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Armstrong, Kerry A.; Watling, Hanna; Davey, Jeremy – Health Education Journal, 2016
Objective: While driveway run-over incidents continue to be a cause of serious injury and deaths among young children in Australia, few empirically evaluated educational interventions have been developed which address these incidents. Addressing this gap, this study describes the development and evaluation of a paper-based driveway safety…
Descriptors: Motor Vehicles, Traffic Safety, Foreign Countries, Safety Education
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Doshi, Anup; Tran, Cuong; Wilder, Matthew H.; Mozer, Michael C.; Trivedi, Mohan M. – Cognitive Science, 2012
The effect of recent experience on current behavior has been studied extensively in simple laboratory tasks. We explore the nature of sequential effects in the more naturalistic setting of automobile driving. Driving is a safety-critical task in which delayed response times may have severe consequences. Using a realistic driving simulator, we find…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Traffic Safety, Simulation, Sequential Approach
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Kim, Hyejeong; Billington, Rosey – Applied Linguistics, 2018
This article explores the issues of pronunciation and comprehension in the English as a lingua franca (ELF) context of pilot--air traffic controller radiotelephony communication, and how these are handled in the proficiency rating scale globally used to assess pilots and air traffic controllers engaging in international flight and air traffic…
Descriptors: Pronunciation, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Air Transportation
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Hammond, James; Cherrett, Tom; Waterson, Ben – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2015
Skills and awareness of young pedestrians can be improved with on-street practical pedestrian training, often delivered in schools in the UK by local authorities with the intention of improving road safety. This training is often supplemented by in-class paper-based worksheet activities that are seen to be less effective than practical training in…
Descriptors: Skill Development, Training, Pedestrian Traffic, Class Activities
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Kim-Spoon, Jungmeen; Kahn, Rachel; Deater-Deckard, Kirby; Chiu, Pearl; Steinberg, Laurence; King-Casas, Brooks – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2016
Adolescence is characterized by increasing incidence of health risk behaviors, including experimentation with drugs and alcohol. To fill the gap in our understanding of the associations between risky decision-making and health risk behaviors, we investigated associations between laboratory-based risky decision-making using the Stoplight task and…
Descriptors: Risk, Decision Making, Traffic Safety, Correlation
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Park, Moonyoung – ReCALL, 2018
Aviation English proficiency is a core competency in the global air traffic controller profession. There is, however, growing concern about the current ineffective paper-based assessment methods and the severe lack of interactive online testing for such a critical profession, one that should be ideally assessed in an authentic task and situation…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Recall (Psychology)
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Haugland, Ole Anton – Physics Teacher, 2013
Stopping distances in car braking can be an intriguing topic in physics teaching. It illustrates some basic principles of physics, and sheds valuable light on students' attitude towards aggressive driving. Due to safety considerations, it can be difficult to make experiments with actual car braking. (Contains 2 figures.)
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Scientific Concepts, Mechanics (Physics)
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Juutinen, Jaana; Viljamaa, Elina – International Journal of Early Childhood, 2016
This research explored how values are communicated in everyday life at preschool. This narrative inquiry focused on how values are conveyed through the use of a material artefact, a chart with traffic lights, as a communication and pedagogical tool. Twenty children aged 3-4 years in one Finnish preschool were involved in the initial data…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Preschool Children, Inquiry, Traffic Safety
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Van Eck, Richard N.; Fu, Hongxia; Drechsel, Paul V. J. – Journal of Computing in Higher Education, 2015
Air traffic control (ATC) operations are critical to the U.S. aviation infrastructure, making ATC training a critical area of study. Because ATC performance is heavily dependent on visual processing, it is important to understand how to screen for or promote relevant visual processing abilities. While conventional wisdom has maintained that such…
Descriptors: Computer Simulation, Simulated Environment, Air Transportation, Traffic Safety
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Bitgood, Stephen; Davey, Gareth; Huang, Xiaoyi; Fung, Holly – Environment and Behavior, 2013
Pedestrian navigation through public spaces reflects the nature of interaction between behavior and environment. This study compared pedestrian choice behavior at shopping mall intersections in China and the United States. The study found that in both countries (a) pedestrians chose movement patterns that involved the fewest steps and (b) there…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Pedestrian Traffic, Behavior Patterns, Traffic Safety
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Simons-Morton, Bruce; Haynie, Denise; O'Brien, Fearghal; Lipsky, Leah; Bible, Joe; Liu, Danping – Journal of American College Health, 2017
Objective: To examine changes in health behaviors among US emerging adults 1 year after high school. Participants: The national sample of participants (N = 1,927), including those attending 4-year college/university (n = 884), 2-year colleges/technical schools (n = 588), and no college (n = 455), participated in annual spring surveys 2013-2014.…
Descriptors: Health Behavior, Young Adults, College Students, Two Year College Students
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Irwin, Christopher; Shum, David; Desbrow, Ben; Leveritt, Michael – Journal of Alcohol and Drug Education, 2014
This study investigated the impact of alcohol mixed with artificially sweetened or carbohydrate containing beverages on breath alcohol concentration s (BrAC) under various levels of hydration status. Two groups of males participated in 3 experimental trials where alcohol was consumed under three different levels of hydration status. One group…
Descriptors: Males, Drinking, Alcohol Abuse, Experiments
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Girard, Jean Claude – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2013
This article illustrates how statistical arguments can be used to influence public policy... for better or for worse. Road safety has improved in a signi?cant way since the 1970s in developed countries. If road casualties and number of killed have decreased, there are many reasons for this, including improvement in roads, building of motorways,…
Descriptors: Statistics, Traffic Safety, Public Policy, Motor Vehicles
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Sole, Marla A. – Mathematics Teacher, 2015
Every day, people use data to make decisions that affect their personal and professional lives, trusting that the data are correct. Many times, however, the data are inaccurate, as a result of a flaw in the design or methodology of the survey used to collect the data. Researchers agree that only questions that are clearly worded, unambiguous, free…
Descriptors: Test Construction, Surveys, Student Participation, Design
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Merga, Margaret K.; Hu, Qi Mei – Australian Journal of Education, 2016
Western Australian schools are expected to educate beyond the classroom context, promoting the health of students, their families and their communities. Little is known about the frequency with which schools employ newsletters to communicate health messages. This content analysis draws from a sample of 70 newsletters from 46 diverse Western…
Descriptors: Health Education, Health Promotion, Newsletters, Communication Strategies
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