Arab-Jewish Coexistence ProgramsISBN: 978-1-4051-2236-8
Paperback
248 pages
December 2004, Wiley-Blackwell
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Tamar Zelniker is a senior lecturer in the Psychology
Department at Tel-Aviv University, and the head of the Graduate
Cognitive Psychology Program. Her research interests are in the
areas of cognitive development, theories of mind and cooperative
learning. She has published journal articles and chapters on
cognitive style in young children, and an edited book (with Tamar
Globerson), Cognitive Style and Cognitive Development
(1989). Dr. Zelniker has been co-director of a Palestinian-Israli
academic training program (1995-1999), and is one of the founders
of a new academic program of studies in Gaza, where she has been on
the academic board since 1995.
Cookie White Stephan is Emeritus Professor of Sociology
at New Mexico State University. She received her Ph.D. in
psychology from the University of Minnesota in 1971. Stephan's
major research focus is on intergroup relations, specifically the
antecedents of prejudice and ethnic identity. With Walter G.
Stephan, she is the author of Intergroup Relations (1996),
and Improving Intergroup Relations (2001).
Walter G. Stephan received his Ph.D. in psychology from the University of Minnesota in 1971. He has taught at the University of Texas at Austin and at New Mexico State University where he currently holds the rank of Emeritus Professor. He has published articles on attribution processes, cognition and affect, intergroup relations, and intercultural relations. He co-authored, with Cookie Stephan, Intergroup Relations (1996), and Improving Intergroup Relations (2001). He has also published Reducing Prejudice and Stereotyping in the Schools (1998), and is co-authoring, with W. Paul Vogt, Multicultural Education Programs: Research and Theory (forthcoming).