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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
211

The Unintended and Unexpected Outcomes of a Major Selection Policy

Pringle, Eboni J. 10 December 2014 (has links)
No description available.
212

The Effects of a Classroom Based Yoga Intervention on Test Anxiety, Academic Performance and Attention in Third Grade Students

Dreisbach, Melissa D. January 2017 (has links)
No description available.
213

The Differential Effects of Peer Tutoring and Peer Tutoring with a Group Contingency on the Spelling Performance and Disruptive Behavior of Fouth-Grade Students in a General Education Classroom

Kiarie, Mary Wanjiru 02 April 2003 (has links)
No description available.
214

Exploring the impact of a Breakfast in the Classroom (BIC) program in an urban Middle School in Western Massachusetts

O'Donnell, Maria 08 May 2020 (has links)
Although breakfast programs in schools have been encouraged in school-aged children due to numerous benefits on physical and academic performance, participation in School Breakfast Programs (SBP) remains lower than the National School Lunch Program in the United States. Some studies have found that lower participation in the SBP are due to barriers and stigmas. Some studies have found that when breakfast programs are taken into the classroom, uptake of the program improves. However, the relationship between breakfast intake and academic outcomes among young adolescents remains inconclusive. The goal of this study was to examine the effect of a newly implemented Breakfast in the Classroom (BIC) program within a large urban school district in Western Massachusetts. A secondary comparative cross-sectional analysis was conducted to investigate the impact of the “Breakfast in the Classroom” (BIC) program on middle school students’ academic performance, absenteeism rates, and school nurse visits, factors that influence learners positive experience within the school system. Data on a total of 1,897 students from seven public schools in Western Massachusetts were included in the analysis. Linear regression models showed that breakfast in the classroom (BIC) program did not have a significant effect on student academic performance, attendance, and school nurse visits in a cohort of middle school students. Sensitivity analysis on a subset of the sample of students receiving free lunch who are also participants of the BIC program, had significantly higher academic performance outcomes than their BIC peers who were ineligible for the free lunch program. Findings of the study provide important baseline data for both food services and the school board district and can help inform future studies on the impact of the BIC program on student outcomes.
215

Facebook and Other Internet Use and the Academic Performance of College Students

O'Brien, Shannon Jill January 2011 (has links)
This study explored college students' use of the Internet and Facebook as well as whether usage patterns, and perceptions about the academic effects of use, relate to time spent studying and/or academic performance. One hundred sixty undergraduate students completed an online survey designed to measure the frequency, duration, intensity, and academic impact of their Internet and Facebook use. Results indicate that students devote a significant amount of time to both academic (M = 1.82 hrs per day) and recreational (M = 2.50 hrs per day) Internet activities, and that Facebook users (n = 153, 96% of the sample) spend an average of two hours per day on the site, accounting for almost half of total time spent on the Internet and approximately 80% of recreational use. Results also show that spending more time on the Internet for academic purposes, waiting longer to check Facebook when studying or doing schoolwork, and spending less time on the Internet for fun, are all significant predictor / Educational Psychology
216

Essays on Social Capital and Peer Effects

Jiang, He 03 June 2022 (has links)
In Chapter 2, I employ the educational production function to identify the different effects of making a friend of the same gender and the opposite gender in a school network. Unlike other gender peer effects literature that only quantifies the causal effects of the proportion of girls in an aggregated level, such as other students in the same class, grade, or dorm, I study the gender of the five best friends nominated by the student. I address the endogeneity of friendship composition by employing a novel set of instrumental variables for the number of same-gender and opposite-gender friends. We find that having more friends, especially in the early accumulation stage, lowers the test scores. We also explore the mechanisms. In Chapter 3, I investigate the role of social learning in enrollment decisions for a public pension scheme. All else equal, if a qualified rural resident moves from a community where no other co- villagers participate in the new pension scheme to a community that is fully covered by the pension scheme, the probability of an individual enrolling by 0.541 percentage point. We use robustness checks to illustrate that the estimated peer effects are not driven by the common unobserved factors, but by social interactions. In Chapter 4, we use the survey data on Chinese middle students and the instrumental variables method to explore the different effects of making friends with the same gender and the opposite gender in a school network on mental health. The empirical results find that having a larger number of same-gender friends improves mental health but having a larger number of opposite-gender friends hurts mental health. / Doctor of Philosophy / We need human connections. Along with other assets, such as money and skills, networks and relationships are resources that could help with economic outcomes in our daily lives. The rapid development of the Internet and the intelligentization of digital devices such as mobile phones have made it easier to establish relationships with others. They also generate much more data nowadays that makes it possible to study social relationships. In this dissertation, we mainly discuss two aspects of social networks. First, we use popularity as a measure of social capital and study how social capital influence middle school students' academic outcomes and mental health outcomes using Chinese data. Given that middle school students are in the embryonic stage of personal emotional development, we distinguish friends by of the same gender or not. We find that popularity with the same gender and the opposite gender differently impacts the outcomes. Second, it is intuitive that under the influence or pressure of a group, an individual tends to make his or her speech and behavior consistent with the group. Therefore, we are interested in if an individual's choice will be driven by other people's choices in the same group. We consider the adoption of a newly introduced pension program for rural residents in China. Besides demographic characteristics, a person's decision is also influenced by those around them. If a higher proportion of his or her co-villagers choose to join the pension plan, he or she is more likely to join.
217

