Spelling suggestions: "subject:"2chool atransition"" "subject:"2chool 2transition""
21 |
Academic self-concept and academic achievement of African American students transitioning from urban to rural schoolsBacon, La Shawn Catrice 01 July 2011 (has links)
The relationship between academic self-concept and academic achievement in African American students who have experienced geographic mobility was the focus of this study. Specifically, this study used quantitative methods to assess African American students from counties in Iowa to obtain information about the students' relocation from urban to rural school environments and to understand how such moves influenced their academic performance and academic self-concept. Gender and length of time since transition were also considered. The sample consisted of 101 African American middle school/junior high students who had been enrolled in Iowa schools for less than 24 months or more than 24 months. Results indicated a significant relationship between academic self-concept and academic achievement measures of ITBS composite scores and cumulative GPA. Gender and the length of time since transition were not shown to be linked to students' academic ability or performance in school. Data gathered from this study will assist administrators, parents, educators, and school counselors with understanding geographic mobility, academic self-concept, and academic achievement. Information obtained will also provide insight about other factors that relate to the academic setting and students' assessment of school such as student motivation, perceptions of peers, the academic self-perceptions students possess, students' attitude towards teachers and classes, and students' attitude towards school.
|
22 |
Upward Bound Graduates Transition From High School to CollegeParks, LaVasa Tiny'a 01 January 2019 (has links)
Some first-generation and low-income students enrolled in an Upward Bound (UB) program in a university in the southeastern United States are not prepared to transition from high school to college; therefore, they may need additional guidance, support, resources, and tools to help them with the process. For this reason, precollege programs such as the UB program were designed to prepare first-generation, low-income students for transitioning from high school to college. The purpose of this bounded qualitative case study was to describe first-generation, low-income students' perspectives of the UB program. The conceptual framework for this case study was Tinto's student integration model. Purposeful sampling was used to select 7 UB graduates who were enrolled in the program for at least 2 years. Opened-ended interview questions were used to gather data for open coding and axial coding data analysis process. The results of this study were used to develop an UB Report which described UB gradates' perspectives of the program. Included in the report are the findings, which revealed that UB graduates identified benefits (motivation, social exposure, and student experiences) and resources (services and guest speakers) as major components of the program that contributed to their transition from high school to college. Reporting the perspectives of UB graduates will help UB directors and secondary and postsecondary administrators better understand how the UB program positively affects first-generation, low-income students' successful transition from high school to college.
|
23 |
Changes in classroom environment and teacher-student relationships during the transition from primary to secondary school.Ferguson, Peter D. January 1998 (has links)
This study investigated students' perceptions of the generalist learning environment of the primary school compared to the same students' perceptions of the learning environments of the secondary school, with a particular focus on science learning environments. The role of student sex and school size pathways were investigated as factors Influencing changes in students' learning environment perceptions. The same students' perceptions of the learning environment were collected in the final stages of primary school and again after their initial term in secondary school. Data collected were both qualitative and quantitative in nature, with the quantitative data derived from short forms of the My Class Inventory and the Questionnaire on Teacher Interaction. Insights were gained into how students' perceptions of learning environment, including the teachers' interpersonal style, changed during their first exposure to secondary learning environments and teachers, and how these changes in perceptions during transition depended upon school size and student sex. The study found that students' perceptions of the learning environments did change across transition, but that these changes on some scales varied with student sex and school size pathway.
