2,967 results on '"ACADEMIC achievement research"'
Search Results
2. Is the Physical Being Taken out of Physical Education? On the Possible Effects of High-Stakes Testing on an Embattled Profession’s Curriculum Goals.
- Author
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Seymour, Clancy and Garrison, Mark
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PHYSICAL education research ,PHYSICAL activity ,BRAIN research ,ACADEMIC achievement research ,ACHIEVEMENT tests ,PUBLIC health research - Abstract
Building on recent discussions regarding how current national standards for physical education promote cognitive outcomes over physical outcomes, the authors explore how a new era in high-stakes testing is also contributing to an emphasis on the cognitive, over the physical. While high-stakes testing has been linked to reducing the amount of physical education schools offer, less attention has been given to the newest phase of high-stakes testing: the use of student achievement test data to evaluate teachers. To explore how this new high-stakes testing may influence physical education curriculum goals, the authors examine new teacher evaluation policies in New York State. The authors then propose an alternative rational for physical education. By promoting the physical—physical activity, exercise, and structured physical movement through physical education programming—physical education can play a unique and key role in creating the conditions for both student cognitive development and improved public health. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
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3. Scheduled Physical Activity is Associated With Better Academic Performance in Chilean School-Age Children.
- Author
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Burrows, Raquel, Correa-Burrows, Paulina, Orellana, Yasna, Almagiá, Atilio, Lizana, Pablo, and Ivanovic, Daniza
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PHYSICAL activity ,HEALTH of school children ,ACADEMIC achievement research ,EDUCATIONAL quality - Abstract
Background: This study was carried out to examine the association between systematic physical activity and academic performance in school kids after controlling for potential sociodemographic and educational confounders. Methods: In a random sample of 1271 students from urban Santiago, attending 5th and 9th grade, who took the 2009 System for the Assessment of Educational Quality (SIMCE) tests, we measured physical activity habits, anthropometric characteristics, and socioeconomic status. Academic performance was measured by the standardized SIMCE tests. Logistic regressions assessed the relationship between the allocation of time to weekly scheduled exercise, potential confounding factors, and individual academic performance. Results: About 80% of students reported less than 2 hours of weekly scheduled exercise, while 10.6% and 10.2% reported 2 to 4 hours/week and more than 4 hours/week, respectively. Devoting more than 4 hours/week to scheduled exercise significantly increased (P < .01) the odds of having SIMCE composite z-scores ≥ 50th percentile (OR: 2.3, 95% CI: 1.4 to 3.6) and ≥ 75th percentile (OR: 2.1, 95% CI: 1.3-3.3). Conclusions: Better academic performance was associated with a higher allocation of time to scheduled exercise in school-age children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
4. Academic Success and Retention: The Role of Recreational Sports Fitness Facilities.
- Author
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Danbert, Samantha J., Pivarnik, James M., McNeil, Richard N., and Washington, Ira J.
- Subjects
SCHOOL dropout prevention ,SCHOOL dropouts ,ACADEMIC achievement research ,SPORTS participation ,RECREATIONAL sports ,RESEARCH ,COLLEGE students - Abstract
This study evaluated the role of a university recreational sports and fitness center, in students' academic success. Study participants included freshmen at a large Midwestern university (n = 4,843; 56% women; 67% white). Recreational sports fitness facility members (students who purchased a recreational sports fitness facilities membership in their first semester; n = 1,138) were compared with nonmembers (students who did not purchase a recreational sports fitness facility membership in their first semester; n = 3,705). M ± SD and percentages were calculated for all variables of interest. Differences between groups were analyzed using t tests and percentages. Members had significantly higher high school grade point averages (GPA) (p = .002). After four consecutive semesters, members had significantly higher cumulative college GPA (p ≤ .0001) and cumulative credits completed (p ≤ .0001). Significantly more members than nonmembers were enrolled in school after two completed years, 89% and 85%, respectively. Results show recreational sports fitness facility membership is associated with, and may be beneficial to, college students' academic success. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
5. Stacks, Serials, Search Engines, and Students' Success: First-Year Undergraduate Students' Library Use, Academic Achievement, and Retention.
- Author
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Soria, Krista M., Fransen, Jan, and Nackerud, Shane
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ACADEMIC library use studies , *ACADEMIC library research , *COLLEGE freshmen , *GRADE point average , *ACADEMIC achievement research , *COLLEGE dropouts , *LEAST squares - Abstract
Like other units within colleges and universities, academic libraries are subject to increasing internal and external pressures to demonstrate their contributions to institutional goals related to students' success. The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationships between first-year undergraduate students' use of the academic library, academic achievement, and retention. Results of ordinary least squares regressions predicting first-year students' cumulative grade point averages (GPA) and logistic regressions predicting students' first-year to second-year retention suggest that students who used academic library services and resources at least once during the academic year had higher GPA and retention on average than their peers who did not use library services. The results of two separate regressions predicting students' GPA by 10 different types of library use suggest that four library use areas were consistently and positively associated with students' GPA: database logins, book loans, electronic journal logins, and library workstation logins. The results of two separate logistic regression analyses suggest that logging into databases and using library workstations were actions consistently and positively associated with students' retention. Additional results predicted by students' use of services at least one time and by one-unit increases in the frequency of library area uses are discussed. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2014
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6. The Economic Model of Intercollegiate Athletics and Its Effects on the College Athlete Educational Experience.
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Lanter, Jason R. and Hawkins, Billy J.
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COLLEGE sports ,COLLEGE athletes ,MASS media & sports ,ECONOMIC models ,ACADEMIC achievement research - Abstract
The financial growth and popularity of intercollegiate athletics presents unique and challenging opportunities to institutions of higher education. Intercollegiate athletics, specifically men's basketball and football, elicit considerable media attention and publicity for these institutions. Yet, the current economic model of intercollegiate athletics engenders challenges to the academic welfare of athletes in both revenue and nonrevenue sports. This paper examines the challenges athletes incur as a result of the current economic model of intercollegiate athletics, and it poses several thought provoking questions to continue the debate on athletic reform. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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7. Multiplicative effect of intrinsic and extrinsic motivation on academic performance: A longitudinal study of Chinese students.
- Author
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Liu, Yuan, Hau, Kit‐Tai, Liu, Hongyun, Wu, Jing, Wang, Xiaofang, Zheng, Xin, and Hau, Kit-Tai
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CHINESE students , *INTRINSIC motivation , *EXTRINSIC motivation , *ACADEMIC achievement & society , *ACADEMIC achievement research , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Objective: For Chinese students, learning is seen as their duty and obligation to the society and their parents. Thus, in contrast to the Western students, the effects of extrinsic motivation on academic performance may not necessarily be always negative. The present study examined the effects of intrinsic and extrinsic motivation, as well as their multiplicative effect among Chinese students.Method: A total of 13,799 students in China were followed longitudinally in three waves (Grade 10, beginning of school year, midyear, and end-of-year; 5-month interval each). The main and multiplicative effects of intrinsic and extrinsic motivations were used to predict academic growth in a latent growth model.Results: The multiplicative effect between intrinsic and extrinsic motivations showed that extrinsic motivation was detrimental to academic performance for students with high intrinsic motivation. For students with low intrinsic motivation, however, the extrinsic motivation helped to improve academic performance. Worth noting, intrinsic motivation also had a moderate positive effect on academic performance.Conclusions: For Chinese learners, interest is not the only key motive to learn. Extrinsic reasons could facilitate students' learning when they are not interested in the subject. Extrinsic motivation harms only for highly intrinsically motivated students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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8. Examining the Impact of Integrating Physical Activity on Fluid Intelligence and Academic Performance in an Elementary School Setting: A Preliminary Investigation.
