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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.
221

Electronic Outlaws: W(r)iting the repressed

Unknown Date (has links)
This dissertation, "Electronic Outlaws:w(r)iting the repressed," is an attempt to work in ecriture feminine, or "woman writing," as defined by Helene Cixous in "The Laugh of the Medusa," with a pedagogical strategy as an implication for the writing. The method of writing I have developed is called scripting. The dissertation is based on a performance art piece by the same name as the dissertation and I ground my ideas in the theoretical framework utilized for the performance. / The preface sets forth the ideas for the theoretical framework of scripting and suggests that scripting is a way to express the repression this culture imposes. The introduction and next two chapters are essays explaining the theoretical basis for chapter three. Chapter three is a transcription of a performance piece by the same name as the dissertation and is the experiment in woman writing. Chapter four is a discussion of how scripting may be used in the classroom. Appendix A is a video of the entire dissertation and Appendix B contains programs from the performance of "Electronic Outlaws." / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 55-09, Section: A, page: 2836. / Major Professor: Sheila Taylor. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1994.
222

Self-efficacy, outcome value and attribution beliefs in a structural model of college students' engagement and achievement in foreign language learning

Unknown Date (has links)
The present research study has included three theoretical constructs of beliefs (the self-efficacy belief, the outcome value belief and the internal control belief) in one structural model to explain college students' engagement and achievement in foreign language learning. Subjects were 285 students who were enrolled in the beginning courses of French, German, Russian, and Spanish in a large southern university. Data were collected in the first few weeks of the semester and at the end of the semester. / Tests of the proposed causal model using Lisrel 7 revealed that a revised model would result in a better fitting and more theoretically meaningful model. / Results of the revised model support the hypothesis that self-efficacy is a mediating factor between various cognitive factors and students' learning results. Self-efficacy was also found to have an effect on students' self study time at the first few weeks of the semester. Students' reported self study time later in the semester was related to their perceived task demand and their earlier performance. Outcome value directly affects students' willingness to persist in learning the target language, and indirectly influences achievement through its direct effect on efficacy expectations. Students' belief in effort also had an indirect effect on achievement through its direct effect on efficacy expectations. It was suggested that two major factors may cause discrepancies in test results of efficacy beliefs: the type of task involved in the study, and the time frame within which measures of efficacy and behavior indicators are collected. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 55-04, Section: A, page: 0916. / Major Professor: Bruce W. Tuckman. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1994.
223

A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS FOR LINGUISTIC MINORITIES IN THREE PLURALISTIC NATIONS: CANADA, PERU, AND SWEDEN

Unknown Date (has links)
This study provides both an overview of current language and education policies for language minorities and a comprehensive comparative analysis of educational programs in Canada, Peru, and Sweden. These three countries, illustrating distinctive situations, were selected on the basis of their pluralistic composition and growing concern with the education of their multiethnic and linguistic minorities. / Two types of data were collected from each country. First, descriptive data regarding the educational system, ethnolinguistic minorities, policies concerning national language and language education, and educational provisions for linguistic minorities were obtained through pertinent documents and other printed materials. Second, supplementary data relating to bilingual/bicultural programs were gathered through a survey questionnaire. / Content analysis of the official documents provided: (a) narrative descriptions of policies concerning language and language education and educational provisions for children of linguistic minorities in Canada, Peru, and Sweden; and (b) a comparative analysis of the bilingual/bicultural programs and/or other types of educational provisions for linguistic minorities in each of these three pluralistic nations, based on the five factors selected for this study, i.e., goals and philosophies, policies, scope and sequence, curriculum, and staffing. The analysis of the survey results provided information on the current status of minority language education programs and the opinions of participants on the major achievements and limitations concerning these programs as well as information on national language policy. / The principal findings regarding language policy and educational provisions for linguistic minority children are provided in terms of their goals and philosophies, policies, scope and sequence, and teacher training. In general, this study establishes that developed pluralistic nations and developing nations as well face complex national and educational language policy issues; language of instruction policy is one of these issues, and the policy governing the extent to which the vernacular language is introduced as a medium or subject of instruction varies from country to country as a function of many social, political, and economic factors. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 47-08, Section: A, page: 2928. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1986.
224

Motivation and achievement of Greek students in English as a Foreign Language as seen from the perspective of gender and parental education