|
24 |
Parent-Adolescent Relationships: Anticipations and Dyadic Interactions During the Transition to High SchoolKear, Emily 23 August 2011 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis was to examine parent-adolescent relationships during the transition to high school. Fourteen parent-adolescent dyads from two Canadian cities completed the study. At pre-transition (Time 1) and post-transition (Time 2) to high school, each dyad was video-recorded engaging in a conversation together about various topics related to the school transition. Content analysis was conducted to explore parents’ and adolescents’ pre-transition anticipations of how their relationship would be in high school. State space grid analysis was used to investigate whether there were changes in the structure or emotional content of parent-adolescent dyadic interactions between pre-transition and post-transition to high school. Results showed that parents and adolescents expressed relationship anticipations of stability, change, or uncertainty. Additionally, no statistically significant differences were found in the structure or emotional content of parent-adolescent interactions, suggesting that the high school transition does not appear to disrupt how parents and adolescents interact together. / Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) and Ontario Graduate Scholarship (OGS)
|
25 |
Perceptions and Roles of School Psychologists in Transition Services for Students with Intellectual DisabilitiesTalapatra, Devadrita 16 May 2014 (has links)
Transition plans and services can have positive benefits on post-school outcomes for students with intellectual disabilities (ID). School psychologists have much to contribute to the transition process, but previous studies have indicated they often have limited involvement in this domain. A national survey was conducted to assess school psychologists’ knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors in regards to transition services for students with ID. Respondents included 176 practicing school psychologists from 21 states. Based on Ajzen’s (1985) Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB), the survey used in the study focused on school psychologists’ transition-related knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors. To understand the role of school psychologists in transition services for students with ID, data collection and analyses addressed (a) the underlying factor structure of the transition survey; (b) the relationship between school psychologists’ frequency of involvement in transition services and their self-reported transition knowledge, attitudes towards transition activities, and background experiences; and (c) the relationship between school psychologists' perceived importance of transition tasks and their transition knowledge and background experiences. An exploratory factor analysis was conducted to verify the survey’s factor structure, and three factors supporting the TPB framework were identified: Knowledge, Attitude, and Behaviors. Scores for the instrument and subscales demonstrated acceptable reliability. A backward multiple regression was conducted with transition involvement as the criterion variable and respondents’ self-reported transition knowledge and attitudes, and background experiences as predictor variables. Attitude, knowledge, and previous experience with the ID population were found to be significant predictors of performance of transition tasks, accounting for 63.9% of the variance combined. A backward multiple regression also was conducted with attitudes toward transition as the criterion variable and respondents’ self-reported transition knowledge and background experiences as predictor variables. Knowledge was found to be the only significant predictor of respondents’ attitudes, accounting for 26.9% of the variance. Implications for practice and policy include increasing school psychologists’ specific knowledge of transition services and transition needs of students with ID, evaluating graduate programs and school districts’ openness towards school psychologists performing transition tasks, and advocating for special education reform to modify the roles and responsibilities of school psychologists.
|
26 |
Sintomas de estresse e percepção de estressores escolares no início do Ensino Fundamental / Stress symptoms and school stress perceptions in the beginning of elementary school.Erica Taciana dos Santos Crepaldi 03 March 2016 (has links)
O ingresso no Ensino Fundamental - EF tem sido visto como um momento de transição devido às novas demandas que apresenta para a criança. Neste contexto, parece haver um aumento da vulnerabilidade das crianças ao estresse, principalmente daquelas com maior dificuldade de adaptação a estas demandas. Esse estudo teve como objetivo amplo investigar o estresse da transição no contexto do EF de nove anos, partindo de uma visão desenvolvimentista aliada a uma perspectiva de exposição a estressores cotidianos. Especificamente, o estudo investigou a relação entre competências e sintomas de estresse no 1º ano do EF, o curso desenvolvimental dos sintomas e das percepções de estresse nos dois anos inicias do EF, suas associações com as tarefas adaptativas da transição e a influência da escola nos indicadores de estresse. Finalmente, exploraram-se modelos explicativos