- Author
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Reed, Julian A., Einstein, Gilles, Hahn, Erin, Hooker, Steven P., Gross, Virginia P., and Kravitz, Jen
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PHYSICAL fitness research ,RESEARCH on students ,INTELLIGENCE levels ,EXERCISE physiology ,ACADEMIC achievement research ,PHYSICAL fitness for children - Abstract
Purpose: To examine the impact of integrating physical activity with elementary curricula on fluid intelligence and academic achievement. Methods: A random sample of 3rd grade teachers integrated physical activity into their core curricula approximately 30 minutes a day, 3 days a week from January 2008 to April 2008. Noninvasive fluid intelligence cognitive measures were used along with State-mandated academic achievement tests. Results: Experimental Group children averaged close to 1200 pedometer steps per integration day, thus averaging 3600 steps per week. Children in the Experimental Group performed significantly better on the SPM Fluid Intelligence Test. Children in the Experimental Group also performed significantly better on the Social Studies State mandated academic achievement test. Experimental Group children also received higher scores on the English/Language Arts, Math and Science achievements tests, but were not statistically significant compared with Control Group children. Children classified in Fitnessgram's Healthy Fitness Zone for BMI earned lower scores on many of the SPM Fluid Intelligence components. Discussion: This investigation provides evidence that movement can influence fluid intelligence and should be considered to promote cognitive development of elementary-age children. Equally compelling were the differences in SPM Fluid Intelligence Test scores for children who were distinguished by Fitnessgram's BMI cut points. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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9. Comparison of Health and Academic Indices Between Campus Recreation Facility Users and Nonusers.
- Author
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Todd, M. Kent, Czyszczon, Greg, Carr, Julie Wallace, and Pratt, Casey
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HEALTH of college students ,RECREATION for college students ,PHYSICAL fitness research ,ACADEMIC achievement research ,RECREATION research ,RECREATION centers ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
Body mass index (BMI), electronic media (EM) use, International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ) scores, selected nutrient intake, smoking, and grade point averages (GPA) were compared between campus recreation (CR) facility users and nonusers at a public, four-year institution in the mid-Atlantic region. Participants (n = 1034) were categorized by CR visits: nonusers, low users (>0 to <1 visit/wk), moderate users (≥1 to <3 visits/wk), or high users (≥3 visits/wk). Significant (p < .05) main effects between user groups were found for BMI, EM use, IPAQ scores, fat intake, smoking, and GPA. High users had better GPA (3.35 vs. ≤3.15 for others), IPAQ scores (8135 MET-min/wk vs. <6800 MET-min/wk for others), and lower fat intake (<30% of total calories vs. >30.9% of total calories for others) than all other groups. High users also had lower BMI (22.8 kg/m
2 ) than moderate users and nonusers (>23.9 kg/m2 ) and lower EM use (5.56 hr/d) than nonusers (6.55 hr/d). These results indicate that CR visitations are favorably associated with academic achievement and good health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2009
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10. Athletic Expenditures and the Academic Mission of American Schools: A Group-Level Analysis.
- Author
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Ward, Jr., Russell E.
- Subjects
- *
SCHOOL administration research , *ACADEMIC achievement research , *PHYSICAL education research , *SCHOOL sports , *HIGH school athletes , *SOCIOLOGY of sports , *FINANCE , *EDUCATION - Abstract
Most studies find positive correlations at the individual level of analysis between athletic participation and academic success. One opportunity for scholarship left largely unexplored concerns the effect of athletics on group-level processes. The author used a resource-based perspective to explore the influence of athletic investment on academic achievement at the organizational level. Data were collected from 227 school districts. Multiple regression analyses revealed negative but insignificant relationships between athletic expenditures and indicators of basic skills and college preparation. Future research might determine whether the nonassociation observed in this study between athletic spending and academic performance generalizes to different school settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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11. Does the GMAT Matter for Executive MBA Students? Some Empirical Evidence.
- Author
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Gropper, Daniel M.
- Subjects
ACADEMIC achievement research ,GRADUATE Management Admission Test ,PREDICTION of scholastic success ,MASTER of business administration degree ,EDUCATIONAL forecasting - Abstract
I examine the relation of several factors, including the GMAT score, undergraduate background, and work experience to academic success in an executive MBA program. The GMAT score was found to have a weak, if any, relation to overall academic success for executive MBA students, although it was positively and significantly related to performance in a smaller set of first-year classes. I found work experience, particularly career advancement, to be significantly and positively related to overall program performance. The results also show some significant grade differences by gender, indicating that women performed as well or better than men with similar credentials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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12. A Meta-Analysis of the Predictive Validity of the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) and Undergraduate Grade Point Average (UGPA) for Graduate Student Academic Performance.
- Author
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Kuncel, Nathan R., Credé, Marcus, and Thomas, Lisa L.
- Subjects
ACADEMIC achievement research ,MASTER of business administration degree ,BUSINESS schools ,PROFESSIONAL education ,EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements ,GRADUATE Management Admission Test ,META-analysis ,GRADE point average - Abstract
Considerable debate both within and outside of academic circles surrounds the validity of standardized tests for predicting student performance in graduate business schools. This meta-analysis aggregates the existing literature on the validity of the two most heavily used predictors in business school admissions: the GMAT and undergraduate grade point average. Results based on over 402 independent samples across 64,583 students indicate that the GMAT is a superior predictor to UGPA and that the two combined yield a high level of validity for predicting student performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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13. Analyzing Undergraduate Students' Performance in Engineering Statistics Course Using Educational Data Mining: Case Study in UniMAP.
- Author
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Zakarial, Siti Aisyah, Azman Wan Muhamadl, Wan Zuki, and Abdul Azziz, Nor Hizamiyani
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ENGINEERING statistics , *STATISTICS education , *DATA mining , *ACADEMIC achievement research , *UNDERGRADUATES - Abstract
The remarkable growth of electronic data in the Mathematics department provides the opportunities to extract some meaningful information from this large capacity of data. The development of the data in the mining field ensures the educational data to improve the quality of the educational processes and to classify the components that affected the performance of the students in engineering statistics course. Thus, in this study, Kami Distance Calculator (KDC) was utilized to analyze the performance of undergraduate students in Universiti Malaysia Perlis (UniMAP) during the academic session 2015/2016 in semester 2. The performance of the students was evaluated based on two aspects. First, the academic achievement of the students from the engineering statistics course during semester 2 2015/2016 was analyzed. Second, the possible variables that affect the performance of students in this course were classified. Thus, in this study, two significant groups of students were recognized i. e. (i) the students who achieved below 60% average, and (ii) the students who achieved above 60% average that can be referred as off-target and target group respectively. Based on the analysis of this study, the two variables (i.e. variables X3 and Xr> affect the performance of the students and cause the students to obtain average marks lower than 60%. The results indicate that, by focusing on the possible variables that affect the academic performance of the students, it is possible to provide an appropriate warning and support to the students below average achievement, and at the same time to provide advice and opportunities to high-performance students based on the past experience about the obtained components. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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14. Relationship of Physical Education Curriculum Implementation and Mathematics Achievement in Chinese Youth.
