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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Extending Emotional Response Theory: Testing a Model of Teacher Communication Behaviors, Student Emotional Processes, Student Academic Resilience, Student Engagement, and Student Discrete Emotions

Waldbuesser, Caroline 23 September 2019 (has links)
No description available.
12

The Influence of Personality Traits and Individual Beliefs on Task Persistence

Elliott, Alexis Shae 19 January 2023 (has links)
No description available.
13

Promoting student success by tapping into the resilience of the at-risk student : a South African higher education perspective

Van Vuuren, Nicolene 11 1900 (has links)
Throughput rates and student retention are a burning concern that all higher education institutions share, as student dropout rates remain high. Promoting student academic success has become imperative. This study is concerned with students who display innate resilience and overcome adversities in their personal lives, but fail to demonstrate resilience when it comes to being academically successful. The objective of this study was to explore: (1) the personal resilience in at-risk students who overcome adversities in their personal lives, but fail to demonstrate resilience when it comes to being academically successful and (2) how their personal resilience can be tapped into to promote academic success. A mixed methods approach was used, employing both quantitative and qualitative methods. At-risk students at a particular higher education institution were identified using their study records. From these students a subgroup of resilient students were selected by means of a resilience questionnaire. This group completed a pre-interview questionnaire, resulting in 10 students being selected on the grounds of being information rich cases of the at-risk resilient student. Through the process of social constructivism and dialogue between the researcher and the participants, themes were identified and analysed using an inductive data analysis style. The data was finally linked to supportive literature. The primary finding was that the same protective factors that can assist a student in developing innate resilience, can also cause the student to be placed academically at- risk. The study further revealed, that if the environment in which students find themselves does not allow them to negotiate for resources, these students' innate resilience alone cannot assist them to overcome the challenges of higher education. The researcher concludes that higher education institutions in their attempts to retain and assist students should be encouraged to tap into students’ innate resilience to develop their academic resilience / Psychology / M.A. (Psychology)
14

Promoting student success by tapping into the resilience of the at-risk student : a South African higher education perspective

Van Vuuren, Nicolene 11 1900 (has links)
Throughput rates and student retention are a burning concern that all higher education institutions share, as student dropout rates remain high. Promoting student academic success has become imperative. This study is concerned with students who display innate resilience and overcome adversities in their personal lives, but fail to demonstrate resilience when it comes to being academically successful. The objective of this study was to explore: (1) the personal resilience in at-risk students who overcome adversities in their personal lives, but fail to demonstrate resilience when it comes to being academically successful and (2) how their personal resilience can be tapped into to promote academic success. A mixed methods approach was used, employing both quantitative and qualitative methods. At-risk students at a particular higher education institution were identified using their study records. From these students a subgroup of resilient students were selected by means of a resilience questionnaire. This group completed a pre-interview questionnaire, resulting in 10 students being selected on the grounds of being information rich cases of the at-risk resilient student. Through the process of social constructivism and dialogue between the researcher and the participants, themes were identified and analysed using an inductive data analysis style. The data was finally linked to supportive literature. The primary finding was that the same protective factors that can assist a student in developing innate resilience, can also cause the student to be placed academically at- risk. The study further revealed, that if the environment in which students find themselves does not allow them to negotiate for resources, these students' innate resilience alone cannot assist them to overcome the challenges of higher education. The researcher concludes that higher education institutions in their attempts to retain and assist students should be encouraged to tap into students’ innate resilience to develop their academic resilience / Psychology / M. A. (Psychology)
15

Kontextspezifische Belastungserfahrungen in der Corona-Krise: Akademische Resilienz in Risikogruppen und der Einfluss protektiver Ressourcen unter Studierenden der TU Dresden.