para indicadores de estresse apresentados no 2º ano. Seguindo metodologia prospectiva, avaliaram-se indicadores de ajustamento e competências relacionadas ao desempenho acadêmico, social e comportamental das crianças no 1º ano, estresse nos dois primeiros anos e características da escola (localização e IDEB). Participaram da pesquisa 157 alunos do 1º ano do EF, sendo 85 meninos e 72 meninas, com idade média de 6 anos e 10 meses no início da pesquisa. Todos tinham experiência de dois anos na Educação Infantil e estavam matriculados em escolas municipais de diferentes regiões de uma cidade do interior de São Paulo. Também participaram do estudo, como informantes, seus respectivos professores do 1º ano, num total de 25. As crianças responderam à Escala de Stress Infantil, ao Inventário de Estressores Escolares e a uma avaliação objetiva de desempenho acadêmico (Provinha Brasil). Os professores avaliaram as habilidades sociais, os problemas de comportamento externalizantes e internalizantes e a competência acadêmica dos seus alunos por meio do Social Skills Rating System Professores. A análise dos dados compreendeu estatísticas descritivas, comparações, correlações e regressões. Nos resultados, 57% dos alunos no 1º ano e 72% no 2º ano relataram sintomas de estresse pelo menos na fase de alerta. Crianças com estresse no 1º ano apresentaram menores índices de ajustamento e competência e perceberam suas escolas como mais estressantes em relação ao seu papel de estudante e nas relações interpessoais. Correlações moderadas entre medidas de indicadores de estresse tomadas no 1º e no 2º ano sugerem estabilidade. A presença de sintomas de estresse aumentou do 1º para o 2º ano, enquanto a percepção de estressores escolares não variou. Crianças com maiores médias de estresse são provenientes de escolas situadas em regiões periféricas e com classificação mais baixa no IDEB. As análises de predição evidenciaram a habilidade social de responsabilidade e cooperação avaliada no 1º ano como importante fator de proteção contra sintomas de estresse no 2º ano, ao passo que a percepção da criança de tensões nas relações interpessoais no 1º ano foi o principal fator de risco para futura sintomatologia de estresse. Nesse sentido, intervenções com ênfase na promoção de habilidades sociais das crianças podem ser profícuas na prevenção do estresse. / The entrance to the elementary school - ES has been considered as a transition time due to the new demands it presents for the child. In this context, some children may become more vulnerable to stress, especially those with greater difficulty in adapting to these demands. This study investigates the stress of transition to ES (nine years long), from a developmental perspective combined with the theoretical approach of exposure to daily hassles. Specifically, the study investigated (a) the relationship between competences and symptoms of stress in the 1st year of the ES; (b) the developmental course of symptoms and stress perceptions in the two initial years of the ES; (c) their associations with adaptive transition tasks; (d) the school influence on stress indicators. Explanatory models for stress indicators presented in 2nd year were also explored up. Following a prospective design, competence and adjustment indicators related to academic performance, social skills, behavior, and stress were evaluated in the 1st year, as well as school characteristics (location and IDEB). Stress measures were repeated in the 2nd year. The participants were 157 ES students, 85 boys and 72 girls, with an average age of 6 years and 10 months at baseline in 1st year. They had two years experience in kindergarten and were enrolled in public schools in different regions of a city of São Paulo State. Their teachers of the 1st year, a total of 25, also participated in the study, as informants. The children answered the Child Stress Scale, the Inventory of School Stressors and an objective evaluation of academic performance (Provinha Brazil). Teachers rated social skills, externalizing and internalizing behavior problems and academic competence of their students through the Social Skills Rating System - Teachers. Data analysis comprised descriptive statistics, comparisons, correlations and regressions. In the results, 57% of students in the 1st year and 72% in the 2nd reported stress symptoms at least in the alert phase. Children with stress symptoms at 1st year had lower levels of adjustment and competence. They also perceived their schools as more stressful concerning both academic demands and interpersonal relationships. Moderate correlations between stress indicators measures in the 1st and 2nd year suggest stability. The presence of stress symptoms increased from the 1st to the 2nd year, while the perception of school stressors did not change. Children with higher average stress come from schools in remote urban areas and lower IDEB index. The prediction analysis showed the social skill of responsibility and cooperation assessed at 1st year as an important protection factor against stress symptoms in the 2nd year, while the child\'s perception of tensions in interpersonal relationships in the 1st year was the main risk factor for future symptoms of stress. In this sense, interventions emphasizing the promotion of social skills of children can be fruitful in preventing stress.
