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Condit, Celeste Michelle – Communication Education, 2000
Responds to J. McCroskey and M. Beatty's article in this issue. Argues that debates over relative importance of nature versus nurture are misguided because the relative influence of genetic and environmental components varies depending on specific genes and environments under consideration and their specific interactions. Explores what these…
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Curriculum

Beatty, Michael J.; McCroskey, James C. – Communication Education, 2000
Replies to C. M. Condit's response to the authors' article on communibiology in the same issue of this journal, arguing that some of her challenges to communibiology are seriously flawed. (SR)
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Curriculum
Meier, John H.; Sloan, Michael P. – 1982
A multifactorial model is presented that depicts a representative set of dimensions involved in child abuse and neglect. The model includes parental, ecological, and child factors linked to precipitating situations and/or events that result in child abuse or neglect. An excerpt from the records of an abused child illustrates the model. Also…
Descriptors: Animal Behavior, Biological Influences, Case Studies, Child Abuse
Conyers, James E. – 1984
Deficiency theories of racial inequality are basically inadequate in explaining observed racial differences between groups. Nonetheless, throughout the history of our country, both political leaders and prominent educators have propounded the notion that the inferior social status of blacks is due to some inherent deficiency in their make-up.…
Descriptors: Black Family, Blacks, Cultural Influences, Nature Nurture Controversy
Morris, Frank L. – 1971
In 1969, Arthur Jensen published his controversial article concluding that blacks are less intelligent than whites and that genetic factors explain more of the variance between the two groups than environmental differences. This paper criticizes Jensen's work and discusses its negative implications. Interpretive and methodological weaknesses in…
Descriptors: Bias, Blacks, Disadvantaged, Educational Researchers
Rudnitski, Rose A. – Gifted Education International, 1996
This article presents a critical overview of leadership theory and curriculum and suggests alternatives to meet the challenges of a changing global society. The inclusion of paradigms and perspectives often excluded from traditional leadership theories and programs is proposed, including nature theories, nurture theories, communitarian theories,…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Secondary Education, Feminism
French, Fred – Education Canada, 2003
Child development theories conclude that nature and nurture interactively shape individual development. Implications for education are that children learn better when they feel wanted and are in a supportive environment. Teaching needs to go beyond pure content and focus on learning how to learn. Assessment should focus on the use of knowledge…
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Child Development, Cognitive Ability, Educational Environment

Touwen, Bert C. L. – Developmental Review, 1998
Examines the weak relationship between structural and functional brain development. Maintains that variability is the basic characteristic of normal development, and that involves the ability to construct pluriform strategies and to select the proper strategy in any particular situation. Argues that McGraw recognized intra- and inter-individual…
Descriptors: Brain, Child Development, Children, Developmental Psychology

Harris, Judith Rich – Developmental Psychology, 2000
Maintains that context effects and genetic effects are among the confounding factors that make it impossible to reject the null hypothesis of zero long-term parenting effects on child outcomes. Asserts that group socialization theory attributes outside-the-home socialization to identification with a peer group and assimilation of group norms, but…
Descriptors: Children, Context Effect, Environmental Influences, Nature Nurture Controversy

McCroskey, James C.; Beatty, Michael J. – Communication Education, 2000
Argues that evidence is accumulating that genetics plays a major role in human communication behavior. Looks at the importance of neurological systems in communication behavior, and at the role of cerebral functioning. Addresses implications of the "communibiological perspective" for communication instruction. Argues that, rather than…
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Curriculum
Gonzalves, Linda – 1983
The history of the study of human mental ability is an example of the dialectic in social science between those who interpret data within the framework of existing social inequities and those who look for perspectives that might eventually dissolve inequities. The dedication of Henry Herbert Goddard to a belief in the scientific proof of…
Descriptors: Bias, Classification, Cognitive Ability, Data Analysis
Gordon, Edmund W. – 1973
Due mainly to the cultural reverence for the baccalaureate degree, there is a growing pressure from low income and minority groups to expand programs in continuing education. Various approaches to the problem have been tried (talent searches by colleges, open admissions) but have not proved successful. Although success and financing are problems,…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Adult Education, Change Strategies, Educational Policy
Morris, Edward K.; Hursh, Daniel E. – 1979
This paper indicates underlying philosophic assumptions which are compatible with the behavior analysis approach to child development. Four issues taken into consideration are (a) biology and environment, (b) structure and function, (c) traits and situations, and (d) mechanistic and organismic approaches to development. The following ideas…
Descriptors: Behavior Theories, Behavioral Science Research, Child Development, Environmental Influences

Hodapp, Robert M.; Zigler, Edward – American Journal of Mental Deficiency, 1986
The authors respond to a critique of their article proposing low IQ as the sole defining characteristics of mental retardation and address such issues as social versus intellectual definitions, the role of social adaptation in defining mental retardation, the relevance of diverse definitions to research and practice, and the nature-nurture…
Descriptors: Adaptive Behavior (of Disabled), Clinical Diagnosis, Definitions, Disability Identification

Loehlin, John C. – Multivariate Behavioral Research, 1984
Raymond Cattell's efforts to sort out the relationships of genetic or environmental patterns to personality factors have contributed to behavior genetics. Early writings on the projected decline of intelligence in Britain, studies using Multivariate Abstract Variance Analysis, and other miscellaneous studies on personality factors and mental…
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Experimenter Characteristics, Genetics, Heredity