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Effect of Teaching Phonological Awareness Using iPad Applications on Reading FluencyMaffit, Rebecca 21 May 2013 (has links)
This study looks at the effect a phonics based iPad application has on three students' oral reading fluency scores. The results of this study are varied and do not show a functional relationship between the iPad application and correct words per minute (CWPM). Some of the data is promising, and CWPM increased in the desired direction. The iPad application used in this study could be beneficial to some students. More research needs to be conducted in order to prove a functional relationship between iPad applications teaching phonics and reading fluency.
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The Male Group Effect: Measuring Moral Judgment and Reasoning Among Two Cohorts of First-Year College MenTerry, Daniel J. 21 May 2013 (has links)
What kinds of experiences, interventions, or programs within the college context appear to foster or enhance moral growth beyond what one would expect developmentally from any 18-22 year old student? This quasi-experimental study is directed toward the effects of a particular aspect of the college environment on the moral judgment development of a particular group of students; specifically, first-year college men. The study investigates whether a certain cohort of men, Alpha Alpha (AA), who participate in a non-traditional, intentional, character-driven approach to fraternity membership demonstrated a rate of growth in moral judgment and reasoning that was greater than that of a similar cohort of men, Beta Beta (BB), who participated in a traditional approach to fraternity membership. The Defining Issues Test, Version 2 (DIT2), a neo-Kohlbergian instrument used to measure moral judgment and reasoning, was used to assess change/growth in moral development over time.
Differences in the pre-test moral judgment scores of AA and BB were found, though the differences did not reach significance (.075, p<.05). Strong statistically-significant differences in mean moral judgment scores were found in post-test test scores for AA and BB (.008, p<.05), though both groups saw decreases in group moral judgment scores from pre- to post-test. An analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) revealed that there were significant differences in the change/growth rates of AA and BB (.048, p<.05). An examination of the moral judgment and reasoning scores of AA and BB alongside normative national DIT2 data for males concluded that the post-test scores of BB were significantly lower than that of the mean for first-year undergraduate men. In discussing findings, the researcher notes the mitigating effect of AA's intervention; that is, rather than fostering growth in moral judgment and reasoning, it only appears to slow what might otherwise be a significant regression in moral judgment as a result of a powerful male group effect found in fraternities. The nature of this group effect is explored, and implications for practice and research are offered.
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Identifying Reading Strengths and Challenges of a Student with Severe Learning DisabilitiesSimons, Jacqueline Elizabeth 21 May 2013 (has links)
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to develop an accurate reading development profile of a 10-year-old boy diagnosed with ADHD and dyslexia including his reading strengths and challenges. The profile was used to provide his teachers in the following grades with suggestions for meeting his needs in reading and content area subjects. The Filtering, Analyzing, and Diagnosing (FAD) reading difficulties model developed by Mokhtari, Niederhauser, Beschroner, and Edwards (2011) was used for collecting and analyzing data to identify and understand reading patterns. Data were collected from three sources: Home, School and Child and analyzed in three phases: Filtering, Analyzing, and Diagnosing. Results indicated the student's greatest challenge was in reading fluency and decoding words within passage context. Strengths included vocabulary and a desire to read fluently.
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The Effects of Incorporating Classroom Pets into the Fourth Grade Science CurriculumAdmire, Maegan Louise 21 May 2013 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to identify and promote successful teaching strategies that incorporate classroom pets in order to influence student engagement, achievement, and perceptions of animals. This was a small action research study conducted in a fourth grade science classroom. Both quantitative and qualitative data were obtained including, pre- and post-assessments, student interviews, researcher field notes, researcher journal, and student work. The results of this study revealed an increased academic achievement from the pre- to post-assessment, increased student observations and descriptions when discussing the animals, and increased student empathy toward the animals. The results also revealed that the teacher's incorporation of the animals within the science curriculum grew in ease over time, and that the animals provided the educator with opportunities to teach non-content related lessons and also a concrete experience for the teacher to apply and extend the science content.
