Area:
Social Psychology, Administration Education
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High-probability grants
According to our matching algorithm, Melvin M. Mark is the likely recipient of the following grants.
Years |
Recipients |
Code |
Title / Keywords |
Matching score |
2002 — 2007 |
Mark, Melvin |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Enhancing Evaluation Methods and Capacity: Principled Discovery,Evaluation Portfolio Management,and Taking Evaluation to the People @ Pennsylvania State Univ University Park
This proposal outlines three lines of work to build evaluation capacity. The first line of work involves applying the techniques of "principled discovery" to determine the complexities of contingent intervention effects using selected EHR/STEM data sets. The second line of work is the design of a strategy for evaluation portfolio management. The expected result is a guide for the allocation of evaluation resources to different types of evaluation studies. The third line of work is the development and institutionalization of effective ways to report and disseminate key evaluation findings to the press at AEA meetings. Collectively these three activities should contribute not only to evaluation capacity, but also to research and evaluation in general.
|
0.915 |
2005 — 2010 |
Mark, Melvin Parker, Jeffrey |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
The Origins and Consequences of Jealousy Over Friends in Early Adolescence @ Pennsylvania State Univ University Park
Participation in smooth-functioning and sustained friendships is an important requirement for healthy adjustment and development in late childhood and early adolescence. Conversely, friendship difficulties can compromise development and can be the source of considerable conflict and aggression in school settings. Thus, understanding the nature and source of friendship difficulties is an important applied and theoretical goal. The broad goal of this work is to expand understanding of the nature of friendship experiences at the transition to adolescence by exploring the jealousy sometimes associated with outside interference in friendship. Past research demonstrates that some individual children show strong jealous reactions when their friends have other friends or engage in activities with other peers. These children report depression and more negative personal well-being than other children, and appear to behave negatively and aggressively towards others. This work will extend understanding of the nature, antecedences, and consequences of this important vulnerability. Specifically, the first goal of the work is to examine how the behavior of characteristically jealous children differs from that of their non-jealous peers and to articulate the emotions, attributions, and behavioral strategies these individuals endorse in jealous circumstances. A second objective is to examine whether the tendency to act jealous over friends is associated with broader indices of problematic social adjustment, including peer rejection and victimization. The final objective is to extend understanding of the psychological roots of friendship jealousy by exploring how specific family processes may compromise the self-images of children and contribute to these children's hyper-vigilance around peers and sensitivity to outsider interference.
|
0.915 |