- Author
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Wang, Yehui, Ma, Xiao, Zhang, Yingbing, Wu, Lili, Yang, Zhaoxi, Yang, Tao, and Li, Youfa
- Subjects
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YOUTH , *CURRICULUM research , *ACADEMIC achievement research , *PHYSICAL education , *MATHEMATICS education - Abstract
Purpose: Previous studies indicated a positive association between physical education (PE) and mathematics achievement (MA). This study explored how PE curriculum implementation relates to MA using data from the China National Assessment of Education Quality (CNAEQ) in 2015, including Mathematics (CNAEQ-MA 2015) as well as Physical Education & Health (CNAEQ-PEH 2015).Method: This study included 22,619 students (48.7% girls) age 13.96 ± 0.64 yr. from the national sample of Grade 8 students from CNAEQ. During 2015, MA and cardiorespiratory fitness (CF) were assessed. PE curriculum implementation, personal hygiene, eating habits, PE interest, mathematics interest, and self-confidence were collected via a self-report student survey. Personal hygiene and eating habits were combined to create the latent variable, healthy lifestyle (HL). Structural equation modeling was applied to examine the associations. Socioeconomic status, school location, Body Mass Index (BMI), and sex were all controlled.Results: PE curriculum implementation had an indirect, positive association with MA through CF, HL-mathematics interest, and HL-mathematics self-confidence. Together, the model explained 27.8% of the variance in MA.Conclusion: PE curriculum implementation may benefit mathematics education, and this link is mainly through HL, CF, mathematics interest, and self-confidence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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15. EXPLODING THE SELF-ESTEEM MYTH.
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Baumeister, Roy F., Campbell, Jennifer D., Krueger, Joachim I., and Vohs, Kathleen D.
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SELF-esteem , *SELF-perception , *ACADEMIC achievement research , *PREDICTION of scholastic success , *CAUSATION (Philosophy) ,HUMAN behavior research - Abstract
The article argues that efforts to boost people's self-esteem are of little value in fostering academic achievement or preventing undesirable behavior. People intuitively recognize the importance of self-esteem to their psychological health, so it is not particularly remarkable that most of us try to protect and enhance it in ourselves whenever possible. In the 1980s, California State Assemblyman John Vasconcellos argued that raising self-esteem in young people would reduce crime, teen pregnancy, drug abuse, school underachievement and pollution. Modern efforts have, however, cast doubt on the idea that higher self-esteem actually induces students to do better. Studies of possible links between workers' self-regard and job performance echo what has been found with schoolwork: the simple search for correlations yields some suggestive results, but these do not show whether a good self-image leads to occupational success, or vice versa. After coming to the conclusion that high self-esteem does not lessen a tendency toward violence, that it does not deter adolescents from turning to alcohol, tobacco, drugs and sex, and that it fails to improve academic or job performance, we got a boost when we looked into how self-esteem relates to happiness. The consistent finding is that people with high self-esteem are significantly happier than others. Causation needs to be established. It seems possible that high self-esteem brings about happiness, but no research has shown this outcome. The strong correlation between self-esteem and happiness is just that--a correlation. INSETS: Overview/Self-Esteem;MIXED MESSAGES.
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- 2005
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16. Managerial Effectiveness I: Formulating a Research Strategy.
- Author
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Cummings, Larry L.
- Subjects
EXECUTIVE ability (Management) ,RESEARCH methodology ,ACADEMIC achievement research ,FORECASTING ,MANAGEMENT science ,MANAGEMENT ,BUSINESS success ,LONGITUDINAL method ,LEADERSHIP - Abstract
This is the first of a series of papers designed to report the various stages of a longitudinal research project on the study of managerial effectiveness. The purposes of this article are: (1) to set forth the various dimensions of the overall research effort; (2) to present a review of the research on the prediction of managerial success or effectiveness; and, (3) to establish the focus for a second paper subsequently to appear in the Academy of Management Journal describing the results and implications of an intermediate research effort. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1966
- Full Text
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17. Academic hardiness: Mediator between sense of belonging to school and academic achievement?
- Author
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Abdollahi, Abbas and Noltemeyer, Amity
- Subjects
- *
ACADEMIC achievement & society , *ACADEMIC achievement research , *QUESTIONNAIRE design , *SCHOOLS , *BUSINESS schools - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to (a) test the relationships between sense of belonging to school, academic hardiness, and academic achievement and (b) examine the mediating role of academic hardiness (including commitment, control, and challenge) on the association between sense of belonging to school and academic achievement. Five hundred and twenty 15-21-year-old high school students (245 young women and 275 young men) from eight high schools in Tehran, Iran, participated in the study by completing a series of validated questionnaires. Partial least squares structural equation modeling provided evidence that commitment, control, challenge, and sense of belonging to school were positively associated with academic achievement. Commitment, control, and challenge partially mediated the relationship between sense of belonging to school and academic achievement. These findings enhance existing literature by revealing how sense of belonging to school may contribute to academic achievement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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18. How teachers integrate a math computer game: Professional development use, teaching practices, and student achievement.
- Author
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Callaghan, M. N., Long, J. J., van Es, E. A., Reich, S. M., and Rutherford, T.
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EDUCATIONAL games , *EDUCATIONAL computer games , *MATHEMATICS education (Elementary) , *TEACHER development , *ACADEMIC achievement research , *ELEMENTARY education , *PROFESSIONAL education , *TEACHERS , *ACADEMIC achievement , *ASIANS , *CHI-squared test , *HISPANIC Americans , *INTERVIEWING , *MATHEMATICS , *RESEARCH methodology , *PROBABILITY theory , *PROFESSIONAL employee training , *REGRESSION analysis , *RESEARCH funding , *SURVEYS , *VIDEO games , *WHITE people , *TEACHING methods , *MEDICAL coding - Abstract
Abstract: As more attention is placed on designing digital educational games to align with schools' academic aims (e.g., Common Core), questions arise regarding how professional development (PD) may support teachers' using games for instruction and how such integration might impact students' achievement. This study seeks to (a) understand how teachers use PD resources (e.g., technology personnel and game‐use workshops) for integration; (b) determine how teachers integrate games into their instruction; and (c) examine how those teaching practices are associated with student achievement. This mixed method study used survey and interview responses from elementary school teachers (n = 863) with access to PD resources for implementing a math game intervention and standardized math‐test scores from their second‐ through sixth‐grade students (n = 10,715). Findings showed few teachers sought PD assistance for integration, but many desired such support. Some reported using integrative practices (i.e., referencing game and using game‐generated progress reports) to identify struggling students, whereas several found integration challenging. Teachers' reordering of game objectives to align with lessons and viewing of game‐based PD videos were associated with increased student math achievement in our OLS‐analysis. However, this result was no longer statistically significant within a school fixed‐effects model, suggesting school differences may influence how strongly teachers' practices are associated with student achievement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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19. Oral Health and Its Effect on the Academic Performance of Children and Adolescents.