Systematic review of acute physically active learning and classroom movement breaks on children's physical activity, cognition, academic performance and classroom behaviour: understanding critical design features.

Daly-Smith, Andrew, Zwolinsky, S, McKenna, J., Tomporowski, P.D., Defeyter, M.A., Manley, A. 24 September 2020 (has links)
Yes / To examine the impact of acute classroom movement break (CMB) and physically active learning (PAL) interventions on physical activity (PA), cognition, academic performance and classroom behaviour. Systematic review. PubMed, EBSCO, Academic Search Complete, Education Resources Information Center, PsycINFO, SPORTDiscus, SCOPUS and Web of Science. Studies investigating school-based acute bouts of CMB or PAL on (PA), cognition, academic performance and classroom behaviour. The Downs and Black checklist assessed risk of bias. Ten PAL and eight CMB studies were identified from 2929 potentially relevant articles. Risk of bias scores ranged from 33% to 64.3%. Variation in study designs drove specific, but differing, outcomes. Three studies assessed PA using objective measures. Interventions replaced sedentary time with either light PA or moderate-to-vigorous PA dependent on design characteristics (mode, duration and intensity). Only one study factored individual PA outcomes into analyses. Classroom behaviour improved after longer moderate-to-vigorous (>10 min), or shorter more intense (5 min), CMB/PAL bouts (9 out of 11 interventions). There was no support for enhanced cognition or academic performance due to limited repeated studies. Low-to-medium quality designs predominate in investigations of the acute impacts of CMB and PAL on PA, cognition, academic performance and classroom behaviour. Variable quality in experimental designs, outcome measures and intervention characteristics impact outcomes making conclusions problematic. CMB and PAL increased PA and enhanced time on task. To improve confidence in study outcomes, future investigations should combine examples of good practice observed in current studies. CRD42017070981.
218

The Daily Mile initiative: Exploring physical activity and the acute effects on executive function and academic performance in primary school children

Morris, Jade L., Daly-Smith, Andrew, Archbold, V.S.J., Wilkins, E.L., McKenna, J. 25 September 2020 (has links)
Yes / For schools to consider physical activity (PA) interventions, improvements must be shown in PA and additional educational benefits such as executive function (EF) and academic performance (AP). Over 8800 schools worldwide have implemented The Daily Mile™ (TDM), without any formal assessments of its impact. Rigorous and high-quality studies are needed to explore TDM's contribution to moderate-to-vigorous PA (MVPA) guidelines and potential impact on EFs and AP. Methods: Children (14 classes, n = 303, age mean = 8.99 ± 0.5) from 11 primary schools already implementing TDM consented. At the individual level, children were randomly assigned using a 4-block process to either TDM or continued academic lessons (TDM n = 158, control n = 145). Children completed pre and post, EF tests (Trail Making Task; Digit Recall; Flanker; Animal Stroop) and a maths fluency test (Maths Addition and Subtraction, Speed and Accuracy Test). Accelerometers assessed MVPA using 15-s-epochs and Evenson cut-points. Results: Using multi-level modelling, TDM revealed significantly greater MVPA (+10.23 min) and reduced sedentary time (−9.28 min) compared to control (p ≤ 0.001, d = 4.92, 3.61 retrospectively). Maths fluency interacted with condition and time (p = 0.031, d = 0.25); post hocs revealed no significances over time (p > 0.05). No differences in EFs (all p > 0.05). Conclusions: This study is the first assessing the acute effects of TDM compared to continued academic lessons. TDM revealed no significant improvements in maths fluency or EF. These findings question justifying the widespread adoption of TDM based on enhanced cognition claims. Nonetheless, TDM may provide 10 min of MVPA, achieving a third of the daily in school recommendations to meet overall daily recommendations.
219

Does Teacher Support Directly Change Academic Resiliency and Ability to Sustain Competence under Pressure?

