YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Childhood Aggression Cognitive and Behaviorist Theories
Essays 301 - 330
In thirty pages this paper considers elementary schools' use of standardized testing such as the Iowa Test of Basic Skills in an e...
In seven pages this paper discusses the connection between hockey, masculinity, aggression, and violence. Nine sources are cited ...
patients, and as such may not be as acceptable or desirable (Saltzman, 1985). Other limiting factors in the use of drugs c...
In thirteen pages this paper examines the many ways in which child aggression can manifest itself in a discussion of definitions, ...
In seven pages this paper examines the relationship between aggression and hot temperatures. Ten sources are cited in the bibliog...
In five pages aggression is examined from a sociological perspective. Three sources are cited in the bibliography....
In fifteen pages aggression causes are discussed in terms of the patriarchal society's role and female oppression, physical effect...
to changing environments (1997). Perhaps the brain can create behavior, but it is also true that behavior can alter the brain (199...
would be no hope of redemption or change - precisely the atmosphere that existed in Levis account. The "eye for an eye" mentality...
higher than American students. Much has been written about the elevated stress levels that Japanese students experience. They al...
notice in psychoanalytical situations. There are, in fact, many differences between males and females which interplay to affect s...
aggressive tendencies of human beings. Nature may lend triggering factors, such as personality glitches and proclivities, but most...
and Val, 2002, p. 458). Children were interviewed in terms of whether they had observed any behavior from their peers such as tha...
Western technology so that it blended into a strong and prosperous union. This was not an easy venture, however, inasmuch as conv...
been studied from several different perspectives, but it appears that there has been no attempt to relate grade expectations with ...
see each other clearly (Lloyd, 1997). Students present represent half of a regular education class, selected according to no part...
acts of violence resulting "from ones reduced ability to regulate the expression of aggressive behavior in interpersonal situation...
The student should consider presenting the following points: Kirker, Tenenbaum and Mattson (2000), for example, recognized that ...
dogs that growl, bare teeth, or bite when they are guarding something like food, toys, and people. This is not to say they are act...
gender differences, as boys were more likely than girls to display aggressive tendencies which were learned through imitating the ...
In this particular section, the student would need to find the ideal environment with which to conduct a proposed field study. For...
uncommon side effect of televisions assault on the senses, found particularly evident with teenagers. Television is responsible f...
hammers (plus scientific observers) (Boeree, 1998). The children beat the daylights out of the doll, hitting it, kicking it, sitt...
2006). The media is in fact a catalyst for violent expression on more than one societal front (DuRant, Champion and Wolfson, 2006...
been diagnosed with a mental impairment that does not involve substance abuse, 5 million of these are considered to suffer from "s...
In five pages this paper discusses violence in a consideration of deductive and inductive reasoning and an examination of Roy F. B...
over between the social and the medical areas, the care plan needs to look at each and determine the way in which these will be de...
take an indirect form, such as gossip. There are also direct forms, such as name-calling; as well as range of behavior that includ...
essential to being able to maintain the necessary nursing workforce and ensuring the delivery of care. These researchers maintain...
include many violent or negative acts. Cartoon characters are killed all the time, only to return immediately without explanation....