|
27 |
The wellbeing of adolescents during the primary-secondary school transitionMollart, Katherine January 2013 (has links)
The transition to secondary school can represent a significant life event for many adolescents and can adversely affect their psychological adjustment and wellbeing. Little is known about how adjustment to this transition can be facilitated for young people. The review paper critically evaluated the evidence-base for school transition programmes that target pupil's mental wellbeing. A keyword search of abstract databases was conducted and 20 studies were evaluated. The majority of studies could not conclude that their intervention improved mental wellbeing to a statistically significant level, and numerous methodological limitations weaken the existing evidence-base. However, the most promising areas of research pertain to intervening with the parents and teachers of adolescents experiencing school transition. Further research should investigate this further. The empirical paper employed a qualitative methodology to examine how adolescents make sense of and create meaning from their experience of going to boarding school, and to explore what can be done to facilitate this adjustment. Ten female and male adolescents were interviewed in their second year of attending boarding school. The interviews, analysed using lnterpretative Phenomenological Analysis, yielded three superordinate themes: 1) 'Home is where the heart is', which captures adolescents experiences of homesickness, the stronger relationships formed with their family, and the development of new attachment figures with their house matron and peers, 2) 'Living in a bubble', which reflects a feeling of being constrained at boarding school and an awareness of it being a hierarchical environment, and 3) 'Gaining familiarity with the place and just being me' as adolescents appeared to positively adjust over time. Results are discussed in terms of attachment, coping and adjustment theories and models of psychosocial development. Clinical and organisational implications for professionals working in boarding schools, as well as suggestions for future research arc discussed.
|
28 |
Realizace přechodu žáků na druhý stupeň po 5. a 4. ročníku / Pupils's transition to a lower secondary school after 5th and 4th gradeUrbanová, Hana January 2017 (has links)
The diploma thesis pursues a pupil's transition to a lower secondary school. The theoretical part describes the development of Czech primary and lower secondary school. It compares the compulsory education in European countries and describes a phenomenon of transition in view of its development in an international context during the past few decades. The empirical part explores main topics of pupil's transition to higher level of education. The research is based on the case study of the primary school with pupil's transition from the fourth grade and from the fifth grade. The research aim is to find out how the transition is viewed by the pupils and their teachers and to find out the reasons for an alternation of classic model of the transition in the fifth grade of primary school. It presents the advantages and disadvantages of this modification in a view of current pupils' development. The results show that neither pupils nor the teachers perceive any major differences in a timing of the transition. For all the pupils, with no regard to the model of the transition, the more important change is the entering to the sixth grade, which is connected with the change of the curriculum. The pupils transitioning according to a new model perceive the transition after the fourth grade as an advantage for...
|
29 |
Well-Being Among Parents of Young Adults With Intellectual Disabilities When Transitioning From High SchoolThompson, Teshawnia 01 January 2018 (has links)
Transition out of high school for young adults with intellectual disabilities (IDs) has been described as a stressful time for individuals and their families, with increased demands for caregiving and parental support. A lack of research is associated specifically with those individuals with moderate IDs and their parents' experiences of well-being during the transition process. The purpose of this phenomenological study was to understand how parents of young adult-aged children with moderate IDs experience well-being as their child transitions from high school to adulthood. Ryff's model of psychological well-being was used as the conceptual framework to better understand and explore the psychological well-being of parents as they navigate through the transition process. Eight parents from an urban Georgia school district were recruited through criterion sampling and participated in individual semistructured face-to-face interviews. Constant comparison analysis was used to analyze the data. There were 8 major themes that emerged from describing the lived experience of parents: (a) expectations and preparation, (b) experience with school, (c) accessing and coordinating services, (d) social support systems, (e) daily activities and planning, (f) life as an adjustment, (g) personal growth, and (h) looking toward the future. School districts and adult service providers may gain insight from parent perspectives to help alleviate rather than exacerbate the challenges parents face during the transition process, which would contribute to the parents' psychological well-being.
|
30 |
Parents' Perception of Speech-Language Pathologists in Secondary TransitionHunt, Madelyn 01 May 2023 (has links)
Speech-Language Pathologists provide services to youth with Down syndrome. The purpose of this study was to (a) determine if parents are aware that speech-language pathologists can provide services to prepare their children for secondary transition; (b) identify the parents’ perceptions of the services provided by speech-language pathologists; and (c) determine if in the parents’ opinion, the speech-language pathologist provided a vital role in preparing their child for transition. Using nonprobability snowball sampling, this cross-sectional mixed-method survey study included 85 parents of youth (ages 14-22) with Down syndrome across the United States. Parents rated their experiences and described their beliefs and perceived helpfulness toward their child’s SLP(s) regarding secondary transition. To identify further thoughts regarding parents’ perceptions of their engagement in the transition process, deductive, inductive, and thematic analysis of two open-ended questions uncovered three themes of responses pertaining to SLPs in secondary transition services, noted as satisfied, career, and unsatisfactory.
|
Page generated in 0.1327 seconds