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Patterns of participation, modes of exclusion : undergraduate students’ experience of community at a research-intensive universityHawkey, Colleen 11 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to come to an understanding of the meaning and
experience of community for undergraduate students at a research-intensive university.
It was assumed that exploring community bounded by disciplinary affiliation would be a
valuable approach to understanding this phenomenon within the context of the researchintensive
university. In-depth interviews were conducted with 23 third year Psychology
students pursuing either a Bachelor of Arts or a Bachelor of Science degree, and a
survey designed to explore key aspects of interviewees' experiences was administered
to a larger cohort of such students. Students' experiences were examined through the
lens of constitutive and individualistic community frameworks, and ideal and actual
experiences were compared. The results of this study show that a focus on disciplinary
affiliation was a useful approach to understanding the meaning of community. Results
document the significant influences of disciplinary affiliation on community
membership and belonging. This exploration revealed that issues of community
membership, involvement, and belonging were longitudinal processes that entailed
complex patterns of participation and modes of exclusion that were influenced by
students' aspirations and obligations as well as structural characteristics of the
Psychology department and of the research-intensive university.
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Effects of cultural values and attribution of outcome feedback on reasoning in Canadian and Chinese college studentsYao, Min 05 1900 (has links)
The primary purpose of the present study was to investigate the joint effects of
culture and attribution of outcome feedback on reasoning performance. This study
attempted to address four major research questions: (a) Do Canadian and Chinese
students have different cultural values and causal attribution patterns? (b) Do pre-experimental
individual differences in causal attribution patterns lead to differences in
Canadian and Chinese students' inductive reasoning performance? (c) Does attribution
of outcome feedback affect Canadian and Chinese students' inductive reasoning
performance? (d) Do Canadian and Chinese students conduct deductive reasoning
differently as a function of outcome feedback and reasoning task contents?
A total of 120 college students (60 Canadian and 60 Chinese) performed three
phases of computerized experimental tasks. The research design involved 2 types of
culture groups (Canadian and Chinese) under 3 conditions of outcome feedback (success,
failure, and control) as two independent variables. The dependent variables observed
were the number of instances used or correct responses made and response time, when
possible.
In terms of culture differences, Canadian students appear to be distinct and
articulate about the matters of socio-cultural values, while Chinese students are relatively
less distinct and articulate. When making attribution for other people's success, both
Canadian and Chinese students held internal factors (i. e., good effort and high ability) as
responsible. When accounting for other people's failure, Canadian students picked
controllable factors (i.e., lack of effort), while Chinese students picked both controllable
and uncontrollable factors (i.e., largely lack of effort and occasionally difficult task) as
the reasons. However, following the success outcome feedback about their own
reasoning performance, Canadian students emphasized mostly high ability and,
occasionally, effort as the reasons, while Chinese students picked mostly good luck and,
occasionally, high ability. Given the failure outcome feedback about their own task
performance, Canadian students attributed to lack of effort and bad luck as causes, while
Chinese students exclusively picked lack of effort as the explanation.
Chinese subjects' inductive and deductive reasoning performances remained
relatively unswayed by success or failure outcome feedback, whereas Canadian subjects'
reasoning performance remained good only when success feedback was received. When
failure feedback was provided, Canadian subjects' reasoning performances deteriorated
and remained poor throughout the experiment.
While Chinese students' reasoning performance is not predictable from their low-ability
attribution of other people's failure outcome, Canadian students' reasoning
performance is highly predictable; that is, the more they attributed others' failure to low
ability, the faster they completed the culture-fair inductive reasoning task. On the other
hand, when making attribution based on their own experience, given success feedback,
Canadian students attributed their performance to their high ability. Given failure
feedback, Canadian students attributed their performance to their lack of effort, with
improved performance commensurable to their verbal causal attribution.
The present findings indicate that Canadian and Chinese college students showed
differences in causal attribution patterns, depending on when they explain others'
success/failure experiences or their own, and further that upon receipt of failure outcome
feedback, Canadian students' reasoning performance deteriorated, while Chinese
students' performance remained insensitive to success or failure outcome feedback.
Further fine-grained analyses of such causal attribution patterns interacting with outcome
feedbacks and cognitive performance needs some more careful studies.
