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Smith, Nancy J.; Farina, Rosemarie Viola – Educational Considerations, 1984
In an historical examination of educational equity issues the authors examine why sex equity remains an unrealized goal, how teacher behavior affects equity, and why classrooms and campuses are not encouraging places for women. The lack of support for equity in the current political climate is also addressed. (SK)
Descriptors: Attitudes, Equal Education, Females, Helplessness
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Dweck, Carol S.; Goetz, Therese E. – Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1980
Investigates the relationship between causal attributions and responses to social rejection across popularity levels, focusing on individual differences along each dimension. (Author/SS)
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Children, Elementary School Students, Helplessness
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Heyman, Gail D.; And Others – Child Development, 1992
Investigated the possibility that some kindergartners exhibit patterns of affective reactions associated with helplessness. Results indicated that, after they were criticized by their teachers, some kindergartners showed affective reactions and made self-evaluations associated with motivational helplessness. Reactions were related to conceptions…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Beliefs, Criticism, Helplessness
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Lee, Kyung Hee – Journal of Research in Childhood Education, 1999
Examined whether the mastery-oriented and helpless motivational patterns would be identified in Korean American kindergartners, and whether these patterns would be associated with general beliefs about goodness/badness. Found that Korean American children revealed more vulnerabilities in the face of negative feedback and they had more global,…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Child Behavior, Feedback, Helplessness
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Maag, John W. – Intervention in School and Clinic, 2002
This article presents an alternative to conceptualization for treating depression that focuses on manipulating context. Ten strategies based on this approach are described, including prescribing depression, creating an ordeal for relief, exaggerating helplessness, controlling the uncontrollable, making deliberate mistakes, buying it and throwing…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Counseling Techniques, Depression (Psychology), Elementary Secondary Education
Teich, Alan; Peregoy, Peter – 1982
According to the learned helplessness hypothesis, organisms exposed to uncontrollable events learn the independence between their responses and environmental outcomes. This learning is believed to interfere with subsequent behavior. To further examine the dimension of uncontrollability, 48 college students were given solvable, unsolvable, or…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, College Students, Emotional Problems, Helplessness
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Dinning, W. David; Evans, Ronald G. – Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1978
In critically reviewing learned helplessness literature, P. H. Blaney (1977) has noted that most of the current support for this model rests on studies that induce or reduce helplessness in college student Ss. This research, employing a psychiatric population, addressed two issues Blaney suggested as in need of clarification: (1) the role of…
Descriptors: Clinical Psychology, Depression (Psychology), Helplessness, Patients
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And Others; Price, Kenneth P. – Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1978
This study was undertaken to extend the learned helplessness phenomenon to a clinical population and to test the competing hypotheses of Seligman and Lewinsohn. 96 male hospitalized psychiatric and medical patients were randomly assigned to one of four experimental conditions. Results replicate the learned helplessness phenomenon in a group of…
Descriptors: Depression (Psychology), Helplessness, Hypothesis Testing, Illustrations
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Blaney, Paul H.; Willis, Max H. – Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1978
Three studies, testing predictions derived from Seligman's helplessness model of depression and generally supported by earlier research, are reported. The first addressed the finding that depressed individuals evidence a perception of noncontingency, the second tested the prediction that undergraduates in whom helplessness had been induced would…
Descriptors: Depression (Psychology), Experiments, Helplessness, Learning
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Greer, John G.; Wethered, Chris E. – Elementary School Guidance and Counseling, 1987
Explores the topic of learned helplessness in children. Discusses these counselor strategies for helping children with learned helplessness: develop realistic attributions, provide feedback, provide success experiences, provide microcomputer experiences, and set realistic goals and expectations. (ABL)
Descriptors: Children, Counseling Objectives, Counseling Techniques, Elementary Education
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Rosenbaum, Michael; Palmon, Noami – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1984
Tested the hypothesis that psychological adjustment to epilepsy would be a joint function of subjects' (N=50) perceived repertoire of self-control skills and the extent to which they were exposed to uncontrollable seizures. Results showed that high-resourceful epileptics exposed to lower frequencies of seizures coped better with their disability.…
Descriptors: Adaptive Behavior (of Disabled), Coping, Emotional Adjustment, Epilepsy
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Perry, Raymond P.; Dickens, Wenda J. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1984
Following an incentive (low, high) manipulation, college students received response-outcome contingency training. All students then observed a lecture. Postlecture results indicated that the high- compared to the low-expressive lecturer increased achievement and internal locus in contingent but not noncontingent students for low-incentive…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attribution Theory, Helplessness, Higher Education
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Johnson, Dona S. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1981
Personality and behavioral consequences of learned helplessness were monitored in children experiencing failure in school. The predictive quality of learned helplessness theory was compared with that of value expectancy theories. Low self-concept was predicted significantly by school failure, internal attributions for failure, and external…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Failure, Attribution Theory, Expectation
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Grimes, Lynn – Learning Disability Quarterly, 1981
The article explores attribution theory and the concept of learned helplessness in teaching learning disabled individuals. Suggestions are given for areas of future research with learning disabled populations. The discussion includes current teaching techniques which may be related to the self regulatory behaviors and perception of personal…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Helplessness, Learning Disabilities, Literature Reviews
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Hagan, Margaret L.; Medway, Frederick J. – Journal of Educational Research, 1989
Results from an experimental study involving 120 third, seventh, and eleventh grade parochial school girls showed that for third-grade females, short-term failure experiences are relatively transitory; however for females around the age of adolescence, helplessness and egotism appear to undertake a significant role in influencing behavior. (IAH)
Descriptors: Behavior Development, Comparative Analysis, Elementary Secondary Education, Failure
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