Fullick, Julia 01 January 2006 (has links)
This study investigates the impact of instructors' positive comments on academic resiliency and student performance. Not only is academic resiliency a stable trait, but we hypothesis that it may be induced or impeded; i.e. academic resiliency is malleable. The Academic Self-Efficacy Scale, Academic Locus of Control Scale, and the Academic Conscientiousness Scale were collected as covariates. It was predicted that participants randomly assigned to the positive teacher support condition would score better on the final exam and demonstrate increased academic resiliency compared to a baseline measure. Conversely, participants randomly assigned to the negative teacher support condition should do poorly on the exam and demonstrate reduced academic resiliency compared to a baseline measure. There were of73 undergraduate participants (13 male, 60 female) with a median age of 22 (SD=7 .19) recruited from a large Southeastern university students who were enrolled in two web-based courses.
220

產學合作技術移轉過程之績效影響因素研究

林文淵, Lin, Wenyuan Unknown Date (has links)
近年來,在全球化市場競爭之衝擊下,企業競爭日益激烈,誰能較早取得關鍵技術,並將之轉化為公司內部的技術能力,將是一個公司開拓或保有市場的一項關鍵因素;對那些知識及技術本位的企業,更是如此。然而,在如此激烈競爭的環境中,為求快速、正確且有效率的取得技術知識,已無法由企業內部獨自完成。據此,尋求外部的技術知識來源已是企業決策者所必須正視的課題。 因此,就國內的企業研究環境而言,如何運用產學合作機能,利用學校與企業資源,雙方在合作上發揮科技資源整合互補效應,以減少學校基礎研究與企業應用研究之間的差距。不過,為何在同一個研究單位,執行技術移轉的績效成果有顯著的差異。什麼是產學績效的評定標準、什麼是它影響技術移轉執行的顯著因子、它們之間的關係如何?本研究討論主軸專注在專案技術移轉執行過程。 目前國內及國外對於產學合作的相關研究很多,有些學者對於產學合作的機制、動機、合作成效、關鍵成功因素作討論;也有些學者針對某特定區域中的產學合作現況作研究,但是研究方向大多以學校的角度評估產學合作的績效,很少看到以公司研究單位的角度來了解影響因子。因而,由公司端探究企業影響產學合作執行績效的要素,也是本研究另一個特色。 希望藉由影響執行過程的因素和績效這兩個構面,所產生的問題,逐一的討論,希望能了解這些因子的因果關係。在未來產學合作專案中,加強做好不足的地方。使合作的結果更加理想。 / In recent years, it’s a key factor for a company to develop or to keep market by getting a core technology earlier and converting it into a company’s internal technical competence. Such scenario is also applied for those enterprises which are knowledge and technology -oriented. However, it is very difficult for an enterprise alone to get a core technology promptly, correctly and efficiently under highly competitive environment. Therefore, seeking outer source of technical knowledge is an essential lesson for an entrepreneur. As for domestic setting of enterprise’s research, it is important to shorten the gap between academic theoretical research and industrial applied research through integrating technical resources from both university and enterprise to obtain compensatory effects for each other on the cooperative basis. However, there is an obvious discrepancy on the performance of executing technical transfer in the same research unit. What are the criteria for evaluating industrial performance and academic one? What are the obvious factors which affect execution of technical transfer? And what are their relationships? This research focuses on the executive process of technical transfer. There are many domestic and foreign researches done on the topic of cooperation between the industry and the academy. Some scholars have discussed about the system, motive, result and key successful factor of the cooperation between the industry and the academy. Some other scholars have done research on present situation of cooperation between the industry and the academy in certain area, but many researches have been done in the academic way of evaluating performance of cooperation between the industry and the academy. Fewer researches have been done in the industrial way of estimating the influential factors. Another special feature of this research is the executive performance of cooperation between the industry and the academy could be affected by the industry. I hope those problems caused by the factors which affect the executive process and its performance can be discussed individually, and the relationship between cause and effect can be understood properly. Also, I wish I can do well in those areas needed to be enhanced in the future project of cooperation between the industry and the academy, and make it better for the result of such cooperation.

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