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Luchow, Jed P. | 1 |
Milich, Richard | 1 |
Miranda, Ana | 1 |
Settle, Shirley A. | 1 |
Shelton, Terri L. | 1 |
Vidal-Abarca, Eduardo | 1 |
Villaescusa, Maria Isabel | 1 |
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Shelton, Terri L.; And Others – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1985
Sixteen "helpless" learning disabled students (grades four to five) assigned to an attribution training group demonstrated greater reading persistence and showed significant increases in effort attributions for failure as well as more internal attributions for achievement situations when compared to Ss in the control group. Treatment gains for…
Descriptors: Achievement Need, Attribution Theory, Elementary Education, Helplessness

Settle, Shirley A.; Milich, Richard – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1999
This study examined the response of intermediate-grade boys (N=18) and girls (N=20) with (N=20) or without (N=18) learning disabilities (LD) to experimental dyadic interactions, either friendly or unfriendly. Children with LD were hypersensitive to both situations and girls with LD appeared most negatively affected by the unfriendly interaction.…
Descriptors: Helplessness, Interaction Process Analysis, Intermediate Grades, Interpersonal Competence

Luchow, Jed P.; And Others – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1985
The study involving 28 educationally handicapped (EH) and 25 learning disabled LD/EH children (mean ages 13 and 12 years) included among its results that EH Ss took significantly more personal responsibility for academic failure than did LD/EH Ss; EH Ss attributed success to ability but failure to both lack of ability and lack of effort.…
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Attribution Theory, Elementary Secondary Education, Helplessness

Miranda, Ana; Villaescusa, Maria Isabel; Vidal-Abarca, Eduardo – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1997
This study investigated the need to include explicit attributional retraining in a program designed to teach self-regulation reading comprehension strategies to 60 Spanish children (grades 5-6) with learning disabilities. Regardless of attributional retraining, children improved on measures of cognitive strategies, but their gains were very low on…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Educational Strategies, Foreign Countries, Helplessness