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Showing 106 to 120 of 128 results Save | Export
Shukla, A. P.; Prakash, Jai – 1989
Religion has played a dominant role in the lives of people all over the world. It is a widespread and significant social force in human societies. This study examined the degree of religiosity among Muslims, Christians, and Hindus and its effects on dependency and self-esteem. Subjects (N=300) were college students divided evenly among each of the…
Descriptors: Christianity, College Students, Comparative Analysis, Foreign Countries
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Power, Shahed – Environmental Education and Information, 1991
This article traces the evolution of Gandhi's exemplary relationship with nature through vignettes from his long life. Annotated are the religious roots and the environmental origins of his philosophical development, his contact with vegetarians and theosophists, and his responses to a variety of issues raised by the cohabitation of humans with…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Experiential Learning, Hinduism, Lifelong Learning
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Eslea, Mike; Mukhtar, Kafeela – Educational Research, 2000
A survey of 243 Hindu, Indian Muslim, and Pakistani children in British schools revealed that 57% of boys and 43% of girls had been bullied. Bullies were as likely to be other Asian children as whites; bullying was often related to religious or cultural differences. Bullying by members of the same ethnic group was comparatively rare. (SK)
Descriptors: Bullying, Cultural Differences, Ethnic Groups, Foreign Countries
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Tarakeshwar, Nalini; Pargament, Kenneth I.; Mahoney, Annette – Cultural Diversity & Ethnic Minority Psychology, 2003
Examines religious practices of Hindus in the United States and develops measures of their religious pathways. Four religious pathways were identified: devotion, ethical action, knowledge, and physical restraint/yoga. Results indicate that the measures of the religious pathways possessed adequate psychometric properties and were predictive of…
Descriptors: Ethics, Hinduism, Knowledge Level, Measures (Individuals)
Asopa, Sheel K. – International Journal of Environmental Education and Information, 1992
Discusses the Hindu religious scriptures as teachings about the human relationship with the environment and attitude toward ecology. Describes how religion has been a historical teacher of environmental ethics. Presents the Hindu view of humanity as it relates to the environment as portrayed in the Hindu theories. (10 references) (MCO)
Descriptors: Conservation (Environment), Ecology, Environmental Education, Ethics
Mayle, Paul D. – 1989
These materials were developed for use in a "Survey of the Far East" course offered at Mount Vernon Nazarene College, Mount Vernon, Ohio. This curriculum project focuses on the "Bhagavad Gita," with reference to its influence on and use by Mahatma Gandhi. The "Gita" may be used as a text, or may be included on a…
Descriptors: Area Studies, Ethics, Global Approach, Higher Education
Stroud, Scott R. – 2001
The "Bhagavad Gita" is a didactic dialogue inserted approximately in the middle of an immensely long Indian epic entitled the "Mahabharata." This paper examines the use of narrative in this ancient Hindu religious work, the "Bhagavad Gita"--specific attention is given to how the story in this didactic text uses…
Descriptors: Asian Studies, Classical Literature, Cultural Context, Didacticism
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Miller, Barbara D. – New Directions for Child Development, 1995
Presents general comments on economic, political and demographic features of Indian Hindu community in the United States. Describes preliminary findings on precepts and practices related to identity formation among Indian Hindu youth. Highlights practices related to dress and hair behaviors and gender differences. Presents questions for further…
Descriptors: Adolescent Attitudes, Adolescents, Behavior Patterns, Beliefs
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Allender, Tim – History of Education, 2003
Focuses on the dominant Anglican missionary schools in Punjab (India). States that the Anglican missions failed to fulfill their original design, but that Hindu schools were successful and played a role in India's movement for independence over British settlements in the northern region. (KDR)
Descriptors: Educational History, Educational Research, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries
Weil, Jonathan S. – 1988
India, a huge land with the second largest population in the world, socially and economically poor, and culturally and linguistically diverse, became the largest democracy in the world on November 26, 1949 with the adoption of the Indian Constitution. The goals of that constitution are: (1) the achievement of national unity and stability; (2) the…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Comparative Analysis, Constitutional History, Cross Cultural Studies
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Ghosh, E. S. K.; Huq, M. M. – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 1985
Reports two studies which examined the social identity of Hindu and Muslim subjects under three frames of reference: self, own group, and outgroup evaluations cross-nationally. Findings are examined in relation to the interplay of specific socio-contextual experiences in the differential pattern of social identity processes. (SED)
Descriptors: Caste, College Students, Cultural Context, Ethnic Relations
Johnson, Donald J.; Johnson, Jean E. – 1981
This book, which can be used in secondary and college courses, is the first of two volumes which present an Indian view of India and the world. The reality of everyday life as experienced by the Indian people is recreated in the series. Almost all of the material in both volumes has been written by Indians and has been taken from a variety of…
Descriptors: Area Studies, Asian Studies, Family Life, Family Relationship
Collins, Alfred; Prakash, Desai – 1984
In this examination of East Indian theories about the self, an overview of two Indian concepts of self, "atman" and "ahamkara," is presented. Then, in an effort to uncover common theoretical grounds for understanding India's diverse views of the self, comparisons are made between Western psychoanalytic theories (e.g., the…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Context, Hinduism
Makin, Marion A. – 1998
Intended for high school students, two humanities lessons on India approach India from a "world cultures" perspective. In the first lesson, "Story Scrolls," pairs of students create and present stories from Hindu mythology using traditional methods. The lesson gives content objectives, skills objectives, and…
Descriptors: Area Studies, Cultural Context, Curriculum Development, Developing Nations
Kakar, Sudhir – 1984
The study of various Indian traditions for the healing of emotional disorders has clarified two issues: the universality of human concerns that underlie emotional illness and the relativity of all psychotherapeutic endeavors, Eastern and Western. It is increasingly evident that Indian patients--whether Hindu, Muslim, or tribal--are engaged in the…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Comparative Analysis, Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Context
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