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Transitioning to kindergarten : a multi-perspectiveSebura, Pamela L. January 2008 (has links)
Children enter kindergarten with many experiences and thoughts. The primary purpose of this study was to examine the perceptions of preschool children concerning their entrance into kindergarten. A comparison of what children perceived and what parents and teachers have done to facilitate the children’s perception of kindergarten was completed. A treatment group of 31 students from a Head Start which provided a visit to the kindergarten classroom that their preschool children would be attending was compared to 29 students from a Title 1 early education program, the control group. The parents and teachers of these students were compared to determine what they had done to prepare these students for kindergarten.
The quantitative aspect of the study compared the treatment student pre- and post- responses on the ‘What I Think about Kindergarten –R’ questionnaire to the control group, a Title 1 early education program. This questionnaire was adapted from the ‘What I Think about School’ (1998) used by Ramey, Lanzi, Phillips, & Ramey for the Head Start Public School Early Transition Demonstration Project in 1998. This study was not able to determine any difference in what the students perceived about kindergarten between and within groups.
While there was no significant difference in what teachers had done to prepare their students for kindergarten, three individual questions had some difference in what the teachers from Head Start had done when compared to the Title 1 early education program. There was no significant difference in what parents did to prepare their children but differences within three questions on the parent surveys were found.
A qualitative methodology was used to investigate what the students’ perceptions of kindergarten were. These perceptions included findings that most children were excited about attending kindergarten but a few anticipated kindergarten with negative feelings. Children also anticipated needing a backpack or lunchbox to attend kindergarten and looked forward to playing in the new school. Because this study was only done between Head Start and a Title 1 early education program, future research is needed to further understand what children think about going to kindergarten. / Department of Elementary Education
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Attitudes of young children toward nursery schoolUnknown Date (has links)
A review of the literature reveals that nothing has been done at the pre-school level in the measurement of attitudes; yet Gesell in his studies recognizes that young children do have attitudes even though many are short-lived and developmental. This lack plus the writer's interest led to the present study of the attitudes of the children enrolled in the Florida State University Nursery School. / Typescript. / "May, 1949." / "Submitted to the Graduate Council of Florida State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts under Plan II." / Advisor: Ralph L. Witherspoon, Professor Directing Paper. / Includes bibliographical references (leaf 43).
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Attitude-behavior fit in preschool peer relations : configurations of sociometry and social participationShankar, Ila 27 September 1991 (has links)
The study of preschool children's peer relations has
primarily employed sociometric interviews and observations
of children's social participation during free-play
situations as methods of assessment. These assessments of
peer relations have traditionally demonstrated lack of fit
between attitude (as measured by sociometry) and behavior
(observation of social participation). Often, sociometric
peer preference and acceptance does not correspond to
children's observation of social participation during freeplay.
The present study was designed to improve this
attitude-behavior fit by developing the Crystallized
Sociometric Scales which employed post stratification of
opinion responses.
Subjects consisted of 65 preschool children between
three- to five- years- of age, divided into two preschool
groups of 45 and 20 subjects. Interviews on both the
traditional sociometric scales and the crystallized
sociometric (weighted with questions on peer exclusivity and
friendship concept) were obtained. Observation of social
participation used Parten's category of play with interval
time sampling. Sociometric analyses of data provided a child
by child picture of the social structure of the peer group.
The discrepancy scores between social participation and the
traditional and crystallized sociometric variables were
compared using t-tests.
Results indicated that peer exclusivity provided the
best attitude-behavior fit and was significantly better than
the traditional nomination score. The level of the
friendship concept did not affect the social participation
of children. Crystallized ratings were not significantly
different from the traditional ratings. The stability of
the Crystallized Sociometric Scales was moderate, although
it was significantly better than the traditional sociometric
scales. It was concluded that crystallized sociometric
nominations provide a methodology to improve the attitude-behavior
fit. Although correlated, sociometry and social
participation measure different aspects of peer relations
whose relationship can be influenced by measurement
procedures. / Graduation date: 1992
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Preschool ChildrenKahriman- Ozturk, Deniz 01 September 2010 (has links) (PDF)
The purpose of this study is to explore preschool children&rsquo / s
attitudes towards environmental issues in terms of consumption
patterns, environmental protection, recycling-reusing, and living
habits and to investigate gender as a factor affecting
environmental attitudes. The sample of the study is comprised of
40 preschool age children living in Ankara, Turkey. The research
has been realized by qualitative design and the data were
collected through interviews. The interview questionnaire was
adapted from
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Childhood Learning: Examining Attitudes toward School and Learning AbilityGeddes, Jeffrey D. 05 1900 (has links)
A child's ability to learn in school and school performance are affected by various factors. Variables that affect learning and academic performance in 46 children, 4 - 7 years old, were examined. Children, parents, and teachers completed questionnaires rating children's attitudes and behavior toward school. Children completed a computerized matching-to-sample (MTS) task. The MTS trained the children to form 3 stimulus classes. One stimulus class included three arbitrary stimuli, the others contained a positively or negatively valenced stimulus, a school-related stimulus, and an arbitrary stimulus. Class formation performance was assessed. Rate of learning predicted attitudes toward school, school attitudes predicted academic performance; however a hypothesized mediation effect of attitudes was not demonstrated. No significant differences in rate of forming stimulus classes containing emotionally valenced and school stimuli were found. Future directions for intervention in the early education of students who have poor attitudes toward school are discussed.
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