- Author
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Dias Ribeiro, Ana Paula, Almeida, Raquel Francis, Amorim Medonca, Jordana Guedes, and Leal, Soraya Coelho
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ORAL hygiene , *ACADEMIC achievement research , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *PEDIATRIC dentistry , *ADOLESCENT health , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this systematic review was to verify whether child and adolescent oral health affected academic performance. Methods: A literature search conducted in March 2017 on PubMed, Lilacs, Web of Science, and Scopus databases identified 2,009 papers, six of which were included in the final review. Quality appraisal and risk of bios were evaluated using the quality assessment tool for observational cohort and cross-sectional studies. Results: Two papers were classified as being of good quality. one as fair, and three as poor. In four publications, oral health conditions were measured by taking only dental caries into account, while in two others treatment needs and dental trauma were also considered. Although four papers concluded that children's academic performance and poor oral health were associated, the results were not considered reliable because of the high risk of bios. The two papers classified as being of good quality did not show an association between oral health and academic performance, unless mediated by socioeconomic factors. Conclusion: Further well-designed studies ore required to demonstrate whether children's oral health can have a negative influence on their academic performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
20. Metacognition and Meta-Affect in Young Students: Does It Make a Difference in Mathematical Problem Solving?
- Author
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Tzohar-Rozen, Meirav and Kramarski, Bracha
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AUTODIDACTICISM , *AFFECT (Psychology) , *PROBLEM solving , *MATHEMATICS problems & exercises , *ACADEMIC achievement research , *TEACHING methods research , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Mathematical problem solving is one of the most valuable aspects of mathematics education and the most difficult for elementary school students. Cognitive and metacognitive difficulties in this area cause students to develop negative attitudes and emotions as affective reactions, hampering their efforts and achievements. These metacognitive and meta-affective reactions are fundamental aspects of self-regulated learning (SRL), a non-innate process that requires systematic, explicit student training. This study investigated the impact of two self-regulation programs among young students (Grade 5)--metacognition (n = 64) and meta-affect (n = 54) versus a control group (n =53)--on enhancing achievements in mathematical verbal problem solving and a novel transfer task, as well as metacognitive and meta-affective regulation processes of a focus group during a thinking-aloud solution. Mixed methods indicate that students who participated in the metacognitive and meta-affective intervention programs presented similar but higher achievements than the control group. Additionally, during the thinking-aloud solution, students from each group broadly implemented the self-regulation processes they were trained in, while consistently referring to all the self-regulation phases. The current study makes an important contribution to practical implications for students with diverse abilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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21. 'The best app is the teacher' Introducing classroom scripts in technology-enhanced education.
- Author
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Montrieux, H., Raes, A., and Schellens, T.
- Subjects
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EDUCATIONAL technology , *TEACHING methods , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes , *TABLET computers in education , *ACADEMIC achievement research , *SECONDARY education , *TEACHERS , *ANALYSIS of covariance , *ANALYSIS of variance , *COMPUTER assisted instruction , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *POCKET computers , *PROBABILITY theory , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *STATISTICS , *STUDENT attitudes , *SURVEYS , *DATA analysis , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *MOBILE apps , *MEDICAL coding - Abstract
A quasi-experimental study was set up in secondary education to study the role of teachers while implementing tablet devices in science education. Three different classroom scripts that guided students and teachers' actions during the intervention on two social planes (group and classroom level) are compared. The main goal was to investigate which classroom script leads to the best results regarding progress in domain-specific knowledge and inquiry skills. Besides student achievement, students' experiences towards the role of the teacher and students' perceptions towards learning with tablets within the three conditions were investigated. In the first condition, the classroom script included learning activities that were balanced between the group and the classroom level. In the second condition, the learning activities occurred predominantly on the group level. The third condition entailed the classroom script as the control condition in which the learning activities were situated only on the classroom level, with the tablet used in a traditional way or as 'book behind glass'. Results show that students perform better on domain-specific knowledge in the conditions where the teacher intervened on the classroom level. Regarding the acquisition of inquiry skills, students performed best in the condition where the learning activities were balanced between the group and the classroom level. Moreover, students who perceived more structure achieved better. These results indicate that the role of the teacher cannot be ignored in technology-enhanced learning. Moreover, these results seem to suggest that one of the best apps remains the teacher. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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22. Different Transitions: Timetable Failures in the Transition to School.
- Author
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Lago, Lina
- Subjects
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TRANSITIONAL programs (Education) , *PRESCHOOL education , *ACADEMIC achievement research , *PROMOTION (School) , *SLOW learning children , *CHILDREN , *FIELDWORK (Educational method) , *CASE studies , *STUDENT attitudes , *TIME , *ETHNOLOGY research , *THEMATIC analysis , *COLLEGE teacher attitudes , *MEDICAL coding - Abstract
The aim of this article was to show how transitions are constructed, and to discuss different ways of making the transition from the preschool class to first grade. The analysis is grounded in ethnographic fieldwork. Temporality is used to understand expectations about how transition should be made. The results reveal that some children made their transitions in ways that did not follow the expected timetable. These transitions can be understood as timetable failures, and needed to be made sense of by both children and teachers. These different transitions were an important part of the overall construction of transition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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23. REFRAMING STUDENT SUCCESS IN COLLEGE: Advancing Know-What and Know-How.
- Author
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Kinzie, Jillian and Kuh, George
- Subjects
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ACADEMIC achievement research , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *POSTSECONDARY education , *UNIVERSITY faculty , *LEARNING - Abstract
The article presents research report on the student success in colleges and universities. It discusses the academic success depending on the students actions and postsecondary experience outcomes. The assistance of the institution, federal policymakers, and faculty and staff helps in the students success and education achievement. The institution's learning environment defines, and address the achievement of the student.
- Published
- 2017
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24. Contribution of spoken language and socio-economic background to adolescents' educational achievement at age 16 years.
- Author
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Spencer, Sarah, Clegg, Judy, Stackhouse, Joy, and Rush, Robert
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ACADEMIC achievement research , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *LANGUAGE ability testing , *LANGUAGE disorders in adolescence , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *TEENAGERS , *SECONDARY education , *ACADEMIC achievement , *CHI-squared test , *COMMUNICATIVE competence , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *HIGH schools , *PROBABILITY theory , *STATISTICS , *T-test (Statistics) , *DATA analysis , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ODDS ratio - Abstract
Background Well-documented associations exist between socio-economic background and language ability in early childhood, and between educational attainment and language ability in children with clinically referred language impairment. However, very little research has looked at the associations between language ability, educational attainment and socio-economic background during adolescence, particularly in populations without language impairment. Aims To investigate: (1) whether adolescents with higher educational outcomes overall had higher language abilities; and (2) associations between adolescent language ability, socio-economic background and educational outcomes, specifically in relation to Mathematics, English Language and English Literature GCSE grade. Method & Procedures A total of 151 participants completed five standardized language assessments measuring vocabulary, comprehension of sentences and spoken paragraphs, and narrative skills and one nonverbal assessment when between 13 and 14 years old. These data were compared with the participants' educational achievement obtained upon leaving secondary education (16 years old). Univariate logistic regressions were employed to identify those language assessments and demographic factors that were associated with achieving a targeted A*-C grade in English Language, English Literature and Mathematics General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) at 16 years. Further logistic regressions were then conducted to examine further the contribution of socio-economic background and spoken language skills in the multivariate models. Results & Outcomes Vocabulary, comprehension of sentences and spoken paragraphs, and mean length utterance in a narrative task along with socio-economic background contributed to whether participants achieved an A*-C grade in GCSE Mathematics and English Language and English Literature. Nonverbal ability contributed to English Language and Mathematics. The results of multivariate logistic regressions then found that vocabulary skills were particularly relevant to all three GCSE outcomes. Socio-economic background only remained important for English Language, once language assessment scores and demographic information were considered. Conclusions & Implications Language ability, and in particular vocabulary, plays an important role for educational achievement. Results confirm a need for ongoing support for spoken language ability throughout secondary education and a potential role for speech and language therapy provision in the continuing drive to reduce the gap in educational attainment between groups from differing socio-economic backgrounds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Processes of Early Childhood Interventions to Adult Well-Being.