Unknown Date (has links)
This study examined the motivation and achievement of Greek students in English as a Foreign Language as seen from the perspective of gender and parental education. Specifically, it endeavored to answer (a) if there was a relationship between motivational orientation and parental education, (b) if there was a relationship between motivational orientation and gender, (c) if there is a relationship between language achievement scores and parental education, (d) if there was a difference in language achievement scores in school according to gender, and (e) if there was a relationship between motivational orientation and language achievement scores. The site of the research setting was three high schools in Athens, the capital of Greece. The three schools were part of an urban Athens school complex, housing four public schools. The subjects were 136 ninth and tenth grade students enrolled in the three Greek high schools and they were administered a questionnaire by the classroom teachers. All scoring was computer-analyzed. For question (a) an ANOVA was conducted with 3 levels of education and motivation as the dependent variable. For question (b) an ANOVA was conducted with 2 levels of gender and motivation as the dependent variable. For question (c) a Pearson product moment coefficient was calculated. For questions (d) and (e) an ANOVA was conducted with language achievement scores as dependent variable, and 2 levels of gender, and 3 levels of parental education as the independent variables. / The study showed that the relationship between motivational orientation and parental education, between motivational orientation and gender, and finally, between motivational orientation and language achievement scores was not significant. The relationship between language achievement and parental education was not significant either. The relationship between achievement scores and gender was significant. Females did better in English as a Foreign Language than males. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 50-05, Section: A, page: 1198. / Major Professor: Ernest Frechette. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1989.
225

The effects of two curricular approaches on junior high students' attitudes towards Hispanics

Unknown Date (has links)
This was a nonequivalent control group study of the effects of two curricular approaches on junior high students' attitudes toward Hispanics. One group was exposed to a semester of Spanish I, primarily a linguistically-based course. Another group was enrolled in a semester-length "Exploring Spanish" course, primarily culturally-based. In addition to these two groups, a control group was employed. A total of 194 students were available for both the pretest and posttest versions of the attitude measures--Cooke's Semantic Differential and the Revised Bogardus Social Distance Scale. / To look for a significant change in attitude resulting from the Spanish I or Exploring Spanish instruction, attitude scores were submitted to a one-way analysis of covariance. The analysis of data did not reveal significant differences between any two groups in regard to attitude toward Hispanics. / A supplementary aspect of the study was the correlation of students' grades in the Spanish I or Exploring Spanish classes with attitude toward Hispanics. Significant correlations were found for particular countries of interest and particular measures of attitude. / This research indicates that, for junior high students, foreign language and cultural instruction does not foster positive attitudes toward the target language group. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 50-01, Section: A, page: 0067. / Major Professor: Frederick L. Jenks. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1988.
226

Processes in kindergarten journal writing: A community of learners

Unknown Date (has links)
The purpose of the study was to investigate how social context influences kindergartners' topic selection strategies and subsequent written text for journal writing. Operating from a cognitive-psychological and a sociolinguistic perspective, the researcher became a participant observer in a kindergarten classroom over a period of 19 weeks. Within the social context of the kindergarten classroom, the researcher employed a number of qualitative methods designed to gather information pertinent to the research questions proposed: participant observation, interviewing techniques, audio recordings, fieldnotes, photographic recordings, the case study method, and triangulation procedures. Data collection consisted of the children's writing samples, social interaction recordings, ongoing interviews, and collected artifacts. Presentation and analysis of the data collected relating to the whole kindergarten classroom is included along with the data relating to three case study participants. The following contextual factors were identified and considered pertinent to the proposed research questions and the data collected: setting, genre, materials, routine, audience, evaluation, the role of the teacher, social group influences, and social/school competence. Based on the results of the study, the following tentative conclusions/hypotheses were generated with regard to the kindergartners' topic selection strategies and subsequent written text for journal writing: (1) the kindergartners' perspectives of the purpose for journal writing within the context of the classroom influenced selected topics, (2) the sharing of materials for journal writing served as a catalyst for social interaction which exerted an influence on their topic selection strategies and subsequent written text, (3) the teacher, along with the students, seemed to impose an acceptable structure for journal / writing which was indicative of social/school competence, and (4) the role of the teacher had a strong influence on the kindergartners' selected topics and subsequent written text for journal writing. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 51-02, Section: A, page: 0405. / Major Professor: Virginia P. Green. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1989.
227

The effect of cognitive processes on word intelligibility by picture identification test results

Unknown Date (has links)
Thirty-eight seven year old children were tested to evaluate the effects of response format and stimulus expectancy (based on subject's label of the test item) on picture and word identification test scores and response latencies. Results of the study indicated that there are significant differences between the picture and word identification tasks. Response latencies were longer and identification scores were lower for the picture identification task. Fifty-nine percent of the test items that were labeled incorrectly were also identified incorrectly. Furthermore, the label given to the test items, by the individual, was found to have a significant effect on the overall test results. Results of this study indicate that the problems encountered when utilizing picture-identification tests stem from the pictures that comprise the test and not the picture test format itself. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 49-12, Section: A, page: 3696. / Major Professor: William H. Haas. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1988.
228

