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Bibliography: Human Rights (Part 330 of 406)

Rubenzer, Donna O.; Rubenzer, Ronald L. (1984). The Brain Owner's Manual: A Workshop on How to Reach Your Personal Best through a Whole Mind Approach. Revised. Designed to accompany an all-day \brain\ workshop on neurological aspects of learning, the manual contains charts and illustrations depicting the role and function of the right and left hemispheres. Additional material addresses such topics as physiological evolution of the brain, disharmony between left/right brain functions, comparisons between the human brain and computers, age and brain development, sex and brain functioning, and the integration of both brains in the creative process. A narrative section comments on the rationale for stimulating right brain processes in education and proposes an approach to stimulate right brain processes. The model includes rationales and descriptions of three types of activities: physical sensory, affective-attitudinal-cognitive, and formal instructional. (CL)…

List, Karen K. (1979). Development of the Right of Publicity Since Zacchini v. Scripps-Howard. This paper deals with the development of the right of publicity since \Zacchini v Scripps-Howard,\ a case in which the Supreme Court ruled in favor of Hugo Zacchini, a \human cannonball\ who had charged that his professional property had been unlawfully appropriated by a television station that had filmed and shown his performance without permission, and against the station, which had claimed protection under the First Amendment. The paper first looks at the development of the right prior to the Supreme Court ruling, then at the case itself, and finally at recent cases centering on the right of publicity. The concluding section offers guidelines for deciding future right-of-publicity cases based on copyright's fair use doctrine. (FL)…

Julian, Liam (2009). Orwell's Instructive Errors. Policy Review, n155 Jun-Jul. In this article, the author talks about George Orwell, his instructive errors, and the manner in which Orwell pierced worthless theory, faced facts and defended decency (with fluctuating success), and largely ignored the tradition of accumulated wisdom that has rendered him a timeless teacher–one whose inadvertent lessons, while infrequently acknowledged, are just as valuable as his intended ones. It commences with an insistence that battling bad English is no \sentimental archaism\ as is generally supposed. Language does not merely reflect but also shapes societies, and so Orwell writes that far from being futile or irrelevant, defending the integrity of English is indispensable for the right functioning of the society that speaks it. In Orwell's writing, so much of it, the words seem \not mere labels, but facts.\ It's a major reason why his pieces are still anthologized, read, and commented upon: They eschew spineless language for clarity and force. It is tempting to believe that… [PDF]

Martinson, David L. (2002). Public Opinion, Constitutional Democracy, and the New Technology: Essential Components in the Secondary School Social Studies Curriculum. Social Studies, v93 n2 p68-72 Mar-Apr. A democratic constitutional system is one in which the majority has a general right to determine public policy. At the same time, however, the rights of that majority are limited. Individual citizens enjoy \certain basic rights\ by virtue of the fact that each individual person \is a human being.\ If schools are to prepare students to be responsible citizens in a constitutional democracy, it is essential that students be introduced to the role public opinion plays in a democratic society. Essential components in a secondary school social studies curriculum that emphasizes the role public opinion plays in a constitutional democracy are discussed…. [Direct]

Dodson, Dan W. (1970). Changes Affecting Human Interaction. ASCD Yearbook, 35-51, 70. Contemporary changes in population patterns, power structures, civil rights, and role adaptations, are affecting human interactions and self-concepts. These social changes call for a re-vamped educational system capable of contributing to a genuine community education. (JH)…

Morrissey, James M. (1990). Rights and Responsibilities of Young People in New York. A Legal Guide for Human Service Providers. Revised and Updated. This manual is designed for human service providers–including social workers, counselors, teachers, child care workers, probation officers, nurses and physicians–to help them with questions about the legal rights and responsibilities of young people in New York State. The document is directed at human service providers because they are seen as persons to whom young people are likely to turn for help, and because such providers are frequently unable to offer informed assistance on legal matters. The seven chapters cover: (1) an overview; (2) minors and the family; (3) minors and public assistance; (4) minors and school; (5) minors and medical treatment; (6) minors, the courts, and the police; and (7) miscellaneous. It should be noted that while the manual is designed to provide accurate and authoritative information about the rights and responsibilities of young people in New York state, the information is not the equivalent of rendered legal advice. Readers also should be aware…