- Author
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Reynolds, Arthur J., Ou, Suh‐Ruu, Mondi, Christina F., and Hayakawa, Momoko
- Subjects
- *
ACADEMIC achievement & society , *ACADEMIC achievement research , *PSYCHOLOGICAL well-being , *EARLY childhood education research , *FAMILIES & psychology , *DEVELOPMENTAL psychobiology , *RESEARCH funding , *SATISFACTION , *SCHOOLS , *EARLY intervention (Education) , *SOCIAL support - Abstract
This article describes the contributions of cognitive-scholastic advantage, family support behavior, and school quality and support as processes through which early childhood interventions promote well-being. Evidence in support of these processes is from longitudinal cohort studies of the Child-Parent Centers and other preventive interventions beginning by age 4. Relatively large effects of participation have been documented for school readiness skills at age 5, parent involvement, K-12 achievement, remedial education, educational attainment, and crime prevention. The three processes account for up to half of the program impacts on well-being. They also help to explain the positive economic returns of many effective programs. The generalizability of these processes is supported by a sizable knowledge base, including a scale up of the Child-Parent Centers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Academic Functioning and Peer Influences: A Short-Term Longitudinal Study of Network-Behavior Dynamics in Middle Adolescence.
- Author
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Rambaran, J. Ashwin, Hopmeyer, Andrea, Schwartz, David, Steglich, Christian, Badaly, Daryaneh, and Veenstra, René
- Subjects
- *
ACADEMIC achievement & society , *ACADEMIC achievement research , *ADOLESCENCE , *PEER pressure in adolescence , *FRIENDSHIP , *LONGITUDINAL method , *SOCIAL skills , *TEENAGERS' conduct of life , *ACHIEVEMENT ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
In this study, the associations between peer effects and academic functioning in middle adolescence (N = 342; 14-15 years old; 48% male) were investigated longitudinally. Similarity in achievement (grade point averages) and unexplained absences (truancy) was explained by both peer selection and peer influence, net of acceptance, and connectedness. Friendships were formed and maintained when adolescents had low levels of achievement or high levels of truancy. Friends influenced one another to increase rather than decrease in achievement and truancy. Moreover, friends' popularity moderated peer influences in truancy in reciprocal friendships but not in unilateral friendships, whereas friends' acceptance moderated peer influences in achievement in both unilateral and reciprocal friendships. The findings illustrate the dynamic interplay between peer effects and academic functioning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Children and Society.
- Author
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Betz, Tanja and Kayser, Laura B.
- Subjects
- *
THEORY of knowledge , *ADULT-child relationships , *SOCIAL order , *ACADEMIC achievement research , *MERITOCRACY , *POVERTY , *QUALITATIVE research ,CHILDREN & society - Abstract
In Western societies, we can observe a social order of knowledge between adults and children which involves the adults’ knowledge (e.g., on social matters) being investigated, made accessible, and distributed. Children’s knowledge, on the other hand, has not been studied in its own right. In this article, we therefore wish to focus on children’s social knowledge by analyzing passages from qualitative interviews with 15 elementary school children (age 8-10; different social backgrounds) on their understanding first, of differences in academic achievement, and second, of wealth and poverty, as well as their ideas on how these two topics are related and (therefore) their belief in meritocracy and knowledge about inequality. By exploring the children’s perspectives, we aim to get a better understanding of societal power structures and dynamics. Our findings reveal a distinct understanding of societal stratification issues on the part of children which is strongly linked to their position as children and not so much to their social class affiliation. Moreover, the results hint at children making a stabilizing contribution to the generational and social order of society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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28. Main Conference Topic: Science Education The Impact of Two Different Cooperative Learning Methods on Academic Achievements and Epistemology Behaviors of the Students in the Teaching of the Unit of the Structure and Features of The Matter.
- Author
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SIMSEK, Umit, FIRAT, Muhammet, and YILDIZ, Emre
- Subjects
- *
GROUP work in education , *ACADEMIC achievement research , *READING research , *ANALYSIS of variance ,WRITING - Abstract
The purpose of the this study is to detect the impact of Jigsaw II method and readingwriting-- presenting methods used in the cooperative learning model on academic achievements and epistemological behaviors of the students in the teaching of the unit of the structure and features of the matter involved in seventh class science and technology course. This study was carried out with the participation of a total 60 students attending to the seventh class of the school of national educational ministry in the 2013-2014 teaching year. One of these groups was reading-writing-presenting group (n = 20), the other group was jigsaw II group (n=20) and another one was control group (n=20) applied traditional method. In research, as data collection instruments Pre-Knowledge Test (PKT), Academic Achievement Test (AAT) and Epistemological Beliefs Scale (EBS) were used. The data obtained from the study were assessed by using descriptive statistics, one way ANOVA, ANCOVA and post hoc tests (LSD and Bonferroni). According to these results, in the teaching of the unit of the structure and feature of the matter, the methods of reading-writing-presenting and Jigsaw II were found more successful than traditional teaching methods in the increasing of academic achievement. Also in term of EBS, there is a significant difference between CG and RWPG, this difference is favorable RWPG and there is not a significant difference between JG and RWPG. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
29. Learning Motivation and goal content of socio-cultural adaptation of International Exchange Students in Hong Kong.
- Author
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Downing, Kevin, Ganotice Jr., Fraide A., Chan, Barbara, and Lee Wai Yip
- Subjects
- *
STUDENT exchange programs , *FOREIGN students , *ACADEMIC motivation , *ACADEMIC achievement research - Abstract
There is a dramatic increase of non-local students coming to Hong Kong attending various courses. With the view of understanding the adaptation of exchange students, particularly the mainland Chinese students (N=216), this study aimed to test the relationship of types of motivation and goal content in studying abroad with adaptation and achievement within the framework of self-determination theory. Our results demonstrated that identified regulation emerged as the strongest predictor of various adaptation outcomes while both goals for studying abroad (self-development and preservation) predicted adaptation. Findings were discussed from the cultural elements of Chinese culture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
30. Effect of Using 3-D Lab on Omani Science Students' Achievement.
- Author
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Al Musawi, A., Ambusaidi, A., Al-Balushi, S., and Al-Balushi, K.
