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Great expectations : the relations between expectancies for success and academic achievementMoore, Caryl 04 1900 (has links)
The main aims of this broad exploratory study were (a) to gain insights as to the
possible interrelations between Unisa students' expectations for success and a
variety of significant variables (such as their academic performance, self-perceptions,
confidence, motivation, self-determination, others' expectancies, locus of control and
attributions relating to previous performance), and (b) to discover possible
differences relating to various groups (i.e. racial and gender groups; 'pass' and 'fail'
groups; and 'realistic' and 'unrealistic' groups).
The results of 61 hypotheses are compared with a variety of theoretical
suggestions and past findings. It was found that, on the whole, the various groups,
inter alia, expected to succeed, were confident about the accuracy of their
expectations, perceived themselves to work hard, considered themselves to have
considerable ability and to be above class average. Despite this rosy outlook many
students failed the examinations. Two of the most striking findings of this study were
that (a) those who failed overestimated their future performance to a significantly
greater extent than those who passed, and (b) overestimations were negatively
correlated with achievement. In contrast to theory and numerous research findings,
the psychological profiles of 'overoptimists', 'realists', and 'underestimators' revealed
that overoptimistic expectancies and self-perceptions appear to be maladaptive in an
academic context. Indeed, the findings suggest that accurate or even underoptimistic
self-assessments may be more conducive to academic success. It is proposed that
overoptimism may reflect ignorance of standards required, of adequate study
methods, or may result in inappropriate preparation. In light of the findings, the
implications and possible benefits and dangers of overoptimistic expectations and
self-perceptions are discussed.
The subjects are 715 third year Unisa psychology students, who are more
heterogeneous than most other university students as they not only vary
considerably in age but also come from a variety of cultures and backgrounds. / Psychology / D. Litt. et Phil. (Psychology)
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The influence of body satisfaction, weight satisfaction, and BMI on sexual behaviors among female college studentsFlitcraft, Jewel Marie 25 February 2014 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / This paper describes the influence of body satisfaction, weight satisfaction, and BMI on sexual behaviors among female college students.
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A life coaching programme for the support of social work students within an open and distance learning contextBotha, Petro 01 1900 (has links)
Compared to other South African universities, the Department of Social Work at the UNISA has the highest intake of social work students but also the lowest throughput. Through post-graduate research, the Department of Social Work became aware of the often impeding influence of the personal, social and learning contexts of social work students on their performance, and identified a need for social work-specific student support. The following central research question was formulated: What would a life coaching programme to support social work students within an ODL context comprise of?
To explore and describe the specific support needs of social work students, the qualitative research approach was used and data was gathered from focus groups of social work students and individual interviews with recently graduated and employed social workers who studied at UNISA. Tesch’s steps (in Creswell, 2009:186) were used to analyse the data systematically and data was verified by integrating Guba’s model (in Krefting, 1991:214-222) with Yin’s (2011:19-20) three objectives for building trustworthiness and credibility.
The Intervention Design and Development (IDD) model of Rothman and Thomas (1994) was adapted and selectively employed, concentrating on Phase 1, 2, 3 (only Step 2) and Phase 4 in order to develop a support programme for this specific context. The goals of the support programme were to enhance student success and throughput, facilitate the personal, academic and professional development of students and to empower students to take ownership of their learning process.
An online self-coaching support programme was developed and structured around seven actions towards growth, namely, clarifying my strengths, connecting to my context, clarifying my vision, completing my plan, committing to action and growth, confirming my direction and celebrating completion. The programme is divided into eight coaching conversations, two per level, contains many activities, stories and references to resources. It is designed to be compulsory and integrated into the practical work modules. Although activities are to be completed independently by students, support will be provided by e-tutors, workshop facilitators and supervisors. A programme coordinator will be available online as an e-coach to provide ongoing support to social work students. / Social Work / D. Phil. (Social Work)
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A historical educational analysis of stress in the pedagogic situation / Histories-opvoedkundige analise van stres in die pedagogiese situasieKlos, Maureen Lilian 06 1900 (has links)
Summaries in English and Afrikaans / Text in English / A modem "disease", stress is a universal and eternal problem in the pedagogic situation, where
the child becomes an aduh, under adult supervision. Stress - a feeling of pressure or strain - is
a problem for contemporary South African children, who automatically respond to stressors
(causes of stress), in the same way as children of the past, since human beings have not
changed psychobiologically over the millennia.
Our bodies and minds should return to a calm state, after our initial stress reaction, but we
often remain under stress, which results in emotional/ physical symptoms of distress. Yet
history has shown that children can be helped to handle stress, making it a stimulus for growth.