Harms, L. S. (1978). The Right to Communicate and Its Implementation within a New World Communication Order. The new communication order must be broad and pluralistic, encouraging a world-wide discussion of, by, and for the people, and must not be modeled on a narrow, news-information order that tends to polarize professional communicators and government officials. The central policy issue in this new communication order will be to insure that communication resources are made available to satisfy human communication needs in a way that is sensitive to the multicultural values of the right to communicate. This right to communicate encompasses the following three major areas: rights of association, information, and cultural evolution. Communication must be interactive and participatory; the right to participate is at the core of the right to communicate. The implementation of a right to communicate within a new communication order will require a substantial body of communication policy at world, national, and local levels. Communication policy science is emerging as a values-sensitive,…

Dworkin, Nancy E.; Dworkin, Yehoash S. (1978). Academic and Behavioral Planning Through an Alternative Model. Journal of Educational Thought, 12, 1, 18-27, Apr 78. Suggests an alternative universe in which failure is identified as a systems concern, instead of a human breakdown. The model presents successful behavior in terms of growth in process efficiency, rather than the +/- (right/wrong) matrix associated with achievement orientation. (Editor)…

Lunneborg, Clifford E. (1978). Some Information-Processing Correlates of Measures of Intelligence. Multivariate Behavioral Research, 13, 2, 153-61, Apr 78. Group and individually administered measure of intelligence were related to laboratory based measures of human information processing on a group of college freshmen. Among other results, high IQ was related to right hemisphere efficiency in processing non-linguistic stimuli. (Author/JKS)…

Davis, Alison (1987). Women with Disabilities: Abortion and Liberation. Disability, Handicap and Society, v2 n3 p275-84. The paper argues that the women's movement has failed to adequately take account of women with disabilities. By supporting women's right to abortions for handicapped fetuses, the movement denies disabled women an identity as equal human beings worthy of respect. (JDD)…

Parker, Jack (1973). A Student-Centered Scheduling Model. NASSP Bulletin, 57, 369, 47-52, Jan 73. Experienced as a practitioner and as a student in building master schedules for both junior and senior high schools, the author recommends a procedure that puts the human element back into scheduling students and teachers into the right classes. (Editor)…

Loye, David (1982). The Brain and the Future: First Ripples of the Wave. Futurist, v16 n5 p15-19 Oct. Discusses how findings from current research on the human brain indicate that the best predictions are made when forecasters draw on both sides of the brain–the intuitive, holistic right side as well as the analytic, objective left side. (AM)…

Eadie, Doug; Houston, Paul D. (2003). Ingredients for a Board-Savvy Relationship. School Administrator, v60 n2 p56-57 Feb. Describes the attributes of board-savvy superintendents: Brings the right attitude to working with the board, makes governance a top priority, focuses consciously on the human dimension of the board-superintendent partnership, and functions as a full-fledged, contemporary CEO. (PKP)…

Gill, Carol J.; Kirschner, Kristi L.; Munger, Kelly M.; Ormond, Kelly E. (2007). The next Exclusion Debate: Assessing Technology, Ethics, and Intellectual Disability after the Human Genome Project. Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities Research Reviews, v13 n2 p121-128. Recent scientific discoveries have made it much easier to test prenatally for various genetic disabilities, such as Down syndrome. However, while many observers have heralded such \advances\ for their effectiveness in detecting certain conditions, others have argued that they perpetuate discrimination by preventing the birth of children with disabilities. This article examines the ethical and social implications of the Human Genome Project for individuals with intellectual disabilities and their families. It details the critique of prenatal testing articulated by many disability rights activists as well as scholarly and professional responses to that critique. A review of the pertinent research literature includes perspectives of genetic professionals, ethicists, disability studies scholars, parents of children with disabilities, and disabled individuals themselves. Finally, the article explores how future research endeavors, policies, and practices may more effectively integrate and… [Direct]

Hommel, Bernhard; Lopez-Moliner, Joan; Tubau, Elisabet (2007). Modes of Executive Control in Sequence Learning: From Stimulus-Based to Plan-Based Control. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, v136 n1 p43-63 Feb. The authors argue that human sequential learning is often but not always characterized by a shift from stimulus- to plan-based action control. To diagnose this shift, they manipulated the frequency of 1st-order transitions in a repeated manual left-right sequence, assuming that performance is sensitive to frequency-induced biases under stimulus- but not plan-based control. Indeed, frequency biases tended to disappear with practice, but only for explicit learners. This tendency was facilitated by visual-verbal target stimuli, response-contingent sounds, and intentional instructions and hampered by auditory (but not visual) noise. Findings are interpreted within an event-coding model of action control, which holds that plans for sequences of discrete actions are coded phonetically, integrating order and relative timing. The model distinguishes between plan acquisition, linked to explicit knowledge, and plan execution, linked to the action control mode…. [Direct]