The language content in selected college English textbooks

Unknown Date (has links)
Statement of the problem. The purpose of this study was to develop a matrix for designing a standard which could be applied in conducting analyses of the content, kinds, and relative amounts of information based on current linguistic knowledge and theory presented in a selected group of college freshman English textbooks. / Procedure. The matrix for this investigation was established from a collection of college freshman English textbooks which are currently used in forty-three (43) private colleges in Georgia and thirty-two (32) public units of the University System of Georgia. A model checklist developed by the investigator, with inputs from other English professionals, was used to determine acceptable language and linguistics content in randomly selected textbooks. In order to assure positive identification, each selected textbook was assigned a code. The contents of each of the texts in the study were examined for category, substance, and relative amounts of information contained in each selected book. Once the research data were compiled, they were measured through the use of standard statistical reliability tests. / Findings. (1) There are more textbooks in which categories of content based on traditional grammar predominate than textbooks in which categories of content based on current linguistic theory and knowledge are predominant. (2) The textbooks in which categories of content based on traditional grammar predominate did comprise a textbook type--either handbook, rhetoric, or composition skills text. (3) Other relationships within and among the textbooks, such as a relationship between content emphasized and date of publication, and between quality of content and publishing companies were revealed. (4) The potential of this study is that it may provide a clear, objective, and valid standard for systematically assessing the presence or absence of language and linguistics content in both textbooks and courses of study. (5) The standard might also serve as a non-impressionistic guide in the planning of language and linguistics content in a freshman English course of study. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 50-03, Section: A, page: 0691. / Major Professor: Dwight D. Burton. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1989.
229

Shades of Color: The Changing Face of Children's Literature

Serock, Erica January 2003 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Susan A. Michalczyk / Children's literature possesses the power to crumble walls of prejudice, open the mind to unlimited possibilities and perhaps most importantly, entertain children whatever their race, age or social status. Many people have such fond memories of the books they read as children that, should you demand of any American college student what his favorite book was as a child, and he will find it difficult to narrow his selection down to just one. Ask any American child what her favorite movie during childhood and inherently nine out of ten children will choose a movie made by Walt Disney. Indeed literature and the stories of childhood play an important role in the intellectual and psychological development of human beings. During childhood, the literature children read and have read to them often lay the seeds for their future views of themselves and the world. If this were the case, then how much caution should be taken with the themes of these books? Children's literature is defined as "books that are good for children, written with their general necessities and entertainment in mind." The “goodness” of these books is determined not only in their vivid creativity and wildly imaginative stories, but as well in the long lasting lessons they impart upon the children who read them. These books give a child a glimpse into distant lands far away from the suburb they live in or the city in whose parks they play every day. As well, literature can also cultivate cultural prejudices and stereotypes that can either damage a child's developing psyche or improve it. From its inception, children's literature has always been meant to shape and mold children to the will of society. The questions remains to be answered, if literature holds such power over us, then what control should responsible publishers, teachers, librarians and parents exercise in determining what their children should be reading? Where does one draw the line between education and politics in the world of children's literature? In order to fully examine this question and comprehend its implications, one must first examine the history of children's literature and what it originally desired to achieve. Then, once the evolution has been traced, one can analyze the future and determine where the shifts that have occurred in children's literature throughout the eras are leading us in the years to follow / Thesis (BA) — Boston College, 2003. / Submitted to: Boston College. College of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: Education, Lynch School of. / Discipline: College Honors Program.
230

Monteiro Lobato and the renewal of children's literature in Brazil

January 1982 (has links)
In spite of the tremendous popularity enjoyed by Monteiro Lobato's books for children, and despite the spread of his popularity beyond Brazil, studies of his works have generally been scarce. Those that do exist have failed to present to the public an objective evaluation of Monteiro Lobato's writings for children. Perhaps the most important reason for the paucity of criticism is that children's literature has never been regarded as literature worthy of serious attention. This attitude has resulted in several misconceptions about Monteiro Lobato's work. The purpose of this study is to clarify Monteiro Lobato's blurred profile in order to arrive at a more comprehensive perspective on his books for children, one which will achieve an unbiased evaluation of his overall contribution to the revitalization of children's literature in Brazil. Through this investigation of specific published material in the field, a set of criteria for evaluating children's books was established and applied to Monteiro Lobato's books for children in order to determine the outstanding qualities in his books, as compared to similar books in Brazil. Finally, the findings were synthesized and analyzed resulting in the thesis that Monteiro Lobato's works were a direct response to a need to lead the development and writing of children's literature in Brazil down new, diverse and relevant paths / acase@tulane.edu

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