920 of 2,894 results
Peer reviewedBurke, Joy Patricia; And Others – Psychology in the Schools, 1983
Surveyed 45 state departments of education to identify professional groups that are providing psychological services in the schools. Results showed 59 percent of the states mandate services of school psychologists by law. A variety of allied professional groups also provide psychological services. (Author/JAC)
Descriptors: Ancillary School Services, Counselor Role, Elementary Secondary Education, Faculty Workload
Peer reviewedHirshoren, Alfred; Schnittjer, Carl J. – Psychology in the Schools, 1983
Assessed behavior problems in blind children (N=104) at a residential school. Teachers completed the Behavior Problem Checklist and results were compared with previous studies of deaf children. Results were more similar to those with hearing impaired children in the residential setting than to deaf children at home or nonhandicapped children.…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Blindness, Children, Cohort Analysis
Peer reviewedHowell, Kenneth W.; And Others – Psychology in the Schools, 1983
Reviews self-control instruction for retarded students and describes a self-recording training procedure. Five moderately retarded adolescents were taught to self-record a training behavior and generalize the self-recording behavior to idiosyncratic behaviors. Subject-observer agreement is reported, along with monitoring effects on the…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Behavior Modification, Behavior Problems, Change Strategies
Peer reviewedBowman, Phyllis; Goldberg, Miriam – Psychology in the Schools, 1983
Uses case studies to illustrate adaptations of reframing by the school psychologist in a single-parent conference. The family is offered a reformulation of the child's problem in interactional terms. The underlying motivation is shown in a positive light and gives the family a new definition of the situation. (Author/JAC)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Counseling Techniques, Elementary Secondary Education, Emotional Adjustment
Peer reviewedChandler, Louis A. – Psychology in the Schools, 1983
Uses a case study to illustrate brief therapy with a parent and presents some implications for the school psychologist. Brief therapy is an active, focused, incisive intervention especially useful with children referred because of emotional adjustment problems. (Author/JAC)
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, Case Studies, Children, Counseling Techniques
Peer reviewedOwnby, Raymond L. – Psychology in the Schools, 1983
Presents a case of successful treatment of compulsive handwashing in a thirteen-year-old boy through a cognitive behavioral intervention, showing the potential efficacy of these procedures with children for this type of behavior problem. The principal cognitive intervention was thought-stopping with which the child's obsessive ruminations were…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Behavior Problems, Case Studies, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewedStehbens, James A.; And Others – Psychology in the Schools, 1983
Investigated school behavior and attendance of children with cancer (N=36) and hemophilia (N=26). Teacher ratings of students' behavior showed no differences before and after treatment. Children with cancer were absent four times more than healthy children; absenteeism of hemophiliacs was twice the normal rate. Academic performance was negatively…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attendance, Cancer, Elementary School Students
Peer reviewedGargiulo, Richard M.; Yonker, Robert J. – Psychology in the Schools, 1983
Assessed attitudes of pre- and in-service regular and special educators (N=48) toward teaching special-needs pupils via changes in pulse and skin temperature and with self-report. The self-report data were contradicted by the physiological evidence, which indicated that preservice perceived teaching the handicapped child to be more stressful.…
Descriptors: Attitude Measures, Attitudes toward Disabilities, Disabilities, Education Majors
Peer reviewedPeter, Dennis; And Others – Psychology in the Schools, 1983
Investigated the relationship between hyperactive behavior and children's (N=92) perceptions of teachers' behavior, particularly acceptance and demand. Hyperactive behavior was significantly related to both variables in the directions of less perceived acceptance and greater perceived demand. Hyperactive boys perceived significantly less…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Elementary School Students, Foreign Countries, Hyperactivity
Peer reviewedWilson, Lonny R.; And Others – Psychology in the Schools, 1983
Explores the limitations associated with the expectancy formula approach, using a logical and mathematical analysis. Expectancy tables are predicted on the questionable assumption that achievement follows a straight line growth pattern. The approach is biased in the direction of applying a more stringent underachievement criterion for older,…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Bias, Educational Diagnosis, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedWillson, Victor L. – Psychology in the Schools, 1983
Reviews a recent paper by Levy (1982) which concluded that a new format of the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test was valid for autistic children. Claims the analysis was inappropriate and presents a statistical test to compare differences between independent mean differences. Includes a reply by Stine Levy. (Author/JAC)
Descriptors: Autism, Children, Comparative Analysis, Correlation
Peer reviewedPowers, Stephen; Barkan, Jerry H. – Psychology in the Schools, 1986
Correlations between the Standard Progressive Matrices test (SPM) and the California Achievement Test, Reading, Language, and Mathematics Tests were examined for 99 Hispanic and 93 non-Hispanic Caucasian seventh-grade students. All correlations were highly significant. Supports continued use of the SPM as a measure of nonverbal intellectual…
Descriptors: Achievement Tests, Cognitive Ability, Concurrent Validity, Culture Fair Tests
Peer reviewedPolubinski, Joseph; And Others – Psychology in the Schools, 1986
Beery's Developmental Test of Visual-Motor Integration was individually administered to 193 school-age children. Four factors were obtained, indicating that the test does not measure a unitary dimension of perceptual-motor development, but rather four distinct levels or stages for the age range of children investigated. (Author/ABB)
Descriptors: Developmental Stages, Elementary School Students, Factor Structure, Longitudinal Studies
Peer reviewedHaddad, Frederick A. – Psychology in the Schools, 1986
Results of the Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children (K-ABC) and Bender-Gestalt Test were compared for a sample of learning disabled children that included 24 blacks and 24 whites; mean age 9 years. A significant correlation coefficient was found between the K-ABC Simultaneous Scale and the Bender-Gestalt Test error score. Implications of these…
Descriptors: Black Students, Comparative Analysis, Correlation, Educational Diagnosis
Peer reviewedKarnes, Frances A.; And Others – Psychology in the Schools, 1986
Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children (K-ABC) processing and achievement subtests were administered to 41 gifted students in grades four through six. Scores were compared to concurrent achievement measures from the California Achievement Test and other mental ability measures. Patterns of intercorrelations suggest that the K-ABC achievement…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Achievement Tests, Comparative Analysis, Correlation