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Bibliography: Human Rights (Part 331 of 406)

Haines, Annette M. (2003). Work. NAMTA Journal, v28 n2 p49-58 Spr. Draws upon Maria Montessori's writings to examine work as a universal human tendency throughout life. Discusses the work of adaptation of the infant, work of "psycho-muscular organism" for the preschooler, work of the imagination for the elementary child, community work of the adolescent, and work of the adult. Asserts that Montessorians' role is to aid development of the human personality by providing opportunities for the right kind of work. (Author/KB)…

Federico, Ron, Ed.; And Others (1977). Appalachian Citizens for Children's Rights: A Rural Community Self-Help Approach to the Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect. The report describes the design of a community development model for child abuse and neglect which used resources already existing in a rural area. The first section presents basic generalizations about rural areas, services, and rural human services professionals. Section II presents working papers, definitions, and concepts used in the project. Contents include papers on community responsibility in child abuse, societal and institutional abuse and neglect, operationalized definitions, self help groups oriented toward social change and children's rights. The development of ACCR (Appalachian Citizens for Children's Rights) is detailed in Section III. Section IV examines human service systems which exist in most rural communities. Covered are social services, health services, law enforcement, education, recreation, child care, and self help services. A final section discusses organization of self help programs in rural communities. (CL)…

Griffis, Kathleen; Vacalis, T. Demetri (1980). Human Experimentation: Impact on Health Education Research. Health Education (Washington D.C.), v11 n3 p21-23 May-Jun. The problems of the use of humans as subjects of medical research and the protection of their rights are discussed. Issues include the use of informed consent, the evaluation of risks and benefits, and the review of research plans by a committee. (JD)…

(1999). ASIS '99 Knowledge: Creation, Organization and Use, Part III: Plenary Sessions. Proceedings of the ASIS Annual Meeting, v36 p859-63. Describes the following sessions: "Knowledge Management: A Celebration of Humans Connected with Quality Information Objects (Plenary Session 1); "Intellectual Property Rights and the Emerging Information Infrastructure (Plenary Session 2); and "Knowledge: Creation, Organization and Use (Conference Wrap-up Session). (AEF)…

(1978). Education of All Handicapped Children and PL 94-142. Report of the National Conference on Human and Civil Rights in Education (16th, Washington, D.C., March 17-19, 1978). The effects and implications of the Education for All Handicapped Children Act, Public Law (PL) 94-142, are discussed in this collection of conference presentations. A panel gave an overview of legislative and legal aspects of the law and its implications for personnel development and funding. Small group sessions were held on: individualized education programs; least restrictive environments; personnel development; the role of the collective bargaining process; student testing; school and teacher accountability; and agency and organizational roles. Presentations at the general sessions were on the National Educational Association Special Study of Handicapped Children, and implications of PL 94-142. Perspectives on the conference are given by several participants. Brief annotations and distribution information for ten films shown at the conference are provided. (FG)…

Bandow, Diane; Hunter, Debra (2008). Developing Policies about Uncivil Workplace Behavior. Business Communication Quarterly, v71 n1 p103-106. Workplace incivility, including aggression and bullying, is a troubling phenomenon. Uncivil behaviors not only harm individuals but also diminish employee performance and sometimes result in legal action against companies. Thus, it behooves organizations and management to become vigilant and responsive to such behaviors. Yet the evidence shows that with the recent exception of attempted legislation in Hawaii (Chiem, 2007), few companies or jurisdictions in the United State have policies and procedures aimed at addressing uncivil behavior. In this article, the authors outline some points to consider when developing policies to counteract uncivil behavior in the workplace. In the process, they incorporate the views of two corporate representatives (a diversity manager at Georgia Power and a human resource manager at PepsiCo) and an attorney with the U.S. military. The authors conclude that the driving principles of the policy should be that every employee has a right to be treated with… [Direct]

de Guzman, Allan B.; Hernandez, Jomar R.; Siy, Elmore Y.; Tancioco, Joseph Bryan F.; Torres, Ramon Kristoffer C.; Uy, Millard M. (2008). From Teaching from the Heart to Teaching with a Heart: Segmenting Filipino College Students' Views of Their Teachers' Caring Behavior and Their Orientations as Cared-for Individuals. Asia Pacific Education Review, v9 n4 p487-502. Caring, as a universal human phenomenon, should permeate elementary, secondary and tertiary level instruction. The practice of teaching, especially at the tertiary level, is not only substantial and procedural but relational as well. To teach with a heart is the essence that makes teaching a form of caring. When teaching is viewed as a form of caring, teachers become relational geniuses in their own right. This study is an attempt to segment Filipino college students' views (n = 1000) of their teachers' caring behavior and their orientations as cared-for individuals. The identified clusters of teacher roles that indicate caring behavior imply that acts of teaching become acts of caring depending on how the teachers, the "efficient cause" of education, perform their ordinary tasks in the context of "extraordinariness". Such extraordinariness spells out a big difference in the way teachers practice the so-called "single loop caring or caring visibility and… [PDF] [Direct]