Although past societies were not directly conscious of the concept of stress, they taught
coping mechanisms to their children. Some of these are generally valid, and provide us with
solutions to the problem of stress in the pedagogic situation. / Die modeme "siekte", stres, is eintlik 'n universele en altyddurende probleem in die
pedagogiese situasie - die· situasie waar die kind besig is om onder volwasse begeleiding 'n
volwassene te word. Stres - 'n gevoel van druk en oorspanning - is 'n probleem vir
hedendaagse Suid-Afrikaanse kinders wat maar, net soos die kinders in die verlede, outomaties
reageer op "stressors" (faktore wat stres veroorsaak). Die afgelope millenniums het immers
bewys dat die mens nie psigobiologies verander het nie.
Ons liggaam en gees behoort mstig te word na 'n aanvanklike stres reaksie. Die probleem is
dat ons meestal onder stres bly leef met emosionele/ psigiese simptome van angs as die
resultaat daarvan. Tog het die geskiedenis bewys dat kinders gehe]p kan word om stres te
hanteer en dit eerder as 'n stimulus vir ontwikkeling te benut. Ten spyte van die feit dat
samelewings in die verlede nie so bewus was van die konsep van stres nie, het hulle tog sekere
tegnieke aan hulle kinders oorgedra om hulle te he]p om hulle stres te hanteer. Sommige van
hierdie tegnieke is algemeen geldig en voorsien ons dus van oplossings vir die probleem van
stres in die pedagogiese situasie. / Educational Studies / M. Ed. (Educational Studies)
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Motivators, contributors and inhibitors in adult higher education in the University of the Western CapeViljoen, Karin 01 1900 (has links)
Lifelong learning for adults has almost become compulsory for the maintenance of employability. In the South African context, The National Plan for Higher Education advocated an increase of adult learners entering higher education to facilitate lifelong learning.
This study will focus on adult learners returning to institutions of higher education on a full-time basis. The study will determine factors that motivate adults to enter the learning environment, and it will identify inhibitors and contributors during their studies. A qualitative research design has been employed. Analysis of data collected by open-ended questionnaires and in-depth interviews indicated that the motivation to return to higher education was mainly personal and career driven. Students reported on situational, dispositional, and institutional inhibitors they experienced and had to overcome. Contributors identified included various support systems. Recommendations are made in view of the results of the empirical study to assist institutions of higher education in South Africa to meet the unique needs of the adult learner. / Educational Studies / M. Ed. (Adult Education)
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A life coaching programme for the support of social work students within an open and distance learning contextBotha, Petro 01 1900 (has links)
Compared to other South African universities, the Department of Social Work at the UNISA has the highest intake of social work students but also the lowest throughput. Through post-graduate research, the Department of Social Work became aware of the often impeding influence of the personal, social and learning contexts of social work students on their performance, and identified a need for social work-specific student support. The following central research question was formulated: What would a life coaching programme to support social work students within an ODL context comprise of?
To explore and describe the specific support needs of social work students, the qualitative research approach was used and data was gathered from focus groups of social work students and individual interviews with recently graduated and employed social workers who studied at UNISA. Tesch’s steps (in Creswell, 2009:186) were used to analyse the data systematically and data was verified by integrating Guba’s model (in Krefting, 1991:214-222) with Yin’s (2011:19-20) three objectives for building trustworthiness and credibility.
The Intervention Design and Development (IDD) model of Rothman and Thomas (1994) was adapted and selectively employed, concentrating on Phase 1, 2, 3 (only Step 2) and Phase 4 in order to develop a support programme for this specific context. The goals of the support programme were to enhance student success and throughput, facilitate the personal, academic and professional development of students and to empower students to take ownership of their learning process.
An online self-coaching support programme was developed and structured around seven actions towards growth, namely, clarifying my strengths, connecting to my context, clarifying my vision, completing my plan, committing to action and growth, confirming my direction and celebrating completion. The programme is divided into eight coaching conversations, two per level, contains many activities, stories and references to resources. It is designed to be compulsory and integrated into the practical work modules. Although activities are to be completed independently by students, support will be provided by e-tutors, workshop facilitators and supervisors. A programme coordinator will be available online as an e-coach to provide ongoing support to social work students. / Social Work / D. Phil. (Social Work)
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Geometric reasoning in an active-engagement upper-division E&M classroomCerny, Leonard Thomas 21 August 2012 (has links)
A combination of theoretical perspectives is used to create a rich description of student reasoning when facing a highly-geometric electricity and magnetism problem in an upper-division active-engagement physics classroom at Oregon State University. Geometric reasoning as students encounter problem situations ranging from familiar to novel is described using van Zee and Manogue's (2010) ethnography of communication. Bing's (2008) epistemic framing model is used to illuminate how students are framing what they are doing and whether or not they see the problem as geometric. Kuo, Hull, Gupta, and Elby's (2010) blending model and Krutetskii's (1976) model of harmonic reasoning are used to illuminate ways students show problem-solving expertise. Sayer and Wittmann's (2008) model is used to show how resource plasticity impacts students' geometric reasoning and the degree to which students accept incorrect results. / Graduation date: 2013
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Motivators, contributors and inhibitors in adult higher education in the University of the Western CapeViljoen, Karin 01 1900 (has links)
Lifelong learning for adults has almost become compulsory for the maintenance of employability. In the South African context, The National Plan for Higher Education advocated an increase of adult learners entering higher education to facilitate lifelong learning.