- Subjects
- *
SCIENCE education research , *ACADEMIC achievement research , *ACHIEVEMENT tests , *MOBILE learning , *VIRTUAL reality , *EDUCATIONAL technology research - Abstract
This paper aims to measure the effectiveness of the 3-D lab on Omani students' achievement in terms of knowledge, application, and metacognitive abilities in science education. The study design adopts the experimental design with Pre-Post Test Control Group Design, where the experimental and control groups (30 students each) have conducted achievement tests. Findings show statistically significant differences in student achievement in favor of the group that studied using the 3-D lab with large effect size. The paper then draws conclusion and recommendations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
31. Cultural diversity evaluation in educational learning groups.
- Author
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Popescu, Anca-Diana, Suciu, Sorin, Borca, Cristina, Nodea, Adela, and Ayotte, Lauren
- Subjects
GROUP work in education ,SOCIOCULTURAL factors ,CULTURAL pluralism ,ACADEMIC achievement research ,HIGH school graduates - Abstract
The objective of this article is to illustrate the cultural diversity evaluation in educational learning groups. Our research analyzes the intercultural competency of two groups of students studying in culturally diverse groups. The evaluation assessment was based on a set of tests measuring socio-cultural intelligence and group behaviour. Two learning groups composed of 68 subjects (experimental group) and 70 subjects (witness group) were used for the sample. In order to more suitably evaluate the learning groups' cultural diversity, the results obtained along with the educational performance of the learning groups (shown by their partial transcript of records) were taken into account. The research variables used were: age, nationality, residence (urban/rural), high school graduate and profile. Statistical processing was implemented using a specific IT platform developed in order to evaluate the cultural diversity of the groups and to send immediate feed-back to the subjects after completing each test. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Building social and emotional efficacy to (re)engage young adolescents: capitalising on the ‘window of opportunity’.
- Author
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Main, Katherine and Whatman, Susan
- Subjects
- *
STUDENT engagement , *LEARNING , *SCHOOL dropout prevention , *ACADEMIC achievement research , *SOCIAL skills - Abstract
Research confirms that when students disengage from learning, there is a greatly increased risk of them dropping out of school and not completing secondary education (Year 12). In an Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD) report on Equity in Education [OECD. 2012. “Investing in Equity in Education Pays off”,in Equity and Quality in Education:Supporting Disadvantaged Students and Schools. Paris, France: OECD. doi:10.1787/9789264130852-3-en], school dropout rates in developed countries averaged 20% and, in some countries, was as high as 25%. Lyche [2010.Taking on the Completion Challenge. A Literature Review on Policies to Prevent Dropout and Early School Leaving. OECD Education Working Papers, No. 53. OECD. doi:10.1787/5km4m2t59cmr-en] noted that school dropout does not ‘just happen’ but rather is a long process of disengagement from school. Students entering early adolescence are experiencing rapid and complex changes to their social, emotional, physical, and cognitive development that can positively or negatively affect their experience in education environments. During this time, there is also an increased expectation, both at school and at home, that young adolescents should accept greater responsibility for themselves and their learning. However, when individual students fail to regulate their behaviour or manage the increasing difficulty of the academic work, they can begin to disengage from learning and become entrenched in a downward cycle of poor academic achievement and poor social competence. With an increasing trend in young adolescents to disengage from learning, identifying how to reengage students is critical to their social and academic success. This study reports on the key features of an early intervention programme that targets young adolescent students who are already showing early signs of disengaging from school. Data show that the programme aligns with evidence-based practice and has had a positive effect in promoting and building students’ social and emotional efficacy and re-engaging them in learning. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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33. The Academic Experiences Survey (AES): Measuring Perceptions of Academic Climate in Liberal Arts Institutions.
- Author
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Galotti, Kathleen M., Clare, Lacey R., McManus, Courtney, and Nixon, Andrea Lisa
- Subjects
ACADEMIC achievement research ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,EDUCATIONAL objectives ,STATISTICAL reliability ,EDUCATIONAL planning ,STEM education - Abstract
In today's educational climate, liberal arts institutions must demonstrate that their educational goals are being met. This paper presents reliability and stability testing of a concise, research-based survey instrument designed to examine student perceptions of academic experiences that is particularly suited to institutions rooted in the liberal arts. The Academic Experiences Survey (AES) consists of five scales: Comfortable in College, Skills, Interdisciplinary Understanding, Liberal Arts Integration, and Future Academic Plans. We present data from administrations at two institutions; examining the instrument's validity as prediction of college retention and graduation, enrollment in STEM courses, and longitudinal changes over the course of students' first year in college. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Do Top Dogs Rule in Middle School? Evidence on Bullying, Safety, and Belonging.
- Author
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Schwartz, Amy Ellen, Stiefel, Leanna, and Rothbart, Michah W.
- Subjects
ACADEMIC achievement research ,BULLYING research ,MIDDLE school students ,CLASSROOM environment ,STUDENTS' conduct of life - Abstract
Recent research finds that grade span affects academic achievement but only speculates about the mechanisms. In this study, we examine one commonly cited mechanism, the top dog/bottom dog phenomenon, which states that students at the top of a grade span (“top dogs”) have better experiences than those at the bottom (“bottom dogs”). Using an instrumental variables strategy introduced in Rockoff and Lockwood (2010) and a longitudinal data set containing student survey data for New York City public middle school students, we estimate the impact of top dog and bottom dog status on bullying, safety, belonging, and academic achievement. This article provides the first credibly causal evidence that top dog status improves the learning environment and academic achievement. We further find that the top dog effect is strongest in sixth grade and in schools with longer grade spans and that the top dog effect is not explained by new students to a school or student height. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Systemic Synthesis Questions [SSynQs] as Tools to Help Students to Build Their Cognitive Structures in a Systemic Manner.
- Author
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Hrin, Tamara, Fahmy, Ameen, Segedinac, Mirjana, and Milenković, Dušica
- Subjects
TEACHING methods research ,ORGANIC chemistry education ,SECONDARY education ,HIGH school students ,ACADEMIC achievement research ,TEACHING methods - Abstract
Many studies dedicated to the teaching and learning of organic chemistry courses have emphasized that high school students have shown significant difficulties in mastering the concepts of this discipline. Therefore, the aim of our study was to help students to overcome these difficulties by applying systemic synthesis questions, [SSynQs], as the instructional method in our intervention. This work shows that students from the group exposed to the new teaching method achieved higher scores on final testing than students from the control group, who were taught by the traditional method, when students' achievements in conventional, linear questions [LQs] and in [SSynQs] were studied. These results were followed by observation of lower levels of mental effort by students from the intervention group, and higher levels of mental effort in the control group, invested during solving both types of questions. This correlation between achievement and mental effort resulted in high instructional efficiency for the applied method in the intervention group, [SSynQs], and low instructional efficiency for the traditional teaching and learning method applied in the control group. A systemic triangular relation between achievement, mental effort, and instructional efficiency, established by each group and gender, emphasized that the application of [SSynQs] was more suited to female students than for male students because of [SSynQs] characteristics as teaching and learning tools and because of learning style and ability differences between genders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Unheard and Unseen.
- Author
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Ellis, Addie Lucille and Geller, Kathy D.
