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The effect of a performance curriculum in human relations on attitudes, verbal communication, and interpersonal relationship of teacher traineeGraham, Frances D. 01 January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
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The effect of an Adlerian-based group counseling/education program on the self concept, locus of control, and family environment of alternative high school studentsSpencer, Thelma. 01 January 1986 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of a structured Adlerian-based group education program (PREP) on the self concept, locus of control, and family relationships of alternative high school students, with and without parent participation in a parent education group.;The sample consisted of students at Point Option Project, an alternative high school in Newport News, Virginia, who requested to take the PREP course for elective credit (n = 34). Students were assigned randomly to two treatment and one control group, with students whose parents were participating in the STEP-TEEN parent education program becoming PREP Group 1 and those students whose parents were not becoming PREP Group 2. Both treatment groups received identical information taught by the same instructor. The control group followed a regular class schedule. All classes met three times a week for approximately 50 minute periods. The Tennessee Self Concept Scale, the Nowicki-Strickland Locus of Control Scale for Children, and the Family Environment Scale were administered to all students as pretest-posttest measures. An analysis of covariance was conducted on the difference in pretest and posttest scores using the pretest score as the covariate.;The major findings of this study were: (1) Students in both treatment groups did not significantly (p < .05) improve their Total Positive score on the Tennessee Self Concept Scale. (2) No significant differences (p < .05) were found between the experimental and control groups on movement toward internality. (3) No significant differences (p < .05) were found in perceptions of family environment as a result of participation in the PREP program.
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The effect of group counseling on academic achievement and achievement motivation of alternative high school studentsSullivan, Anne Klare 01 January 1986 (has links)
This study compared the effectiveness of two structured small-group counseling techniques, Peer Counseling and Achievement Motivation Training, on the school attendance and academic achievement of underachieving alternative high school students. It also investigated whether participation in daily counseling sessions over a six-week period positively effected measures of self-concept, locus of control, and tendency to achieve.;Experimental subjects were 81 high school students in grades nine through twelve in a public open alternative high school. Subjects were students who had passed fewer than 75 percent of their classes during the marking period preceding the study.;Subjects were assigned randomly to one of four treatment groups: Achievement Motivation Training (AMT), Peer Counseling Training (PC), Attention Placebo control, and No-Treatment control. The AMT group participated in a structured training program designed to facilitate behaviors characteristic of high achievers.;The PC group participated in a structured program in human relations training designed to develop communication skills. The Attention Placebo group engaged in unstructured group discussions, while the No-Treatment control group pursued the normal Groups met daily for fifty minutes for six weeks.;Academic grade point averages and percentage of classes attended were calculated pre- and post-treatment for all subjects. The Tennessee Self Concept Scale, Rotter's I-E Scale, and Mehrabian and Bank's Measure of Achieving Tendency were also administered pre- and post-treatment. It was hypothesized that students participating in the AMT group would show greater increase in achievement motivation and movement toward internal locus of control than those participating in the PC group or control groups. It was also hypothesized that students participating in AMT and PC groups would show greater increase in self-esteem, and greater improvement in attendance and achievement than control group subjects.;Data analysis did not support any of the experimental hypotheses. All groups, experimental and control, showed significant improvement in grade point average subsequent to the experimental treatment period.;It was concluded that neither experimental treatment significantly effected the academic achievement, class attendance, achievement motivation, locus of control, or self-concept for this population. Several possible reasons were discussed for the failure to obtain the hypothesized results.
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The effects of a program of structured group counseling on the self-concept and leadership skills of disadvantaged gifted elementary school studentsHill, Sheila Gibbs 01 January 1982 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of participation in structured group counseling on the self-concept and leadership skills of disadvantaged gifted elementary school children.;Subjects were forty-eight elementary students from the Chesapeake Public School District in Chesapeake, Virginia. All students had been identified as potentially gifted and talented and were in attendance at a school designated as Title I by the Elementary and Secondary Act of 1965 (ESEA).;Three instruments were used to carry out the study: The Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking (TTCT), figural form, to measure creative thinking ability; the Piers-Harris Children's Self-Concept Scale (PHCSCS) to measure change in self-concept; and the Scales for Rating the Behavioral Characteristics of Superior Students (SRBCSS), Part IV, Leadership Characteristics to measure change in leadership.;The research design used for the investigation was the Pretest-Posttest Control Group Design. Analysis of Variance using an a priori contrast was employed to determine significance of treatment. A Pearson Product-Moment Correlation was used to investigate the relationship between creative thinking ability, self-concept, and leadership skills. All hypotheses were tested at the .05 level of confidence.;The findings indicated that: (1) participation in a program of structured group counseling did not significantly increase self-concept or leadership test scores of disadvantaged gifted students and (2) among the program participants, high creative students did not have significantly higher mean gain scores in self-concept and leadership than low creative students. It was also found that (3) although there was no significant correlation between creative thinking test scores, self-concept test scores, and leadership test scores, there was significant correlation between self-concept test scores and leadership test scores.;Because research is limited, further study investigating the self-concept, leadership, and creative thinking ability of disadvantaged gifted students is needed in order to generate a broader base of knowledge and more finite instrumentation. In addition, group guidance and instructional activities focusing on the needs of the disadvantaged gifted should be implemented so as to provide opportunities for development of potential.
