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Colleen E. Whittingham; Emily Brown Hoffman – Peabody Journal of Education, 2024
A critical content analysis is employed to scrutinize the second-grade materials within EL education's English language arts curriculum. Applying critical race theory, this study confronts the pervasive anti-Black narrative embedded in standardized curriculum used in the United States. The study unveils the presence of this narrative in the…
Descriptors: Grade 2, Instructional Materials, Language Arts, Racism
Steen, Sam; Davis, Julius; Bethea, Canaan – Journal of School-Based Counseling Policy and Evaluation, 2023
Scholarship focused on Black male students in school counseling has been intermittent despite being well documented in the larger field of education and other disciplines. In this article, we conducted a systematic review of the school counseling literature that focused on Black male students. We used critical race theory (CRT) to examine the…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Blacks, African American Students, Success
Maina-Okori, Naomi Mumbi; Koushik, Jada Renee; Wilson, Alexandria – Journal of Environmental Education, 2018
We seek to understand how issues of intersectionality are addressed in environmental and sustainability education (ESE) literature, focusing on how gender is discussed in relation to other social identities such as class, race, sexuality, and ability. Our analysis draws from feminist and decolonizing frameworks, and uses intersectionality to…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Sustainability, Social Theories, Feminism
Stolp, Stephanie; Zabrucky, Karen M. – International Electronic Journal of Elementary Education, 2009
In this paper we examine the contributions of metacognitive and self-regulated learning theories to research on students' calibration of comprehension. Historically, cognitive psychologists have studied calibration of comprehension within a purely metacognitive framework, with an emphasis on the role of text and task factors but little…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Learning Theories, Independent Study, Reading Comprehension
Junker, Brian W.; And Others – 1991
Some item response theory (IRT) techniques work in applications even though the usual structural IRT assumptions, and local independence (LI) in particular, do not hold. When the departure from LI is too great, traditional procedures will break down. Although violations of strictly unidimensional, monotone, locally independent latent structure can…
Descriptors: Ability, Equations (Mathematics), Estimation (Mathematics), Item Response Theory
Carsrud, Robert Steven – 1988
Since the identification of self-handicapping strategies in 1978, considerable attention has been paid to this phenomenon. Self-handicapping is a strategy for discounting ability attributions for probable failure while augmenting ability attributions for possible success. Behavioral self-handicaps are conceptually distinct from self-reported…
Descriptors: Ability, Attribution Theory, Behavior Patterns, Behavior Theories

Whitely, Susan E. – Intelligence, 1980
This article examines the potential contribution of latent trait models to the study of intelligence. Nontechnical introductions to both unidimensional and multidimensional latent trait models are given. Multidimensional latent trait models can be used to test alternative multiple component theories of test item processing. (Author/CTM)
Descriptors: Ability, Aptitude Tests, Cognitive Processes, Intelligence

Watkins, Marley W.; Kush, Joseph C. – School Psychology Review, 1994
Study compares Wechsler (WISC-R) profiles of special-education students to seven core types distinguished primarily by levels of global ability. More than 96% of these students were found to be similar to one of the core types considered to be common variants of normal intellectual ability. Based on data, it is recommended that "no way"…
Descriptors: Ability, Achievement Tests, Special Education, Test Theory
Schunk, Dale H. – 1990
The idea that schooling socialization practices may influence students' self-regulated learning through their effects on attributions and perceived self-efficacy is discussed, focusing on students' beliefs about their abilities. From an attributional perspective, ability is generally viewed as a relatively fixed quality, but researchers have begun…
Descriptors: Ability, Attribution Theory, Behavior Theories, Elementary Secondary Education
de la Torre, Jimmy; Patz, Richard J. – 2002
It is not unusual for several tests measuring different abilities to be given in one test administration. A common practice is to estimate these abilities independently of each other, but this paper proposes a more efficient method of estimating these abilities that takes into account the correlational structure of the abilities. The method uses a…
Descriptors: Ability, Bayesian Statistics, Estimation (Mathematics), Item Response Theory

Luchins, Edith H. – American Mathematical Monthly, 1981
Frequently cited sex differences in general psychology texts are noted, with such "differences" specified even when scientific evidence did not exist. Research on brain lateralization and sex difference is reviewed. (MP)
Descriptors: Ability, Cognitive Ability, Females, Intelligence

Yan, Wenfan; Gaier, Eugene L. – Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 1994
Compares possible causal attributions for college success and failure in 358 American and Asian undergraduate students. American students attributed academic success more often to ability than did Asian students, and they appeared to believe that effort was more important to success than lack of effort was to failure. (GLR)
Descriptors: Ability, Academic Achievement, Academic Failure, Asian Americans

Saha, Sunhir K. – Human Relations, 1979
Some of the major contingency theories of leadership are reviewed; some results from the author's study of Fiedler's contingency model are reported; and some thoughts for the future of leadership research are provided. (Author/MLF)
Descriptors: Ability, Contingency Management, Group Behavior, Intelligence

Parsons, Jacquelynne Eccles – Journal of Educational Equity and Leadership, 1983
Reviews the attribution literature on sex differences in academic achievement, especially in mathematics. Suggests that: (1) there are small sex differences in the importance attached to effort and ability as causes of mathematics success and failure; and (2) attributions are not as significant as other possible causes in mediating course…
Descriptors: Ability, Academic Achievement, Attribution Theory, Elementary Secondary Education

Holloway, Susan D. – Review of Educational Research, 1988
A research review of ability and effort studies in the United States and Japan finds: (1) effort considered the primary determinant of achievement in Japan; (2) different concepts; and (3) the Japanese fostering task involvement through cooperation. Social structure may account for the attributional patterns of Japanese children. (SLD)
Descriptors: Ability, Academic Achievement, Attribution Theory, Comparative Analysis
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