- Subjects
- *
AFRICAN American teenagers , *HOMELESSNESS , *URBAN education , *SOCIAL work research , *ACADEMIC achievement research - Abstract
This narrative study is based on stories told by African American adolescents experiencing homelessness. It offers insights into their lived experiences and describes the challenges faced in negotiating the urban education system. African American youth are disproportionately represented in the adolescent homeless demographic. “Unheard and unseen” in the dominant narrative, the needs of this population often go unmet. The educational and social service systems frequently place barriers, and blame, that impede the academic achievement of these youth. The dominant narrative is often viewed from the perspective of “what is wrong with ‘those’ kids?” This research shifts the perspective to “what is occurring within the larger system?” [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Situating Special Educators’ Instructional Quality and Their Students’ Outcomes within the Conditions Shaping Their Work.
- Author
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Bettini, Elizabeth, Park, Yujeong, Benedict, Amber, Kimerling, Jenna, and Leite, Walter
- Subjects
- *
SPECIAL education research , *READING level of students , *TEACHER influence , *EFFECTIVE teaching , *ACADEMIC achievement research - Abstract
This investigation examined relationships among special education teachers’ working conditions (e.g., classroom characteristics, administrative support), personal characteristics (e.g., experience, certification status, self-efficacy), instructional quality, and students with disabilities’ reading achievement and behavioral outcomes. Data from the 2004–2005 administration of the Special Education Elementary Longitudinal Study were used. Confirmatory factor analysis was used to test the fit of models for five latent factors. Hybrid structural models were applied to test the hypothesis that working conditions would be positively associated with special education teachers’ self-efficacy and their instructional quality, which would, in turn, be positively associated with their students’ reading achievement and behavioral outcomes. Although the initial structural equation model tested failed to support the hypotheses, several significant relationships with theoretical and practical significance were discovered. Directions for future research and practical implications are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. School Correlates of Academic Behaviors and Performance Among McKinney–Vento Identified Youth.
- Author
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Stone, Susan and Uretsky, Mathew
- Subjects
- *
HOMELESS children , *ACADEMIC achievement research , *EFFECTIVE teaching , *SCHOOL attendance research , *TEST-taking skills - Abstract
We utilized a pooled sample of elementary, middle, and high school–aged children identified as homeless via definitions set forth by McKinney–Vento legislation in a large urban district in California to estimate the extent to which school factors contributed to student attendance, suspensions, test-taking behaviors, and performance on state standardized achievement tests (N = 2,618 students in 111 schools). Results of multi-level models indicated that school factors, including school truancy and average school reading and mathematics proficiency rates, contributed to individual student outcomes. Students identified as English language learners or receiving special education services performed relatively more poorly than peers across outcomes considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The Predictive Strength of Perceived Parenting and Parental Attachment Styles on Psychological Symptoms among Turkish University Students.
- Author
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Körük, Serdar, Öztürk, Abdülkadir, and Kara, Ahmet
- Subjects
PARENTING research ,RESEARCH ,COLLEGE students ,ACADEMIC achievement research ,PARENT participation in education - Abstract
Copyright of International Journal of Instruction is the property of International Journal of Instruction and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Investigation of Factors Affecting Students' Science Achievement According to Student Science Teachers.
- Author
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Tatar, Erdal, Tüysüz, Cengiz, Tosun, Cemal, and İlhan, Nail
- Subjects
RATING of students ,ACADEMIC achievement research ,SCIENCE education research ,TEACHING research ,UNIVERSITY faculty - Abstract
Copyright of International Journal of Instruction is the property of International Journal of Instruction and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. THE EFFECTS OF STUDENT-CONTENT INTERACTION ON ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE IN DISTANCE-LEARNING COURSES.
- Author
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ER, Neslihan Fatma and ER, Mustafa
- Subjects
DISTANCE education research ,BLENDED learning ,ACADEMIC achievement research ,ACADEMIC ability ,HIGHER education research - Abstract
Information technology is a widely used tool to facilitate teaching and learning activities in tertiary education. Distance learning courses designed and delivered via information technologies present opportunities to students with difficulties in enrolling and attending courses in higher education. Students enrolled in these courses are expected to participate in the technology supported learning environments and interact with the content presented through distance education technologies. This study is designed to elaborate on the factors that have effect on student success in two undergraduate courses taught through distance education technologies. Participants of this study are 124 freshman students. The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of student-content interaction on academic performance via a detailed analysis of data retrieved from the distance learning environment. This study will also shed light on the relationship between gender differences and success levels in distance education courses with respect to participation performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
42. THE EFFECT OF USING THE SIX THINKING HATS STRATEGY IN TEACHING HEALTH AND FITNESS COURSE ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF CREATIVE THINKING AND THE ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT LEVEL.
- Author
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MOHAMED, Amal Salah Eldeen and AHMED, Eman Maher
- Subjects
COLLEGE students ,RESEARCH ,ACADEMIC achievement research ,PHYSICAL fitness research ,HEALTH education research - Abstract
Aim. Creativity is a multi-faceted phenomenon, includes a new production and in the evening, which is consistent with the primary objective of education in this day and age, a graduate learners capable of innovation and creativity and uncover new, to create a creative and innovative thinking at the time of the change pattern. The aim of this study was to investigate that Effect of using the six thinking hats strategy in teaching health and fitness course on the development of creative thinking and the academic achievement level. Methods. (76) Female student from faculty of education-grade one, divided into (2) group. The experimental group (n = 37) performance the six thinking hats strategy and control group (n = 39) performed traditional learning. The parameters were collected before and after (10) weeks. Subject's parents and teachers were required to read and informed consent document; there was no history of injuries, diabetes or recent surgery. statistical analysis of the results was carried out with the use of SPSS software. Results. The experimental group had significantly higher than control group in Torrance Test of Creativity Thinking, and the experimental group had significantly higher than control group in Test of academic achievement. Conclusion. Under the condition of our study, using the six thinking hats strategy to ten week has beneficial effect on teaching health and fitness course on the development of creative thinking and the academic achievement level for university female students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
43. Charters without Lotteries: Testing Takeovers in New Orleans and Boston†.
- Author
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Abdulkadiroğlu, Atila, Angrist, Joshua D., Hull, Peter D., and Pathak, Parag A.
- Subjects
CHARTER schools ,PUBLIC schools ,RATING of students ,ACADEMIC achievement research ,SCHOOL attendance - Abstract
Charter takeovers are traditional public schools restarted as charter schools. We develop a grandfathering instrument for takeover attendance that compares students at schools designated for takeover with a matched sample of students attending similar schools not yet taken over. Grandfathering estimates from New Orleans show substantial gains from takeover enrollment. In Boston, grandfathered students see achievement gains at least as large as the gains for students assigned charter seats in lotteries. A non-charter Boston turnaround intervention that had much in common with the takeover strategy generated gains as large as those seen for takeovers, while other more modest turnaround interventions yielded smaller effects. (JEL D44, H75, I21, I28) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Selection on performance and tracking.
- Author
-
Korthals, R. A. and Dronkers, J.
