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The relationship between test anxiety and standardized test performance among college students of varying ability levels / Test performance among college students of varying ability levels.Ayers, Anita J. January 1981 (has links)
This study investigated whether or not receiving cognitive modification counseling would lead to reduced debilitating test anxiety, as measured by the Achievement Anxiety Test (AAT), and improved standardized test performance, as measured by the School and College Abilities Test (SCAT). The subjects were test anxious college students of high, middle, and low ability levels. It was predicted that test anxious students who received cognitive modification counseling would experience greater reductions in test anxiety than would test anxious students who did not receive such counseling. It was further predicted that concomitant with test anxiety reduction, students of middle ability would demonstrate greater improvement on a standardized aptitude test than would students of high or low ability who had received counseling or students of high, middle, or low aptitude who had not received counseling.SCAT and AAT pre-tests were administered to 776 college undergraduates, the majority of whom were freshmen. Students were designated as being of high, middle, or low ability level on the basis of their SCAT standard scores. Those students who scored within the highest 27% on the AAT were invited to participate in counseling and volunteers were randomly assigned to experimental and wait-list control groups. A total of 68 volunteer subjects' participated in the study.Experimental subjects were randomly assigned, within the limitations of their time schedules, to three counseling groups of 9-14 subjects per group. The author acted as counselor for all groups, which each met for five sessions over a period of three weeks. Meichenbaum's (1972) cognitive modification procedures were followed in all sessions.Experimental and wait-list control groups were post-tested with the AAT and an. alternate form of the SCAT. A two factor multivariate analysis of covariance design was used to analyze the data. The independent variable was counseling and no-counseling. AAT and SCAT post-test scores were the dependent variables measured, with SCAT pre-test scores serving as the covariate.Analysis of the data revealed that debilitating test anxiety was significantly (p.< .01) reduced for subjects who received cognitive modification counseling. Performance scores on the SCAT post-test, however, were the same for both counseled and wait-list control subjects. Analysis of the interaction between treatement and ability level also revealed no significant differences. Standardized test scores were essentially the same, within ability levels, for counseled and wait-list control subjects.The findings of this study support the effectiveness of cognitive modification counseling as a technique for reducing test anxiety among college students. They do not, however, support the contention that test anxiety has a detrimental effect on standardized test performance or the differential effects, reported in previous studies, of test anxiety on learning and test performance among students of high, average, and low ability. Methodological limitations encountered in the study, however, make hazardous the arrival at conclusions regarding the effect of test anxiety on test performance.The results of this study indicate that counselors may need to consider combining instruction in study techniques with cognitive modification counseling when attempting to bring about improved test performance among test anxious college students. The results also suggest that school psychologists may accept with confidence the group standardized test scores of students who report themselves to be test anxious.Recommendations for further research concerning the interactive effects of test anxiety and ability level on standardized test performance include: the use of an actual standardized test situation, i.e., a regularly scheduled administration of the Scholastic Aptitude Test; and comparison between group and individual standardized test scores of test anxious students.
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North Korea's First 2006 Nuclear Test: Balancing against Threat?Cho, Chanhyun 25 August 2014 (has links)
This thesis investigates the events leading up to and following the first North Korean nuclear test, which took place in 2006, in order to examine first, whether the test helped the North Korean regime survive, and second, how this unilateral action acted as a balance to the United States’ policy of oppression. The thesis will also attempt to shed some light on the validity of the Western International Relations (IR) theories by ascertaining the balance of threat and applying the notion of “two-level games” to the nuclear conundrum. Through the lens of these IR theories, the research described in the thesis addresses three smaller questions: (1) how did the nuclear test stabilize Pyongyang’s integrity as a balance to the threat of a potential American military attack?; (2) how was the test used as a bargaining mechanism to urge the Bush administration to shift away from its hostile stance and towards a policy of engagement?; and (3) how did the test influence the security environment of the Northeast Asian region?
Finally, the thesis considers various reasons why the nuclear deadlock in which we currently find ourselves will not be resolved in the foreseeable future, and it suggests that resolution of the nuclear stalemate can only occur once comprehensive deal-making incentives between Washington and Pyongyang are adopted. / Graduate / 0615 / lomulos@yahoo.co.kr
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E-Voting election test to the Austrian Federal Presidency Election 2004Prosser, Alexander, Kofler, Robert, Krimmer, Robert, Unger, Martin Karl January 2004 (has links) (PDF)
Design and implementation of e-voting represent a particular responsibility in regards to the voting principles. Due to the sensitivity of the application, e-voting can only be used after extensive tests and feedback from practical application. The election test described in this working paper describes such a test conducted in parallel to the Federal Presidential Election in 2004. (author's abstract) / Series: Working Papers on Information Systems, Information Business and Operations
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A comparative study of the Luscher Color Test /Johnson, Charles J. January 1974 (has links)
Thesis (Ed.D.)--University of Tulsa, 1974. / Bibliography: leaf 11.
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A comparison of distortion scores on the Bender Visual Motor Gestalt Test using circular and rectangular protocol sheetsWard, William J. January 1969 (has links)
Thesis (Ed. D.)--University of Tulsa, 1969. / Bibliography: leaves 66-68.
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Meta-analyses of test anxiety among college students /Harris, Mark Manning, January 1987 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 1987. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 65-74). Available online via OhioLINK's ETD Center.
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A linear elastic finite element analysis of the Down Hole plate load test /Butcher, Michael John. January 1981 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.Eng.Sc.) -- University of Adelaide, Dept. of Civil Engineering, 1981. / Typescript (photocopy).
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An investigation of the reliability and validity of the Luscher colour test.Barnett, Adrian John. January 1975 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (B.A. (Hons.))--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Psychology, 1976.
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Entwicklung eines Koordinationstests für Kinder im Grundschulalter und dessen Validierung mit Hilfe biomechanischer Methoden /Prätorius, Beate. January 2008 (has links)
Universiẗat, Diss.--Chemnitz, 2008.
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Berechnung von Charakteristiken sequentieller Tests zur WeibullverteilungRückert, Nadja, Eger, Karl-Heinz. January 2007 (has links)
Chemnitz, Techn. Univ., Masterarb., 2007.
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