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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.
391

Increasing Differentiation on Vocational Assessments among Gifted High School Students

Kidner, Cindy L. (Cindy Lee) 08 1900 (has links)
Multipotentiality makes career counseling with gifted students difficult. High-flat vocational profiles give the impression that gifted students can develop a wide range of abilities to an equally high level. High-flat vocational profiles may be due to assessments that consider abilities and disregard interests and values, and ceiling effects from the use of age-appropriate, rather than cognitively-appropriate measures. Subjects included 170 gifted students from a residential, early college entrance program (M=15.9 yrs., SD=.361). Subjects completed the Scholastic Aptitude Test, Self-Directed Search, and Study of Values. McNemar's Test of Correlated Proportions shows the proportion of multipotential profiles decreases significantly when cognitively-appropriate measures of interests and values are considered, in addition to abilities. Pearson Chi-square shows no ethnic differences.
392

The rights of students in public high schools

Lindahl, Keith James 01 May 1973 (has links)
The United States Bill of Rights guarantees American citizens’ personal freedom and at the same time places limitations on the actions of the various levels of government. Questions arise in regards to the age at which citizens are guaranteed rights and freedoms under the Bill of Rights. The young American citizen, in a public school, has not always enjoyed the exercise of the rights of American citizenship. This paper examines the current status of the rights of public high school students, specifically in the State of Oregon. First to determine just which rights do apply in Oregon High Schools, court decisions, primarily from federal courts, were examined in order to extract the current judicial definitions of civil rights and liberties. As a result of this research, it was found that high school students are guaranteed the First Amendment rights of free expression and the Fourteenth Amendment privileges of due process or fair procedures in civil actions involving the school administration. The Fourth Amendment has been the basis of numerous cases dealing with locker searches and seizures, but the courts have held that the guarantees of the Fourth Amendment do not apply in light of the special circumstances of the school environment. Secondly, the status of the these student rights in the Oregon public school systems was examined by studying the state guidelines for student conduct codes and individual district codes from the 1971-72 and 1972-73 school years. It was concluded that as of 1972-73, most of Oregon’s high school students are guaranteed the rights that have been judicially defined as applying to high school students; this guarantee, at the local school district level, came about as a result of new Oregon Revised Statutes and new Oregon Board of Education policy. Third, the attitudes of high school students and principals towards student rights were polled and tallied. The results show that though both groups are not aware of all current judicial definitions, the students are more in accord with the courts decisions and current legal interpretations than are the principals. As a result, it is concluded that young Oregonians in public high schools are guaranteed rights under the United States Constitution; and with the advent of detailed rights and responsibilities codes in the local school districts, students are now allowed to exercise their rights in most Oregon high schools. The majority of students are aware of their rights, thus providing a situation in which students can function socially and politically as much as they would if they were out of high school.
393

Peer relationships and major acceleration in high school

Glazer, Sheila. January 1982 (has links)
No description available.
394

The status of drug and alcohol prevention activities in Ohio high schools : implications for the Ohio high school athletic association and the student athlete /

DiBiasio, Anthony J. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
395

A Critical Analysis of Youth and Adult Discourses about the Transition to High School on TikTok, School Websites, and in Counseling Texts

Shanahan, James M. January 2024 (has links)
This qualitative dissertation conducted a critical discourse analysis of youth and adult discourses about the transition to high school. Despite being a well-researched field, studies of the transition to high school and interventions in the transition to high school do not prioritize youth perspectives. To remedy this shortcoming and examine youth discourses, I collected data from youth giving advice about beginning high school on TikTok. By conducting a critical discourse analysis of these videos and comparing discourses from school website data and school counseling textbooks, I developed findings that showcase the complexities of the transition to high school and call into question views based solely on academic measures. Youth and adult discourses agree that timeliness, organization, and self-knowledge are important for a successful transition. Youth discourses uniquely focus on advice to avoid relational violence and present an ambivalent view of friendship. Discourses of school tours that showcase amenities and serve as advertising for the school are uniquely adult. I used these findings to theorize the transition to high school as a curriculum and call for a vision of youth and adults co-creating the transition-as-curriculum.
396

Analysis of the Interrelationship of Intelligence, Achievement, and Socio-Economic Status in a Selected Population of High-School Seniors

Jordan, Billy H. 01 1900 (has links)
The problem of this study was to determine the interrelationship of intelligence, socio-economic status, and ten subtest measures of achievement in a selected population of high-school seniors. In addition to the general problem, the specific problems were as follows: 1. To determine the relative independence of dependence of each of the variables in relation to their influence on each of the other variables. 2. To determine the degree of predictive validity with which behavioral regression equations can be used in terms of intelligence, achievement, and socio-economic status.
397

Poor urban learners' long walks to school and the influence on their school activities.

Dladla, Thamsanqa Elphas. January 2012 (has links)
Poor urban learners' long walks to school and the influence on their school activities. My study is about poor urban learners who walk long distances to school. I explore how their school trip affects their participation in school activities - co-curricular and extra curricula activities, and their understandings about the educational implications. The purpose of this study is two-fold: to understand poor urban learners' school trips through their own voices; and to reflect on the school management implications of the findings. In a case study of one school located in the Cato Manor redevelopment area of Durban, I explore Grade 10 learners' accounts of their walks to and from school and how this affects their early morning and afternoon school activities and what they understand might be the reasons and consequences in their futures. My findings are that poor urban learners encounter security risks daily on their way to school and they use various strategies to navigate those risks; learners experience unsympathetic and negative responses from some staff relating to their long walks to reach school; and the learners say that school regimes rather than the long distances they walk are jeopardising their educational aspirations. At the outset my theoretical perspective was that the school trip is an obtacle to poor urban learners' education capabilities. However my conclusion is that some school regimes are unresponsive to poor urban learners' needs and may obstruct the educational opportunities for learners to better their futures more than does their walking long distances to school. / Thesis (M.Ed.) - University of KwaZulu-Natal, Edgewood, 2012.
398

Examining the effects of drug testing on drug use at the secondary education level

Walter, Sandra M. January 1997 (has links)
The primary purpose of this study was to determine if a drug testing program could impact or change student drug use at the secondary education level. Secondary purposes were to 1) assess the perceptions of secondary education students toward licit and illicit drugs, drug use, and the newly implemented drug testing program, and 2) to examine why drug use may continue even after a drug testing program has been implemented. Data was collected through the use of questionnaires, discussion groups, and one-on-one interviews. Examination of the questionnaire data indicated that student drug use was not substantially deterred by the newly implemented drug testing program over a three to four month time period. Also, students' perceptions of the newly implemented drug testing program were mainly that of disagreement. Students commented that they felt the drug testing policy was implemented to "catch them" using drugs rather than "help them" with a possible drug addiction. One of the main reasons that the drug testing program did not have a great deterrent effect on student drug use, as suggested by the students, was that the odds were not high enough that they would be selected to be drug tested. In some instances, drug testing was not proving to be a deterrent to drug use, but rather a deterrent to participation in school activities. However, for some students, drug testing was proving to be a deterrent to drug use. As quoted from one of the discussion group members: "It's a step in the right direction." / School of Physical Education
399

Adult support for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and questioning (LGBTQQ) youth in high school : a project based upon an independent investigation /

Starfield, Amanda Louise. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.W.)--Smith College School for Social Work, Northampton, Mass., 2008. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 65-69).
400

An investigation of the relationship between socio-economic status and parental influence towards physical activity patterns in Hong Kong secondary school students /

Wong, So-Kam, Sally. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (M. Ed.)--University of Hong Kong, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 102-119).

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