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A cross-cultural study of role behaviors pertaining to the roles of student and professorNadal, Kathryne Jeanne 01 January 1980 (has links)
Communication theory involving the role concept has shown that role expectations and differing evaluations of role behavior can lead to communication breakdowns between persons. Literature pertaining to relations between professors and international students indicates the presence of unfulfilled expectations between them as to how they perform their respective roles. It was therefore hypothesized that some difficulties international students face in the academic world may be due to factors such as differing role expectations. As the literature provided no methodologically based cross-cultural research in this area, the researcher undertook to discover if professors and students evaluate the roles of student and professor differently cross-culturally. The researcher was also interested to learn of other factors that might affect role behavior evaluation such as status, sex, country of origin, and time in country. The purpose of the research was to: 1) definitively explore the current status of cross-cultural research on the roles of professor and student; 2) develop and administer a questionnaire that would allow a cross-cultural exploration of the role behaviors associated with the roles of student and professor; and 3) analyze the results. Role behaviors associated with student and professor roles were obtained from a multi-cultural sample and from them a prototype questionnaire was composed of 118 selected role behavior items. This was given to a sample of thirty-four subjects at two week intervals. Forty-five items evaluated at a significance level of .65 or above were termed reliable and included in a final questionnaire that was completed by a cross-cultural sample of 501 professors and students at a large urban university. The results indicated that culture-and status both affect how a role behavior is evaluated, but that culture is the more significant factor. "ben the evaluations of international students and American students were compared, using the t-Test for comparison of independent sample means, they differed significantly in the evaluation of seventeen items. International students and American professors differed in their evaluation of twenty-three of the forty-five items, whereas when American students' evaluations of the items were compared to those of American professors' there were only five items evaluated differently. These results can be interpreted to mean that American students and American professors perceive these roles more similarly than do international students and American professors. Using an "etic-ernic" classificatory schema there were nineteen "etic" and twenty-six "ernie" role behaviors. Of the "ernie" role behaviors, culture was determined to be the significant variable for the differing evaluations of sixteen items, status for five items, and both status and culture for one item. For four items is was not possible to determine the primary factor responsible. Further analysis of the data indicated that sex, status as an undergraduate, graduate, or professor, and cultural background or country of origin are other variables that can be isolated out as affecting how a role behavior is evaluated. The significance of the results and suggestions for improving communication between professors and students is addressed and directions for further research suggested.
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Saudi Early Childhood Teachers' Attitudes About The Use Of Technology In Early Childhood ClassroomsAlasimi, Amal A. 10 December 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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Parents' and teachers' differing views of group work with gifted studentsSaunders, Katie, 1980- January 2004 (has links)
No description available.
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Teacher perceptions of the characteristics of effectiveness in Canadian independent schoolsBeauchamp, Pierre January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
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Breaking the ice : Qallunaat teachers' journeys to NunavikMueller, Caroline. January 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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Attitude similarity of students and teachers and ratings of instructional effectivenessMizener, Deborah Ann. January 1982 (has links)
No description available.
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Resistance to technology integration in elementary teaching by the technologically proficient classroom teacherRashotte, Angela L. January 2004 (has links)
No description available.
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Perceptions of Vocational Administrators, Vocational Counselors and Vocational Teachers Toward Selected Issues in Vocational EducationMcHam, Marilyn 08 1900 (has links)
The purposes of this study were to determine the perceptions of vocational administrators, vocational counselors, and vocational teachers toward selected issues in vocational education. This study surveyed randomly selected vocational administrators, vocational counselors, and vocational teachers by means of a questionnaire designed to ascertain perceptions toward selected issues related to three categories: policies and procedures, curricula, and societal implications. The Likert-type scale instrument consisted of 26 items covering the three categories. A total of 116 returned useable questionnaires of the 150 sent. Vocational administrators returned 90% (4 5 instruments); vocational counselors returned 70% (35 instruments); and vocational teachers returned 72% (36 instruments).
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Clinical Teacher Identity as Told by Early Mid-Career Clinical Dental InstructorsVasilyeva, Daria January 2024 (has links)
Little is known about the nature of clinical teacher identity among clinical dental instructors. In broader education research, teacher identity is recognized as a central organizing element in the life of a teacher and a source of motivation to persist in teaching and become better at it. The awareness of and research into clinical teacher identity in health professions education is also increasing, although there is little identity scholarship in dentistry or dental academia.
This qualitative study sought to explore how early mid-career clinical dental instructors make sense of themselves as teachers. Five early mid-career clinical dental instructors participated in a series of semi-structured interviews about clinical teaching. Additionally, eight former and current dental students of these educators participated in a series of focus groups to provide an external perspective on faculty members’ experiences. Re-interpretation of interviews with educators and conversations with their students revealed that educators’ identities were complex, fluid, and influenced by various social, contextual, and emotional dimensions. The findings of the study suggest potential directions for strengthening the pathways of entry into dental academia and retention of early mid-career dental faculty.
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Reading Mastery: A Descriptive Study of Teachers Attitudes and Perceptions Towards Direct InstructionGervase, Sara Jane 29 June 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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