- Subjects
STUDENTS ,EDUCATION ,ACADEMIC achievement research ,PERFORMANCE ,ACADEMIC ability - Abstract
Tracking is widely used in secondary schools around the world. Some countries put more emphasis on the use of performance to place students into tracks (e.g. the Netherlands), while in other countries parents have more influence on the track their child will go to (e.g. Germany). This article examines whether selection into tracks based on performance has an effect on the relation between tracking and student performance and educational opportunities. Using data from the Programme for International Student Assessment for around 185 000 students in 31 countries, different estimation models are compared. The results indicate that a highly differentiated system is best for performance when schools always consider prior performance when deciding on student acceptance. In systems with a few tracks, there is no such impact. Equality of opportunity is best provided for in a system with many tracks when schools always consider prior performance. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The Impact of College Teaching on Students' Academic and Labor Market Outcomes.
- Author
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Braga, Michela, Paccagnella, Marco, and Pellizzari, Michele
- Subjects
COLLEGE teaching ,ACADEMIC achievement research ,LABOR market ,CURRICULUM ,COLLEGE students - Abstract
This paper estimates the impact of college teaching on students' academic achievement and labor market outcomes using administrative data from Bocconi University matched with tax records. The estimation exploits the random allocation of students to teachers in a fixed sequence of compulsory courses. We find that teacher effects on students' academic and labor market outcomes are only mildly positively correlated and that the professors who are best at improving the academic achievement of their students are not always also the ones who boost their earnings the most. For the least able students, the correlation between the academic and labor market effectiveness of teachers turns out to be negative. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Teaching a lay theory before college narrows achievement gaps at scale.
- Author
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Yeager, David S., Walton, Gregory M., Brady, Shannon T., Akcinar, Ezgi N., Paunesku, David, Keane, Laura, Kamentz, Donald, Ritter, Gretchen, Duckworth, Angela Lee, Urstein, Robert, Gomez, Eric M., Markus, Hazel Rose, Cohen, Geoffrey L., and Dweck, Carol S.
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOLOGY of college students , *ACADEMIC achievement research , *EDUCATIONAL equalization research , *SOCIAL psychology research , *SCHOOL enrollment - Abstract
Previous experiments have shown that college students benefit when they understand that challenges in the transition to college are common and improvable and, thus, that early struggles need not portend a permanent lack of belonging or potential. Could such an approach--called a lay theory intervention--be effective before college matriculation? Could this strategy reduce a portion of racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic achievement gaps for entire institutions? Three double-blind experiments tested this possibility. Ninety percent of first-year college students from three institutions were randomly assigned to complete single-session, online lay theory or control materials before matriculation (n > 9,500). The lay theory interventions raised first-year full-time college enrollment among students from socially and economically disadvantaged backgrounds exiting a high-performing charter high school network or entering a public flagship university (experiments 1 and 2) and, at a selective private university, raised disadvantaged students' cumulative first-year grade point average (experiment 3). These gains correspond to 31-40% reductions of the raw (unadjusted) institutional achievement gaps between students from disadvantaged and non-disadvantaged backgrounds at those institutions. Further, follow-up surveys suggest that the interventions improved disadvantaged students' overall college experiences, promoting use of student support services and the development of friendship networks and mentor relationships. This research therefore provides a basis for further tests of the generalizability of preparatory lay theories interventions and of their potential to reduce social inequality and improve other major life transitions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Systematic Review of Key Leader Practices Found to Influence Student Achievement.
- Author
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Hitt, Dallas Hambrick and Tucker, Pamela D.
- Subjects
- *
ACADEMIC achievement research , *EDUCATIONAL leadership research , *LEADERSHIP , *LEADERS , *EDUCATION - Abstract
The field of educational leadership has accrued a body of research that explains how leaders influence student achievement through the enactment of various practices. Yet, differences exist in the substance of the frameworks that assert the areas to which leaders should attend. The specific purposes of this article are to identify and synthesize the empirical research on how leadership influences student achievement and to provide evidence on how school leaders should direct their efforts. During the literature review, we consulted experts for recommendations and searched peer-reviewed journals from 2000 to 2014. The literature review yielded 56 empirical research studies of relevance to the topic and 3 frameworks consisting of clustered practices. We then grouped the 28 practices according to systematic criteria and found 5 overarching domains. In doing so, this study unifies existing frameworks through developing a cohesive set of practices to inform the work of researchers and practitioners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Motivation Interventions in Education.
- Author
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Lazowski, Rory A. and Hulleman, Chris S.
- Subjects
- *
ACADEMIC motivation , *META-analysis , *EDUCATION research , *ACADEMIC achievement research - Abstract
This meta-analysis provides an extensive and organized summary of intervention studies in education that are grounded in motivation theory. We identified 74 published and unpublished papers that experimentally manipulated an independent variable and measured an authentic educational outcome within an ecologically valid educational context. Our analyses included 92 independent effect sizes with 38,377 participants. Our results indicated that interventions were generally effective, with an average mean effect size of d = 0.49 (95% confidence interval = [0.43, 0.56]). Although there were descriptive differences in the effect sizes across several moderator variables considered in our analyses, the only significant difference found was for the type of experimental design, with randomized designs having smaller effect sizes than quasi-experimental designs. This work illustrates the extent to which interventions and accompanying theories have been tested via experimental methods and provides information about appropriate next steps in developing and testing effective motivation interventions in education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. ‘ I Don't Just Want to Do It for Myself’: Diverse Pespectives on Being Successful at University by Social Work Students Who Speak English as an Additional Language.
- Author
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Rowntree, Margaret R., Zufferey, Carole, and King, Sue
- Subjects
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ACADEMIC achievement research , *ACHIEVEMENT , *SOCIAL work students , *STUDENTS , *ENGLISH language - Abstract
This article gives attention to furthering understandings about what being successful at university means to social work students, focusing on the perspectives of students who speak English as an additional language (EAL). It departs from approaches in the literature that focus on problematic aspects of teaching and learning. The article is informed by data from a small-scale focus group study of nine students from an undergraduate and a postgraduate social work programme in a South Australian university. Drawing on a methodological approach known as ‘Appreciative Inquiry’, students were asked how they conceptualise, experience and imagine success at university. The study found that students’ understandings of success are inextricably intertwined with their individual, family and community aspirations. These findings are discussed in the light of current dominant assumptions about the notion of success and possible directions for future research and implications for social work education. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Effects of Instant Messaging on School Performance in Adolescents.
- Author
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Grover, Karan, Pecor, Keith, Malkowski, Michael, Kang, Lilia, Machado, Sasha, Lulla, Roshni, Heisey, David, and Ming, Xue
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INSTANT messaging , *EDUCATION of teenagers , *HEALTH , *SLEEP , *ACADEMIC achievement research , *HEALTH of high school students - Abstract
Instant messaging may compromise sleep quality and school performance in adolescents. We aimed to determine associations between nighttime messaging and daytime sleepiness, self-reported sleep parameters, and/or school performance. Students from 3 high schools in New Jersey completed anonymous questionnaires assessing sleep duration, daytime sleepiness, messaging habits, and academic performance. Of the 2,352 students sampled, 1,537 responses were contrasted among grades, sexes, and messaging duration, both before and after lights out. Students who reported longer duration of messaging after lights out were more likely to report a shorter sleep duration, higher rate of daytime sleepiness, and poorer academic performance. Messaging before lights out was not associated with higher rates of daytime sleepiness or poorer academic performance. Females reported more messaging, more daytime sleepiness, and better academic performance than males. There may be an association between text messaging and school performance in this cohort of students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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