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Tate, Thomas F.; Copas, Randall L. – Reclaiming Children and Youth, 2010
Peer group treatment has been subject to two main lines of criticism. Some suggest any program which aggregates antisocial youth inevitably fosters negative peer influence. Others are concerned that certain peer programs are based on coercive peer confrontation. Positive Peer Culture [PPC] is an antidote to both of these varieties of toxic group…
Descriptors: Peer Groups, Peer Influence, Antisocial Behavior, Youth Programs
Rossen, Eric; Cowan, Katherine C. – National Association of School Psychologists, 2012
Creating safe and supportive schools that are free from bullying, discrimination, harassment, aggression, violence, and abuse is essential to this mission. Bullying among school-age youth is a particularly serious, insidious, and pervasive problem that undermines the teaching and learning environment, increases mental health and behavior problems,…
Descriptors: Bullying, Prevention, School Safety, Educational Environment
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Snakenborg, John; Van Acker, Richard; Gable, Robert A. – Preventing School Failure, 2011
Bullying has long been of concern to school officials and parents alike. Bullying, which is a type of aggressive behavior, has now entered the electronic age in the form of cyberbullying (e.g., e-mails, text messages, profile sites). Cyberbullying is especially insidious because it affords a measure of anonymity and the opportunity to reach a much…
Descriptors: Intervention, Bullying, Aggression, Prevention
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Letendre, Joan; Smith, Ellen – Children & Schools, 2011
Girl fighting and its relational context is a problem that is receiving extensive attention in popular and academic circles. This article reports on a project that gathered the opinions from focus groups of seventh- and eighth-grade girls, organized to understand the perspectives of young adolescent girls in middle school on girl fighting. Both…
Descriptors: Females, Early Adolescents, Middle School Students, Violence
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Asaya, Samuel Adetunji – Journal of International Education Research, 2011
The vices rampant now among students in Nigeria secondary schools, such as acts of indiscipline, stealing, cheating, truancy, rioting, cultism, and raping, together with population explosion, call for special skills on the part of the school administrators to be able to cope with these challenges. Consequently, this paper examines the uniqueness…
Descriptors: Educational Improvement, Foreign Countries, Staff Development, Principals
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Aljadeff-Abergel, Elian; Ayvazo, Shiri; Eldar, Eitan – Intervention in School and Clinic, 2012
Social skills are prerequisite to academic performance and success in school. Training of these skills is particularly important for students with emotional and behavioral disorders (EBD) who have social deficits and struggle maintaining appropriate and accepted behavior in and outside of the classroom. Educating through the "physical" model is a…
Descriptors: Physical Activities, Physical Education Teachers, Play, Special Education Teachers
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Bagley, Constance E.; Natarajan, Priyamvada; Vayzman, Liena; Wexler, Laura; McCarthy, Shirley – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2012
Sexual assault and other forms of sexual misconduct are all too common on university campuses. The US Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights reports that 19 percent of female and 6.1 percent of male college students reported being victims of completed or attempted sexual assaults since entering college. The degree to which Penn State's…
Descriptors: Campuses, Civil Rights, Sexual Harassment, Sexual Abuse
Dillon, James – Principal, 2010
After a tragic event, suicide, or violent act of revenge that occurs as a result of frequent bullying, the public is outraged at school employees who they think did nothing to prevent it. The public asks the obvious questions: How come nobody cared enough to do something to stop it? How could the staff be so heartless and callous? Where were the…
Descriptors: Bullying, Prevention, Antisocial Behavior, Administrator Role
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Kelley, Ken; Rausch, Joseph R. – Psychological Methods, 2011
Longitudinal studies are necessary to examine individual change over time, with group status often being an important variable in explaining some individual differences in change. Although sample size planning for longitudinal studies has focused on statistical power, recent calls for effect sizes and their corresponding confidence intervals…
Descriptors: Intervals, Sample Size, Effect Size, Longitudinal Studies
Segool, Natasha K.; Crespi, Tony D. – Communique, 2011
Rapid advances in digital technologies have resulted in school professionals having to grapple with new and complex dilemmas related to balancing student privacy, safety, and legal rights and restrictions, often with little to no guidance from school or district policies. Students commonly bring cellular telephones, smartphones, iPods, and other…
Descriptors: School Psychologists, Privacy, Telecommunications, Computer Mediated Communication
Young, Ellie L.; Nelson, David A.; Hottle, America B.; Warburton, Brittney; Young, Bryan K. – Education Digest: Essential Readings Condensed for Quick Review, 2011
"Relational aggression" refers to harm within relationships caused by covert bullying or manipulative behavior. Examples include isolating a youth from his or her group of friends (social exclusion), threatening to stop talking to a friend (the silent treatment), or spreading gossip and rumors by email. This type of bullying tends to be…
Descriptors: Socialization, Intervention, Violence, Bullying
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Lee, Bonnie K. – International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction, 2009
Couple therapy models for pathological gambling are limited. Congruence Couple Therapy is an integrative, humanistic, systems model that addresses intrapsychic, interpersonal, intergenerational, and universal-spiritual disconnections of pathological gamblers and their spouses to shift towards congruence. Specifically, CCT's theoretical…
Descriptors: Spiritual Development, Counseling Techniques, Marriage Counseling, Antisocial Behavior
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Bywater, Tracey; Sharples, Jonathan – Research Papers in Education, 2012
School-based programmes developed to promote social and emotional well-being aims to reduce the risk of academic failure and other negative outcomes, such as antisocial behaviour and mental health problems. This article maps the British political trajectory from understanding the importance of social and emotional well-being, to delivering…
Descriptors: Evidence, Formative Evaluation, Academic Failure, Well Being
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Kreisle, Beate – Reclaiming Children and Youth, 2010
Pioneers in work with troubled children sought, with mixed results, to replace coercive discipline with democratic self-governance. In 1927, law student Clara Liepmann wrote her doctoral dissertation on the history of self-governance in correctional settings in Europe and the United States. Her father, Moritz Liepmann, was a law school professor…
Descriptors: Discipline, Antisocial Behavior, Correctional Institutions, Doctoral Dissertations
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Tate, Tom – Reclaiming Children and Youth, 2010
Traditional diagnosis treats behavior problems as "disorders" in the individual rather than "discord" in relationships. From an ecological perspective, a "problem" involves behavior that hurts self or others. Three global patterns of problems are: Inconsiderate of Others, Inconsiderate of Self, and Low Self-Worth. Strength-based assessment…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Behavior Disorders, Emotional Disturbances, Intervention
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