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A comparative study of the effectiveness of residence hall student government and selected perceptions and characteristics of resident hall student staff members and student government officersBachman, William C. 06 June 1989 (has links)
This study was concerned with determining if: (1) the
effectiveness of residence hall student government varies according to
the perceptions of its role held by residence hall student staff and
government officers, and the hall type and population; (2) the
perception of hall student government held by student staff varies
according to their age, time in position and gender; and (3) the
perception of hall student government by student officers varies
according to their age, time in office and gender.
The survey population included 48 residence hall directors, 209
student staff and 281 student officers from northwestern land grant
universities. Hall directors were surveyed to determine perceived
effectiveness of their hall's student government, and the resident
population. Student staff and officer perceptions of the role of hall
student government were obtained by utilizing the government section
of the Residence Hall Attitude Scale (Murphy 1971). Age, gender, time
in position or office and type of hall were also provided by the
students.
Multiple regression analysis was used to test three hypotheses at
a .05 level of significance. Of the hypothesized relationships, only
gender was found to be significantly related to the variance in
perceptions of role of hall student government. In the case of both
student staff and officers, women were more favorable toward residence
hail student government than men. The combined independent variables
of age, gender and time in position or office were found, however, to
account for only small percentages (4.4%, staff; 7.8%, officers) of
the total variance.
The regression equation for effectiveness of hall student
government failed to account for significant variance due to any of
the independent variables of student staff and officer perceptions,
type or population of hall. All variables combined accounted for only
7.7% of the variance in perception.
The results of this research suggest that hypothesized
relationships between various demographic factors and perceptions, and
effectiveness of residence hall student government do not exist. This
indicates that some other variables must be used to attempt prediction
of either effectiveness or role perceptions of hall student
government. / Graduation date: 1990
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Karriärmorsor och velourpappor : Bedömning av föräldrar som karriärister och föräldraledigaJern, Clara, Karlsson, Johanna January 2013 (has links)
Familjestrukturer och föräldraroller är i förändring. Stereotyper av föräldraskap har bidragit till rådande attityder där män och kvinnor i icke traditionella familjestrukturer bedöms mindre fördelaktigt (Brescoll & Uhlmann, 2005). Studiens syfte var att se om attityder påverkas av huruvida föräldern är karriärist eller föräldraledig samt man eller kvinna. En pilotstudie genomfördes för att generera egenskaper för föräldraskap och bestod av 30 deltagare. I huvudstudien deltog 115 personer, varav 69 kvinnor och 46 män. En egenkonstruerad enkät användes där deltagarna fick bedöma bra respektive dåligt föräldraskap utifrån en fiktiv fallbeskrivning. Enkäten bestod även av The Ambivalent Sexism Inventory som avser att mäta sexism (Glick & Fiske, 1996). Resultatet visade att både män och kvinnor bedöms som bättre föräldrar då de är föräldralediga. Fientlig sexism hade samband med uppfattning av mäns bra föräldraskap samt kvinnors dåliga föräldraskap. Resultaten stämmer till stor del överens med tidigare forskning om traditionella samt icke traditionella familjestrukturer.
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Canadian Pharmacists and Natural Health Products: Identifying Professional ResponsibilitiesShanthakumar, Narmatha 15 February 2010 (has links)
Natural health products (NHPs) are increasingly sold in pharmacies. The purpose of this study was to determine Canadian pharmacists’ attitudes about their professional responsibilities regarding natural health products. A cross-sectional, random sample survey design was used: 3356 questionnaires were mailed to a random sample of licensed pharmacists in all provinces/territories in Canada (except Nunavut). Survey responses were evaluated using descriptive statistics and logistic regression analyses. Response rate was 61%. Overall, respondents were most likely to endorse pharmacist responsibilities related to vitamins and minerals, followed by herbal medicines, then homeopathic medicines. Responsibilities regarding knowledge of NHPs and counseling on NHPs were more frequently endorsed than responsibilities associated with NHP-related documentation. Self-reported knowledge was positively associated with endorsement of NHP-related responsibilities for all NHP types.
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Canadian Pharmacists and Natural Health Products: Identifying Professional ResponsibilitiesShanthakumar, Narmatha 15 February 2010 (has links)
Natural health products (NHPs) are increasingly sold in pharmacies. The purpose of this study was to determine Canadian pharmacists’ attitudes about their professional responsibilities regarding natural health products. A cross-sectional, random sample survey design was used: 3356 questionnaires were mailed to a random sample of licensed pharmacists in all provinces/territories in Canada (except Nunavut). Survey responses were evaluated using descriptive statistics and logistic regression analyses. Response rate was 61%. Overall, respondents were most likely to endorse pharmacist responsibilities related to vitamins and minerals, followed by herbal medicines, then homeopathic medicines. Responsibilities regarding knowledge of NHPs and counseling on NHPs were more frequently endorsed than responsibilities associated with NHP-related documentation. Self-reported knowledge was positively associated with endorsement of NHP-related responsibilities for all NHP types.