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Does Attainment of Piaget's Formal Operational Level of Cognitive Development Predict Student Understanding of Scientific ModelsLahti, Richard Dennis 23 May 2013 (has links)
Knowledge of scientific models and their uses is a concept that has become a key benchmark in many of the science standards of the past 30 years, including the proposed Next Generation Science Standards. Knowledge of models is linked to other important nature of science concepts such as theory change which are also rising in prominence in newer standards. Effective methods of instruction will need to be developed to enable students to achieve these standards. The literature reveals an inconsistent history of success with modeling education. These same studies point to a possible cognitive development component which might explain why some students succeeded and others failed. An environmental science course, rich in modeling experiences, was used to test both the extent to which knowledge of models and modeling could be improved over the course of one semester, and more importantly, to identify if cognitive ability was related to this improvement. In addition, nature of science knowledge, particularly related to theories and theory change, was also examined. Pretest and posttest results on modeling (SUMS) and nature of science (SUSSI), as well as data from the modeling activities themselves, was collected. Cognitive ability was measured (CTSR) as a covariate. Students' gain in six of seven categories of modeling knowledge was at least medium (Cohen's <italic>d</italic> >.5) and moderately correlated to CTSR for two of seven categories. Nature of science gains were smaller, although more strongly correlated with CTSR. Student success at creating a model was related to CTSR, significantly in three of five sub-categories. These results suggest that explicit, reflective experience with models can increase student knowledge of models and modeling (although higher cognitive ability students may have more success), but successfully creating models may depend more heavily on cognitive ability. This finding in particular has implications in the grade placement of modeling standards and curriculum chosen to help these students, particularly those with low cognitive ability, to meet the standards.
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The Damage DoneConde, Kelly Beth 23 May 2013 (has links)
Conde, Kelly, M.A., Spring 2013 Journalism
The Damage Done
Chairperson: Dennis Swibold
The water that ran from Helen Rickers faucet stank of rotten eggs and of chemicals. It ran orange and greasy. It stained her clothes and clung to her skin.
Ricker lives on the Fort Peck Indian Reservation, three miles north of Poplar, Mont. From Rickers home, the oil wells from the East Poplar oilfields can be seen in the distance. Her water started to change in the early 1970s, twenty years after the first oil well was drilled. It took about that long for the contamination from poorly regulated drilling practices and leaking wells to reach her water supply. Since then, Ricker and her neighbors have struggled for clean water.
Twenty years after the contamination turned Rickers water undrinkable, it reached Poplar. It went from contaminating the water of 20 homes, to poisoning an entire city water supply.
Poised on the edge of the highly productive Bakken formation, Poplar was caught straddling two eras. As the town scrambled for a solution to their water problems brought on by oil practices from decades ago, the prospect of rapid oil production flickered in the near future. And just as the towns water was saved by way of a new water treatment plant funded by American taxpayers, the Bakken started to boom. If the boom reaches the reservation, it means a way out of economic hardship, but for those still dealing with the consequences of the last boom, it means fresh wounds on an already scarred land.
The Damage Done sheds light on the long-term effects of unharnessed oil and gas production. It also tells the scientific story of oil production and some ways the industry and regulatory agencies have changed to prevent such environmental disasters from happening in the future.
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Learning An Ontogenetic Skill: A Constraints ApproachFerrandino, Josephine Helen 23 May 2013 (has links)
Abstract
LEARNING AN ONTOGENETIC SKILL: A CONSTRAINTS APPROACH
By Josephine Ferrandino, M.S., 2013
Department of Kinesiology
Texas Christian University
Thesis Advisor: Dan Southard, Ph.D.
This study examined the effects of goal constraints (accuracy, velocity, or both) on the performance and learning of an ontogenetic skill. Participants were undergraduate female college students (N=16), with no prior golf experience. Participants were randomly placed into one of 4 groups - Control, Accuracy, Velocity, or Accuracy and Velocity. Participants in all groups practiced a golf swing for 6 sessions and returned one-week following practice for a retention session. All participants were told that the goal of the golf swing was to hit the ball with both velocity and accuracy. There was no instruction concerning the swing given to participants in any of the four conditions. Participants in the Control group received no augmented information during practice or retention. The participants in the Accuracy condition were reminded to emphasize accuracy during practice sessions. The participants in the Velocity condition were encouraged to increase their velocity of swing during practice sessions. The participants in the Accuracy and Velocity condition were encouraged to focus on increasing both velocity of swing and accuracy during practice sessions. Analysis of motor pattern change indicated that participants in the velocity conditions improved their swing with practice and retained their swing better than those in the Accuracy alone condition and Control condition. It was concluded that scaling up on the constraint of velocity will improve the use of the order parameter (open kinetic chain). Results indicate that complex skills such as a golf swing can be learned without the aid of instruction by scaling up on a constraint that becomes a control parameter.
