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Lockhart, Barbara D. – Quest, 1994
Article proposes concepts that could be the basis for fitness attitudes and practices for all people regardless of skill, age, or expertise. An intrinsic definition of fitness highlights the importance of exercise and relaxation to fitness, integration of the whole self, and acceptance of self based on inherent worth. (SM)
Descriptors: Exercise, Higher Education, Holistic Approach, Individual Psychology
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Cennamo, Katherine S.; And Others – TechTrends, 1992
Provides advice for graduate researchers on how to get a research project started, research committee relations, design of the research project, keeping motivated, managing time, maintaining momentum, and safeguarding mental health during the research process. It is noted that the advice would be particularly useful for the completion of doctoral…
Descriptors: Doctoral Dissertations, Graduate Study, Higher Education, Research Committees
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Snyder, C. R. – Journal of Counseling & Development, 1995
Hope is defined as the process of thinking about one's goals, along with the motivation to move toward those goals and the ways to achieve them. After discussing other related concepts, the scale for measuring hope is introduced, and the role of hope in the counseling process is described. (Author/JPS)
Descriptors: Ability Identification, Aspiration, Coping, Counseling
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Lashaway-Bokina, Nancy – Roeper Review, 2000
This article discusses the importance of recognizing and nurturing intrinsic motivation in students and describes an introductory teacher education course that alerted 48 teacher interns to the characteristics of intrinsically motivated students and to the exceptional qualities of non-conforming students who lack the benefit of being teacher…
Descriptors: Ability Identification, Elementary Education, Gifted, Higher Education
Jaeger, Michael; Lauritzen, Carol – 1992
Constructivists view thinking and learning differently from other learning theorists: they believe that learners do not acquire knowledge that is transmitted to them; rather, learners construct knowledge through intellectual activity. Sharp contrasts exist between a "transmission" model of instruction and the constructivist perspective.…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Curriculum Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education
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Clements, Douglas H. – Teaching Children Mathematics, 1997
Discusses misconceptions about constructivism by identifying related myths such as students should always be actively and reflectively constructing, manipulatives make learners active, and cooperative learning is constructivist. One central goal of constructivism should be that students become autonomous and self-motivated in their learning.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Constructivism (Learning), Elementary Secondary Education