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Stein, Elizabeth Leahy; Weidman, John C. – 1989
This paper argues that neither of two views of post-baccalaureate training of professionals is adequate for understanding socialization into the learned professions and offers an alternative model. Both the idea of professional education as the transmission of professional knowledge and skills and the idea of professional education as a sorting or…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Graduate Study, Higher Education, Individual Characteristics
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Matsueda, Ross L.; Heimer, Karen – American Sociological Review, 1987
Broken homes have a larger impact on delinquency among Blacks than non-Blacks. In both populations, the effects of broken homes and attachment to parents and peers are mediated by the learning of definitions of delinquency, a finding that supports differential association over social control theory. (Author/BJV)
Descriptors: Behavior Theories, Blacks, Delinquency, Delinquency Causes
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Cole, Stephen; And Others – American Sociological Review, 1988
The following arguments are offered in criticism of Hargens' theory that consensus may be measured by scholarly journal rejection rate: (1) Hargens fails to specify adequately the meaning of "consensus"; (2) all sciences have similar levels of relatively low consensus; and (3) journal rejection rates are influenced by other variables…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Academic Standards, Editing, Reader Response
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Hargens, Lowell L. – American Sociological Review, 1988
Cole, Simon, and Cole identify the following variables that may affect scholarly journal rejection rates: (1) field-specific publication norms; (2) diffuseness of journal structures; and (3) differences in training practices. However, they do not explain why the variables they identify covary across disciplines. (BJV)
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Academic Standards, Editing, Reader Response
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Garza, Raymond T.; Lipton, Jack P. – Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences, 1982
Traditional theories of personality development are critically examined, emphasizing their applications to Mexican Americans. A preliminary framework for an interactional model of multiculturalism and personality development which can synthesize and integrate the effects of Chicano culture on the development of personality is proposed and…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Biculturalism, Cultural Influences, Developmental Psychology
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Harrington, Charles – Anthropology and Education Quarterly, 1982
Beginning with an overview of the anthropological heritage of educational anthropology, the outgoing editor of this journal reviews the development of the field and comments on the implications of anthropology for research on educational policy. (Author/GC)
Descriptors: Anthropology, Cross Cultural Studies, Culture, Educational Anthropology
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Chatman, Elfreda A. – RQ, 1990
Alienation theory was applied to a study of information behavior among 51 janitors. Results showed that they lack an informal information network because of their work schedule, and a perception that their neighbors are undesirable associates and no more informed than they are. (34 references) (EAM)
Descriptors: Alienation, Disadvantaged Environment, Housekeepers, Information Networks
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Farnsworth, Margaret; Leiber, Michael J. – American Sociological Review, 1989
Defends Merton's theory of strain and crime against recent criticism on the grounds that conceptual reinterpretations have differed from Merton's original statement. Through the analysis of data reported by 1614 juveniles, examines the empirical and theoretical implications of the reconciliation of strain implied in its current use. (Author/BJV)
Descriptors: Crime, Delinquency Causes, High Risk Persons, Models
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Zeichner, Kenneth M. – Teaching and Teacher Education, 1993
Discusses how a conceptual framework describing four traditions of practice in U.S. teacher education (academic, social efficacy, developmentalist, and social reconstructionist) can be used to explain approaches in individual teacher education programs. The University of Wisconsin's program illustrates how the traditions illuminate the commitments…
Descriptors: Conventional Instruction, Educational Change, Elementary Education, Higher Education
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Albert, Katrice A.; Luzzo, Darrell Anthony – Journal of Counseling & Development, 1999
Presents overview of the primary components of Lent, Brown, and Hackett's social cognitive career theory and Weiner's attribution theory as they relate to career-related barriers. Discusses implications associated with each approach. Suggests that counselors need to help clients distinguish between barriers for which personal control and…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Career Choice, Career Exploration, College Students
Jones, James M. – 1983
From its beginning, the United States has been a multiracial society, and from the beginning relations between and among the races have been strained by cultural, economic, social, political, and psychological conflicts. Social psychology came of age in the early 1900's as a disciplined inquiry into the psycho-social problems of the people, and…
Descriptors: Blacks, Cultural Differences, Evaluation, Intelligence Differences
Elliott, John – 1983
In the first part of the paper, the author discusses his observation that teachers perceive any form of theorizing in schools to be intellectually dependent on educational researchers. Teachers assume that their access to educational theories depends on a group external to themselves and that theory has little practical value in the classroom. In…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Research, Educational Theories, Hidden Curriculum
Sander, Benno – 1985
This paper examines the role of comparative education from the perspective of the dependent society, with particular attention to Latin America and the Caribbean. The paper starts by comparing the theories of dependence developed in both dominant and dependent societies. The Marxist theory and the liberal, "developmental" theories that…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Developed Nations, Developing Nations, Educational Administration
McCord, Joan – 1985
Theories of socialization have developed independently of established facts against which to measure their adequacy. Studies showing low levels of skin conductance and slow latency of response among criminals have supported a bio-social theory that criminals inherit neurological systems that impede reduction of fear and interfere with learning.…
Descriptors: Antisocial Behavior, Attribution Theory, Cognitive Style, Criminals
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Lewis, Arthur O. – Bulletin of Science, Technology, and Society, 1987
Differentiates between utopian societies and their opposite, anti-utopias. Cites literary works which refer to the relationships between utopias and technology. Provides a bibliography of works cited as well as secondary sources. (TW)
Descriptors: Literary History, Literature, Literature Reviews, Science and Society
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