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Physical activity during recess and physical education class in childrenTully, Robyn E. 18 January 2008 (has links)
Children do not acquire adequate amounts of physical activity (PA), there for it is important to identify opportunities to increase PA. The purpose of this thesis is to characterize PA during the school day, and to determine the effectiveness of a short term recess PA intervention. Children from two schools (N=75, ages 7-10) wore pedometers for five days. A subset of subjects (N=17) also wore accelerometers. Step counts were recorded 9-10 times/day to obtain PA information for six daily periods. Males were more active than females (P<0.001, 12.331, 9439 step/day respectively). Recess contributes 30.6% of daily step counts, while PE contributes 17.2%. Sex, period duration, weather and location of PA period all were factors for PA. The intervention was effective in increasing PA by a mean 985 (±1808) steps/day (P<0.05). Recess is window of opportunity in which to improve on PA and pedometer interventions are effective in this area. / February 2008
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Alliance and Outcomes in Counseling Canadian Aboriginal PeoplesShaw, Sidney 17 July 2013 (has links)
This study evaluated predictors of outcome in counseling with Canadian Aboriginal peoples. Participants in the study included 373 Canadian Aboriginal clients receiving outpatient counseling at Calgary Counselling Centre in Alberta, Canada between October 2004 and November 2011. Outcome in this study was measured using the Outcome Questionnaire 45 (OQ-45) and predictor variables consisted of client demographics, counselor training level, and client ratings of the therapeutic alliance. The alliance was measured using the Session Rating Scale (SRS). Outcome variables, as measured by the OQ-45, were most often analyzed categorically and consisted of four different possible categories of change as measured from first to last session. Client OQ-45 scores were also analyzed as a continuous variable to examine the relationship between therapeutic change and therapeutic alliance. The researcher found significant results in the following areas: 1) primary presenting problem predicted client level of distress at intake; 2) education level of the client was predictive of number of sessions attended; 3) client ratings of the alliance at the second and third sessions were predictive of therapeutic change. As hypothesized, there was no significant difference in outcome based on counselor training level. The results are discussed in the context of improving clinical practice in real-world clinical settings, considerations in working with Native peoples, and the need for ongoing outcome monitoring. Limitations of the study, implications of the findings, and recommendations for future research are discussed.
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The Relationship Between School Board Governance Behaviors and Student AchievementLorentzen, Ivan J. 17 July 2013 (has links)
This non-experimental quantitative study examined the relationship between school board governance behavior (i.e. boardsmanship) and student achievement scores. Pearson's r correlation was utilized to examine the relationship.
Boardsmanship was defined by scores on the Board Self-Assessment Survey (BSAS) © designed by, and used with permission from, the Washington State School Directors Association (WSSDA). The BSAS consisted of a 69 item survey organized around 5 board Standards, 22 Benchmarks, and 69 Key Indicators (i.e. survey items). Board members from all 121 high school districts in Montana were invited to participate in the online survey. Seventy-four board members from 27 school districts returned complete and useable surveys for a response rate of 22.3% (27/121).
Student achievement was defined by scores in reading, math, and science assessed by Montana's Criterion Reference Test (CRT) given to all 10th graders. CRT scores were obtained from the Office of Public Instruction in Helena, MT. Data from both the BSAS and CRT were collected during the spring of AY 2011-2012.
Statistically significant relationships were found between several aspects of student achievement and numerous elements of boardsmanship. Student achievement significantly correlated with some aspect of all five board Standards such as (a) providing responsible school district governance, (b) setting and communicating high expectations for student learning with clear goals and plans for meeting those expectations, (c) creating the conditions district wide for student and staff success, (d) holding the school district accountable for meeting student learning expectations, and (e) engaging the community. School boards that accomplish the items identified in the BSAS govern districts with the highest achievement scores. Each of these board Standards were further explicated through the Benchmarks and statistically significant Key Indicators which describe specific actions the board could take in order to participate in district efforts to raise student achievement. Boards do play a role in student achievement and their actions matter.
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