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Physical Activity and Teachers’ Attitudes: Exploring School-Based Activity for Students with Exceptionalities2012 November 1900 (has links)
Abstract
Two purposes guided this study. First, the researcher explored in-service teachers’ perceptions of the benefits and barriers physical activity had on students with exceptionalities in school-based activities. Second, the researcher explored in-service teachers’ perceptions of physical activity and how their attitudes affected student’s learning.
One hundred and fifty eight in-service, postgraduate (teachers taking courses in Education) and graduate teachers (teachers taking graduate level courses) volunteered to participate in this study. In-service teachers teaching in Kindergarten to grade 12 classrooms were either employed with a rural school division in Central Saskatchewan or a rural school division in the West Kootenay region of British Columbia. Data was collected using adapted versions the Physical Educators’ Attitude Toward Teaching Individual with Disabilities-III (PEATID-III) (Rizzo, 1993) and the Physical Educators’ Judgement about Inclusion (PEJI) (Hodge, Murata, & Kozub, 2002) in this study. Volunteered participants completed the amalgamated adapted survey titled, Physical Educators’ Judgments and Attitude Towards Teaching Individuals with Exceptionalities.
Pearson correlation analysis was used to determine the relationship between teacher characteristics (e.g., gender, age, whether participants had taught physical education, participants ratings of fitness) and the six survey subscales (e.g., outcomes of teaching students with exceptionalities, effects on student learning, need for more academic preparation, judgement about inclusion, judgement about acceptance of students with exceptionalities, and judgement about perceived training needs) to investigate if there were any statistically significant relationships. An analysis of variance (ANOVA) was also used to examine potential differences between teachers’ attitudes toward instructing students with exceptionalities and the teacher characteristics (number of special education courses taken, years of teaching experience with exceptionalities, and number of adapted PE courses taken). All six subscales were examined compared with teacher characteristics to find potential differences between teachers’ attitudes toward instructing students with exceptionalities and varying levels of experience and pre-service training.
Results showed years of teaching experience and academic preparation influenced teachers’ attitudes towards instructing students with exceptionalities. Physical education teachers who had more additional training had higher self-reported ratings of their ability to teach physical education to all students than physical education teachers with less additional training. Results also indicated the older teachers were, the more negative attitudes they had toward wanting students with exceptionalities in their classrooms. These results support the body of evidence that shows there is a need to promote positive attitudes in the schools toward teaching individuals with exceptionalities physical activity.
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The relationship of student attitude to academic achievement in reading/language, mathematics, science, and social studies when gender, grade level and class size are controlledHayes, Ralph W. 03 June 2011 (has links)
The purpose of the study was to determine the relationship of student attitude to academic achievement in reading/language, mathematics, science, and social studies while holding gender, grade level, and class size constant.The review of related literature revealed the transition of educational emphasis from positive cognitive outcomes to affective considerations. Research dealing with the effect of the independent variables, gender, grade level, and class size, as well as that showing the impact of attitude toward reading/language, mathematics, science, and social studies as they affected achievement in those subjects was studied.A multiple partial canonical correlation analysis was used to treat the data.POPULATION1. Sample data were collected from thirteen Indianapolis area private Christian schools.2. Three hundred eighty-four subjects were boys and three hundred eighty-three were girls.3. Grade four had one hundred forty-five boys and one hundred forty-three girls. Grade five had one hundred eighteen boys and one hundred sixteen girls while grade six had one hundred twenty boys and one hundred twenty-five girls.4. Forty-nine students were administered the California Achievement Test, one hundred forty-six the Stanford Achievement Test, one hundred forty-eight the Metropolitan Achievement Test, and four hundred twenty-four the Iowa Tests of Basic Skills.5. Three hundred seventy-two students were from Baptist schools, fifty-four from Church of Christ schools, seventy-five from Church of God schools, forty-one from Nazarene schools, and two hundred twenty-five from non-church related Christian schools.FINDINGSThe null hypothesis was rejected at the .01 significance level for the California Achievement Test, Iowa Tests of Basic Skills, and the Stanford Achievement Test, and at the .05 significance level for the Metropolitan Achievement Test.CONCLUSIONS1. There is a relationship between student attitude toward reading/language, mathematics, science, and social studies and achievement in reading/language, mathematics, science, and social studies when extraneous variables are partialed out.2. That the relationship is not the result of sample error is implied by the significant X2 tests.