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The effects of client centered group counseling and relaxation on the self concept and negative bahavior of junior high school students who are disciplinary problemsKaggwa, Gladys Hammond 01 January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
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The effects of cognitive behavior modification on type A behavior in academically superior secondary school studentsGrant, Robert John 01 January 1983 (has links)
The Type A behavior pattern, which has been linked to a high incidence of heart attack among adult males, has been the subject of much research by both medical and psychological professionals. There have been very few attempts to modify this damaging behavior pattern in individuals who have not shown any symptoms of heart disease. This research is concerned with the student population most likely to contain a high production of Type A's, the academically superior.;Thirty honor roll students from each of three junior high schools were identified as Type A using the student form of the Jenkins Activity Survey. After random assignment, the students in the six treatment groups participated in five weeks of Stress innoculation Training consisting of deep muscle relaxation, the symptoms/identification of stress and the modification of self-statements. Each group was conducted by a counselor in the students' home school who had been trained in SI. The course of the treatment followed a detailed outline to optimize consistency.;Post-treatment measures included the Timed-Arithmetic Task to measure achievement striving, the Adjective Check List to measure need for achievement, the Writing Speed Task and the Time Estimate Task to measure Time Urgency, and the end of treatment grade point averages to measure achievement.;Using a 3 x 3 factorial design it was predicted that there would be no differences between treatment groups or between the several schools on any of the measures. In addition, it was predicted that there would be no interaction effect between the schools and treatments.;The two way analysis of variance conducted on the post treatment measures indicated that there were no significant differences on achievement levels, achievement striving or need for achievement. Although some significant school effects were noted on the reduction of Time Urgency, post hoc measures failed to yield any consistent pattern of variance. It was thus concluded that the treatment was not effective in reducing the Type A pattern in the subject population.
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The effects of rational emotive therapy on academic achievement for community college probation students participating in a study skills classBecherer, Jack John 01 January 1982 (has links)
This study was designed to determine if training in rational emotive therapy and study skills would be more effective in improving academic competence than training in study skills.;The subject population consisted of 141 students who were on academic probation at a community college. Students were recruited to participate in a one credit, graded seminar designed to increase the possibility of succeeding in college. Forty-two students were placed in one of four seminars. In addition, twenty-one students who initially expressed an interest in the seminar but later decided not to participate comprised the control group.;Treatment groups were offered both day and evening, and consisted of one, ninety minute session per week for eight weeks. The criterion measures were grade point average, the Survey of Study Habits and Attitudes (Brown and Holtzman, 1966), and student retention.;The research hypothesis predicted that the RET study skills group would be more effective than the non-RET study skills group which in turn would be more effective than the control group on all criterion measures.;The control group had significantly higher GPA and study attitude scale scores on the SSHA at the onset of the study. Analysis of covariance procedures, using pre-test scores as covariates, were employed on post-test GPA and SSHA data to control for pre-test differences.;No significant differences existed between the treatment groups at the completion of the study. A significant difference between treatment and control groups did exist on the post-treatment teacher approval scale of the SSHA. Both treatment groups reported substantially larger increases on each SSHA scale than the control group. No differences existed among groups on retention rates, nor was time of participation a significant factor.;The data were analyzed on the basis of the amount of effort that students expended in the seminar. Final grade received in the seminar and number of seminar classes attended comprised the operational definitions of student effort. Significant differences were obtained on GPA and on each subscale of the SSHA, distinguishing students who applied themselves in the seminars from those who did not. One can conclude that a program to increase academic competence among students on academic probation can be successful, but only if the student makes a commitment to change previously ineffective study patterns.
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The effects of rational self-counseling on selected personality dimensions of upward mobility registrantsFinnerty, Marguerite Charlotte 01 January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
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The effects of rational self-counseling upon the locus of control of treated subjectsClawson, Thomas Warren 01 January 1976 (has links)
No description available.
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The effects of role modeling as a technique in counteracting sexual stereotyping in the occupational election of high school girlsHelms, Nancy Eddins 01 January 1982 (has links)
Stereotyping of jobs by sex has a restricting effect on both sexes, but it has had a disproportionately negative impact on women. The need for methods to counteract occupational stereotyping is widely recognized (Steiger and Schlesinger, 1979; Monthly Labor Review, 1976). Since role modeling has been found in many settings to be a forceful factor in modifying behavior, Bandura's (1971) observational learning through role modeling formed the rationale for the study. This study proposes to answer the question, "Will using female role models in nontraditional careers for women affect the choice of high school girls in selecting nontraditional occupations for themselves?".;Forty high school girls enrolled in a Career Decision Making course were randomly placed in two groups. Group 1 consisted of twenty girls who received information about specific nontraditional occupations for women from women role models who worked in those occupations. Group 1 was referred to as the experimental group, while Group 2 which consisted of twenty girls who received the same occupational information from the classroom teacher, was referred to as the control group.;After treatment which covered eight sessions of thirty minutes each, the two groups were administered the following measurements: an occupational selection list, a display of brochures, a Career and Educational Planning Card, the California Occupational Preference System interest inventory, and an Attitude Assessment Scale. Data were analyzed using a Chi square test of significance.;Results were as follows: (1) Subjects in Group 1 chose more nontraditional occupations than those in Group 2 to a significant (p. = .0002) degree on the occupational selection list and approached significance (p. = .06) on the Career and Educational Planning Card. Group 1 chose more nontraditional occupations on all measurements although not to a significant degree on all measurements. (2) The Attitude Assessment Scale indicated a highly favorable attitude toward all role models. The influence of the classroom teacher as a model was recognized. (3) Role modeling was found to be effective as a technique in counteracting occupational stereotyping in high school girls.;Recommendations for further research in this area are included.
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