Kahn, Peter H., Jr.; McCoy, Ann (1992). Children's Moral Relationships with Nature. Two studies of the development of children's moral relationships with nature addressed such questions as: (1) What does it mean to say that we have an obligation not to harm the natural environment? (2) Does the natural environment feel pain? (3) Does it have rights? or (4) Is moral obligation an inappropriate construct by which to understand the moral relation of humans with nature? In one study, 60 children in grades 2, 5, and 8 were interviewed about the Prince William Sound Oil Spill. In a second study, 72 children in grades 1, 3, and 5 in an impoverished inner-city black community were interviewed on their conceptions of and values about nature. The preliminary findings from these studies provide evidence for several overarching ways in which children reason about the natural environment: (1) homocentric reasoning, in which an appeal is made to the child's understanding of how the action of one person or group harms the physical welfare of others, or infringes on others'… [PDF]

Pajak, Edward F. (2011). Cultural Narcissism and Education Reform. Teachers College Record, v113 n9 p2018-2046. Background/Context: Scholars have described American culture in recent decades as narcissistic, manifested by displays of self-absorption tantamount to a pathological syndrome that has reached epidemic proportions. An education reform movement that is highly critical of public schools, teachers, and students has simultaneously emerged, espousing a wide array of seemingly disconnected innovations and punitive sanctions. Prior efforts to critically analyze these reform efforts have focused on the historical workings of power and knowledge by supporting reflective, emancipatory knowledge and action while overlooking the insights offered by psychoanalytic theory. Consequently, the impact of education policies on the identities of teachers and the personal relationships between teachers and students has not been thoroughly or sufficiently understood. Purpose/Objective/Research Question/Focus of Study: This article represents a tentative step toward understanding the social and… [Direct]

Blake, Deborah (1984). Are High School Students Prepared for a Brave New World?. Momentum, v15 n2 p45-46 May. Describes Notre Dame High School's (California) integrated bioethics course, which contains units on basic concepts of goals, rights, and duty ethics; reproductive technologies; genetic technologies; death and dying; behavior modification; and experiments with human subjects. Provides a bibliography of student and teacher materials. (DMM)…

MacCann, Donnarae (1976). Children's Books in a Pluralistic Society. Wilson Library Bulletin, 51, 2, 154-62, Oct 76. Either we acknowledge that others have the right to exist with the human dignity that we ourselves take for granted, or we maintain a white cultural monopoly by saying that popular books that force on readers a racial or sexist bias are sacrosanct. (Author)…

Poliakoff, Lorraine (1973). Recent Trends in Evaluating School Personnel. National Elementary Principal, 52, 5, 39-44, Feb 73. The trends in evaluating school personnel today focus on the participation of the person evaluated and on his needs and rights as a professional and human being. This article is based on a review of the literature on evaluation in the ERIC system. (Author)…

Flannery, Susan (1981). Up for Discussion: Balancing Act. School Library Journal, v27 n10 p30-31 Aug. Recommends that libraries include conservative 'Moral Majority' as well as liberal views of human sexuality in their acquisition of books for young adults to provide a balanced collection and blunt atttempts to limit academic freedom through censorship. Five 'New Right' choices are reviewed. (RAA)…

Kemp, Judy B.; Sonnier, Isodore L. (1980). Teach the Left Brain and Only the Left Brain Learns–Teach the Right Brain and Both Brains Learn. Southern Journal of Educational Research, v14 n1 p63-70 Win. Based on the theory that the human left brain hemisphere processes verbal-sequential data and that the right hemisphere processes visual-spatial data, this article presents a teaching strategy for stimulating both hemispheres. It also describes the study that contributed to this strategy. (DS)…

Blegen, Mary Beth (1998). The Kids Come. TECHNOS, v7 n3 p20-22 Fall. Examines how teachers can find the right balance between teaching and being human for their students who are growing up in a constantly changing technological society. Discusses dilemmas faced by caring teachers, technology and standards, and finding the balance in the classroom and community. (AEF)…

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