This study will focus on adult learners returning to institutions of higher education on a full-time basis. The study will determine factors that motivate adults to enter the learning environment, and it will identify inhibitors and contributors during their studies. A qualitative research design has been employed. Analysis of data collected by open-ended questionnaires and in-depth interviews indicated that the motivation to return to higher education was mainly personal and career driven. Students reported on situational, dispositional, and institutional inhibitors they experienced and had to overcome. Contributors identified included various support systems. Recommendations are made in view of the results of the empirical study to assist institutions of higher education in South Africa to meet the unique needs of the adult learner. / Educational Studies / M. Ed. (Adult Education)
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A historical educational analysis of stress in the pedagogic situation / Histories-opvoedkundige analise van stres in die pedagogiese situasieKlos, Maureen Lilian 06 1900 (has links)
Summaries in English and Afrikaans / Text in English / A modem "disease", stress is a universal and eternal problem in the pedagogic situation, where
the child becomes an aduh, under adult supervision. Stress - a feeling of pressure or strain - is
a problem for contemporary South African children, who automatically respond to stressors
(causes of stress), in the same way as children of the past, since human beings have not
changed psychobiologically over the millennia.
Our bodies and minds should return to a calm state, after our initial stress reaction, but we
often remain under stress, which results in emotional/ physical symptoms of distress. Yet
history has shown that children can be helped to handle stress, making it a stimulus for growth.
Although past societies were not directly conscious of the concept of stress, they taught
coping mechanisms to their children. Some of these are generally valid, and provide us with
solutions to the problem of stress in the pedagogic situation. / Die modeme "siekte", stres, is eintlik 'n universele en altyddurende probleem in die
pedagogiese situasie - die· situasie waar die kind besig is om onder volwasse begeleiding 'n
volwassene te word. Stres - 'n gevoel van druk en oorspanning - is 'n probleem vir
hedendaagse Suid-Afrikaanse kinders wat maar, net soos die kinders in die verlede, outomaties
reageer op "stressors" (faktore wat stres veroorsaak). Die afgelope millenniums het immers
bewys dat die mens nie psigobiologies verander het nie.
Ons liggaam en gees behoort mstig te word na 'n aanvanklike stres reaksie. Die probleem is
dat ons meestal onder stres bly leef met emosionele/ psigiese simptome van angs as die
resultaat daarvan. Tog het die geskiedenis bewys dat kinders gehe]p kan word om stres te
hanteer en dit eerder as 'n stimulus vir ontwikkeling te benut. Ten spyte van die feit dat
samelewings in die verlede nie so bewus was van die konsep van stres nie, het hulle tog sekere
tegnieke aan hulle kinders oorgedra om hulle te he]p om hulle stres te hanteer. Sommige van
hierdie tegnieke is algemeen geldig en voorsien ons dus van oplossings vir die probleem van
stres in die pedagogiese situasie. / Educational Studies / M. Ed. (Educational Studies)
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Walking the narrow path : narratives of migration and mental health among Saudi Arabian women at Oregon State UniversityGentry, Kristen Elizabeth 27 April 2012 (has links)
Since the inauguration of the King Abdullah-Aziz Foreign Scholarship Program in 2005, the number of Saudi university students in the United States has increased exponentially, and an unprecedented amount of Saudi women are seeking international degrees. The absence of scholarly research within these women���s home and host countries highlights the need for an ethnographic account of their transnational experiences, which can elucidate ways in which knowledge, values, and customs are in a constant process of contextual negotiation. This in turn influences available sources of social support and psychological well-being. Drawing on data from free-lists, a focus group, and in-depth semi-structured interviews, this ethnographic research aims to uncover and examine the social determinants of psychological well-being as described by the narrative experiences of Saudi Arabian women studying at Oregon State University. After providing a detailed analysis of specific sociocultural structures operating in these women's lives, two sides qualifying Saudi Arabian women's experiences are examined: stakes of their international education projects and challenges in maintaining good mental health. These stakes, formed by sociocultural structures, circumscribe their experiences, decisions, and behavior in the U.S., where they must navigate through new challenges and sources of distress. The challenges they face cause distress, but also delineate possible sources of support and create avenues for agency. Finally, this thesis is concluded by recommending applications for mental health care providers and examining macro-level theoretical underpinnings of social determinants of psychological well-being. / Graduation date: 2012
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