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Effects of cultural values and attribution of outcome feedback on reasoning in Canadian and Chinese college studentsYao, Min 05 1900 (has links)
The primary purpose of the present study was to investigate the joint effects of
culture and attribution of outcome feedback on reasoning performance. This study
attempted to address four major research questions: (a) Do Canadian and Chinese
students have different cultural values and causal attribution patterns? (b) Do pre-experimental
individual differences in causal attribution patterns lead to differences in
Canadian and Chinese students' inductive reasoning performance? (c) Does attribution
of outcome feedback affect Canadian and Chinese students' inductive reasoning
performance? (d) Do Canadian and Chinese students conduct deductive reasoning
differently as a function of outcome feedback and reasoning task contents?
A total of 120 college students (60 Canadian and 60 Chinese) performed three
phases of computerized experimental tasks. The research design involved 2 types of
culture groups (Canadian and Chinese) under 3 conditions of outcome feedback (success,
failure, and control) as two independent variables. The dependent variables observed
were the number of instances used or correct responses made and response time, when
possible.
In terms of culture differences, Canadian students appear to be distinct and
articulate about the matters of socio-cultural values, while Chinese students are relatively
less distinct and articulate. When making attribution for other people's success, both
Canadian and Chinese students held internal factors (i. e., good effort and high ability) as
responsible. When accounting for other people's failure, Canadian students picked
controllable factors (i.e., lack of effort), while Chinese students picked both controllable
and uncontrollable factors (i.e., largely lack of effort and occasionally difficult task) as
the reasons. However, following the success outcome feedback about their own
reasoning performance, Canadian students emphasized mostly high ability and,
occasionally, effort as the reasons, while Chinese students picked mostly good luck and,
occasionally, high ability. Given the failure outcome feedback about their own task
performance, Canadian students attributed to lack of effort and bad luck as causes, while
Chinese students exclusively picked lack of effort as the explanation.
Chinese subjects' inductive and deductive reasoning performances remained
relatively unswayed by success or failure outcome feedback, whereas Canadian subjects'
reasoning performance remained good only when success feedback was received. When
failure feedback was provided, Canadian subjects' reasoning performances deteriorated
and remained poor throughout the experiment.
While Chinese students' reasoning performance is not predictable from their low-ability
attribution of other people's failure outcome, Canadian students' reasoning
performance is highly predictable; that is, the more they attributed others' failure to low
ability, the faster they completed the culture-fair inductive reasoning task. On the other
hand, when making attribution based on their own experience, given success feedback,
Canadian students attributed their performance to their high ability. Given failure
feedback, Canadian students attributed their performance to their lack of effort, with
improved performance commensurable to their verbal causal attribution.
The present findings indicate that Canadian and Chinese college students showed
differences in causal attribution patterns, depending on when they explain others'
success/failure experiences or their own, and further that upon receipt of failure outcome
feedback, Canadian students' reasoning performance deteriorated, while Chinese
students' performance remained insensitive to success or failure outcome feedback.
Further fine-grained analyses of such causal attribution patterns interacting with outcome
feedbacks and cognitive performance needs some more careful studies. / Education, Faculty of / Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS), Department of / Graduate
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Patterns of participation, modes of exclusion : undergraduate students’ experience of community at a research-intensive universityHawkey, Colleen 11 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to come to an understanding of the meaning and
experience of community for undergraduate students at a research-intensive university.
It was assumed that exploring community bounded by disciplinary affiliation would be a
valuable approach to understanding this phenomenon within the context of the researchintensive
university. In-depth interviews were conducted with 23 third year Psychology
students pursuing either a Bachelor of Arts or a Bachelor of Science degree, and a
survey designed to explore key aspects of interviewees' experiences was administered
to a larger cohort of such students. Students' experiences were examined through the
lens of constitutive and individualistic community frameworks, and ideal and actual
experiences were compared. The results of this study show that a focus on disciplinary
affiliation was a useful approach to understanding the meaning of community. Results
document the significant influences of disciplinary affiliation on community
membership and belonging. This exploration revealed that issues of community
membership, involvement, and belonging were longitudinal processes that entailed
complex patterns of participation and modes of exclusion that were influenced by
students' aspirations and obligations as well as structural characteristics of the
Psychology department and of the research-intensive university. / Education, Faculty of / Educational Studies (EDST), Department of / Graduate
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