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Teacher expectations and student achievementCopper, Michael C. 03 June 2011 (has links)
The 1989 Teacher Expectations and Student Achievement (TESA) study analyzed whether students perceived as low achievers, having been taught by TESA-trained instructors in the Metropolitan School District (MSD) of Warren Township over a three-year period, achieved significantly (p < .05) higher academic gain than a similar control group of students not taught by TESA-trained instructors as measured by the Comprehensive Test of Basic Skills (CTBS).Federal Judge S. Hugh Dillin, in 1971, found the Indianapolis Public Schools (IPS) system to be racially segregated in violation of the Constitution. The ruling indicated that the school system was denying equal opportunity to black children because of race. Following ten years of review and appeals to higher courts, one-way busing of black students from IPS to six suburban school districts began in the fall of 1981 in Marion County, including the MSD of Warren Township. Some of the greatest concerns for one-way busing included the steps being taken to ensure fair treatment and full academic opportunity for all children involved in desegregation.As a result of the desegregation order, the MSD of Warren Township and several other Indianapolis suburban school systems adopted the TESA staff development program. TESA is an intervention program designed to encourage non-discriminatory behavior toward all students in the classroom in order to increase academic performance.The original TESA research was conducted in 1974 by Sam Kerman and Mary Martin in school districts in Los Angeles, California. This 1989 TESA study covered five school years from 1982-1983 through 1986-1987, and followed the progress of 102 students through three consecutive years of being taught by a TESA-trained teacher, or a teacher not trained in TESA skills, in 246 classrooms.A multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) indicated that neither group (TESA or other) or race (black or other) were found to be statistically significant in improving students' academic achievements on the CTBS. Although some academic gains were noted for students taught by TESA-trained teachers over a three-year period, the gains were not statistically significant. TESA continues to be a staff development program many school systems support, but perhaps the interest should not include the expectation that low achieving students will significantly improve academic achievement.
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Culture, Context, Curriculum: An Explosion of the Attitudes of Black Middle School Males Towards Art EducationBaker, Rita D 11 May 2012 (has links)
ABSTRACT
CULTURE, CONTEXT AND CURRICULUM: AN EXPLORATION
OF THE ATTITUDES OF BLACK MIDDLE SCHOOL MALES
TOWARDS ART EDUCATION
by
Rita Baker
The level of participation and interest in visual arts education demonstrated by Black male students falls consistently lower than that of their White counterparts which manifests itself in under performance and disruptive behaviors. Previous research has explored how views within the Black community towards art education and art related careers have impacted high school and college students. However, those explanations may not be pertinent to middle school, and the scarcity of literature dedicated to how the valuation of art within this racial group influences middle school males suggests the need for inquiry in this area. Based on a constructivist and constructionist epistemological framework grounded in social learning theories, this case study was conducted at a predominantly Black middle school outside of a major southern city. The participants in the study were six eighth grade Black male students between the ages of 13-16 enrolled in a nine-week art class. Initial data collection procedures involved observations in the neighborhood, school, and classroom, a focus group session, individual interviews, member checking, art analyses and a follow up discussion with the teacher. The data analysis was conducted utilizing content analysis, open coding, and axial coding. The findings revealed that opinions were equally divided between students who enjoyed art class throughout the term, and those who expressed boredom. The findings suggest that students’ opinions were shaped by a myriad of factors within the culture, learning context and curriculum. Further, the data implies that goal setting and student interest were connected to students’ participation in art class, while interest in art making diminished between the elementary and middle school years. Perceptions of art class, parental preferences, and the curricular focus of the class proved to be factors which influenced student attitudes towards art instruction. The data advances areas for future scholarship, and recommendations for art educators.
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The Politicization of Climate ChangeHarris, Devian K 18 November 2012 (has links)
For decades, rhetoric has been utilized by both politicians and those in the scientific community to convey either support for or denial of the existence of climate change. This study combined two forms of rhetoric in the forms of both framing and politicization to determine which form of rhetoric is most powerful in influencing a person’s attitudes and behavioral intentions. Pro climate change frames are expected to increase support for climate change action, while anti climate change politicization is expected to decrease support for climate change action. The results of this study show that select frames have the intended effect of influence on increasing support for climate change measures. Surprisingly, the results also show that politicization that questions the science of climate change has the power to both increase and decrease support for attitudinal measures with regard to climate change.
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Influences of country of origin in Thai consumers’ buying decision toward beer purchasingChaimanat, Pattanee, Rackchamroon, Purit January 2011 (has links)
Group number: 2838 Research Questions: Does the country of origin influence Thai consumers’ buying decision towards beer purchasing? What are the consumers’ attitudes and perception towards beer consumption? Purpose: The authors aim to explore the effect of COO towards beer purchasing behavior of Thai consumer. The research study examines the attitudes of Thai consumers in terms of the beer purchasing based on two aspects: foreign and domestic brands. Method: Qualitative approach and quantitative approach was used in order to get the primary data. Questionnaire online were sent out 247 forms to the respondents and get the response 240 forms that could answers the question effectively. Interviews also were conducted with ten beer drinkers. Furthermore, several articles, researches, and literatures were used to strengthen reliability of the paper and improve the validity as well. Conclusion: Based on the study results, country of origin does not affect much in consumers’ buying decision in term of low-involvement products. Also country of origin showed that can influence consumer first purchasing activity. The research also portrayed when consumers have more knowledge or experience other cues such as price and taste have definitely effects in their buying decision more than Country of Origin factors.
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