Siebenhaar, Marie 29 August 2022 (has links)
Die Corona-Pandemie hat den Alltag Studierender in den vergangenen zwei Jahren geprägt, stark verändert und einhergehend damit auch die Voraussetzungen, unter welchen sich Erfolg und Gesundheit im Studium entwickeln können. Widerstands- sowie Anpassungsfähigkeit scheinen im Zuge weitreichender Veränderungen in der akademischen Hochschullehre bedeutsamer geworden zu sein. Gleichzeitig besteht schon seit Längerem die Notwendigkeit, das Forschungsdesiderat in Bezug auf Resilienz und (Hochschul-)Bildung, deren Voraussetzungen sowie Interventionsansätze von Bewältigungsstrategien in Studierenden zu untersuchen. Dieses Forschungsprojekt hat davon ausgehend, akademische Resilienz unter Studierenden in der Zeit der Corona-Krise quantitativ erhoben und analysiert. Mit einem ressourcenbasierten Blick auf personale, soziale, institutionelle sowie finanzielle Dimensionen sozialer Ungleichheit an der Technischen Universität Dresden wurden dabei sowohl Herkunfts- und Kontexteffekte in Bezug auf akademische Resilienz als auch Ressourcen, welche diese beeinflussen bzw. in spezifischen Gruppen moderieren, untersucht. Akademische Resilienz wurde dabei anhand von Resilienz, Lebenszufriedenheit sowie Betroffenheit Studierender abgebildet, welche jeweils als abhängige Variable in moderierte Regressionsmodelle einbezogen wurden. Studierende mit Kind(ern), Migrationshintergrund, physischen und psychischen Beeinträchtigungen bzw. Lernschwächen sowie der ersten Hochschulgeneration wurden als Risikogruppen im Vergleich zu Studierenden ohne diese Merkmale in Hinblick auf akademische Resilienz analysiert. Im Zuge dessen wurde ebenso die Bedeutung spezifischer Ressourcen innerhalb der studentischen Risikogruppen mit Hilfe von Interaktionsvariablen geprüft. Dabei konnten Studierende mit Beeinträchtigung, Studienanfänger:innen sowie sozial isolierte Studierende der TU Dresden als vulnerabel und damit als spezifische Zielgruppen von Interventionsangeboten identifiziert werden. Darüber hinaus konnte die Bedeutung sozialer Ressourcen, insbesondere sozialer Unterstützung und Netzwerke sowie die Erfahrung von Selbstwirksamkeit und Kontrolle, herausgestellt werden. Dadurch, dass die Studierenden zwar eine eher hohe Betroffenheit äußerten, jedoch gleichzeitig eher resilient und zufrieden waren, bekräftigt die Studie die Bedeutung akademischer Resilienz und die Notwendigkeit, diese kontinuierlich in Studierenden zu sichern. / The Covid-19 pandemic has had massive influence and brought enormous change in the everyday life of students in the past two years. Under these circumstances also, the requirements for the development and preservation of success and mental health in the field of university education have altered. Resistance and adaptability seem to be much more important in the face of profound changes and insecurity. Universities should develop intervention programs tailored to these capabilities. Simultaneously, a knowledge gap exists relating to resilience and higher education, their preconditions and intervention measures of coping strategies researched and analysed in university students. From this point of view, this research project has surveyed data under students of the Technical University Dresden to display their academic resilience during the Covid-19 Pandemic. The quantitative data set got analysed with a resource theoretically view on personal, social, institutional and financial dimensions of social inequality. In terms of that, origin and context effects relating to academic resilience as well as resources which influence or rather interact with it just within risk groups of students, got analysed. Academic resilience as the process of positive adaption in the face of a personal as well as a professional crisis got depicted by resilience, Well-being and consternation which were used as dependent variables in multiple linear regression models. Students with child(ren), migration background, physical, psychological or learning disabilities as well as students of the first generation in higher academic education got defined as risk groups along the research status and analysed in comparison with students without these characteristics. In terms of that also the influence of specific resources for students got proofed by integrating them as predictors as well as in building and involving interaction variables relating to the risk factors and predictor resources for making possible differences between promotive resources in general and protective resources, which may influence the academic resilience of the risk groups significant stronger, visible. Significant interactions also got plotted for interpreting the effects more precise. The results show, that students with psychological, physical or learning disabilities are significant less resilient during the pandemic situation, but they are not showing significantly less well-being or higher consternation. The other risk groups show no significant differences to students without risk characteristics beside students with child(ren) which show even a better well-being than all the other students. The results clearly point out the importance of personal and social resources, self-efficacy, an internal Locus of control and a reliable social network in particular which should also be supported by the university itself. Further risk groups which can be found in the data are social isolated students and university entrants, which should also be focused on intervention programs of the university. Over all Students of TUD show high scores of resilience and a good well-being even though they express strong consternation of the crisis at the same time which underlines the importance and utility of academic resilience in students which should be continuously secured and developed broader.

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