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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.
51

Assessing Argumentation Skills

Bruun, Karen Sybille January 2024 (has links)
Skills of argument have attracted the attention of educators but remain challenging to both assess and develop. In contrast to the traditional essay, dialogic argument requires reflection on and coordination of one’s own claims with those of an interlocutor. Investigating a tool for assessing an individual’s dialogic argument skill is an objective of the present work. Building on an earlier study by the author and colleagues, and informed by philosophical writings on objectives of argumentation, undertaken here is a conceptual analysis of instances of dialogic argumentation by skilled arguers in order to discern its essential characteristics. The identified set of characteristics is then used as a basis for evaluating the argumentation skills exhibited by a sample of sixth grade students. A practical purpose is development of an assessment tool for use in educational contexts, identifying the range and variation of argumentation skills individuals bring to dialog. A value of the individual instrument referred to as a constructed dialog and developed and employed here, is that it overcomes the statistical problem created by lack of independence between participants in a dialog which requires that the unit of analysis be the pair-- thereby defeating the objective of assessing the skill of an individual. Empirical results document that young adolescents display competence in some basic skills of argumentation but, even following an intervention designed to build and exercise such skills, they continue to use these sparingly and to lack other equally fundamental ones. Discussion addresses implications for education, as well as the potential for use of the constructed dialog as an assessment tool for evaluating an individual student’s skill in argumentation and the associated understanding it reflects regarding the nature and objectives of argumentation.
52

Science interests of sixth grade students

Abdi, S. Wali January 1988 (has links)
Authors of some research studies and other concerned citizens have questioned the relevance and appropriateness of the teaching of science as it is currently done for the transescents in the middle schools. Some suggest that teachers merely attempt to teach scientific facts without regard for students' characteristics, needs, interests, and input. The premise that student input is desirable suggested the need for this investigation of the sixth grade science course. The purposes of this study were: 1. To determine the degree of interest expressed by students in ·topics and in specific items within topics, 2. To determine differences in the degrees of interest expressed by students of different teachers, 3. To determine differences in the degrees of interest expressed by male and female students in the topics taught, 4. To determine if student interest in science is related to achievement as indicated by final grade in science, and 5. To determine teachers' perceptions of their students' interests in topics and specific items within topics. A survey was conducted with an instrument that listed all of the science topics covered in the sixth grade course. Beginning seventh grade students were asked to express their interest in each concept and indicate whether they thought they were taught or not taught in sixth grade. They rated each concept as definitely interesting, of some interest, or not interesting. Appropriate statistical procedures were used to analyze the data and the following conclusions were drawn: 1. Students were generally interested in the sixth grade science program„ However, for most of the concepts students indicated "some" interest as opposed to "definite" interest. 2. There were significant differences among the levels of interest of students taught by different teachers on five topics: Classifying Animals with Backbones; Classifying Animals without Backbones; Elements and Compounds; Sources of Energy; and Atmosphere, Climates of the World, and Natural Cycles. 3. There were significant differences in the levels of interest between male and female students only on two topics: Life Cycles, Heredity, and Living Things; and Sources of Energy. 4. Student achievement and interest were significantly related only on the topics of Classifying Animals without Backbones; Properties of Light; Sources of Energy; and Electricity and Magnetism. 5. Teachers perceived all the science items to be of "definite" or greater than "some" interest to the students. / Ed. D. / incomplete_metadata
53

The Effects of Classroom Management Techniques of Students' Choice Status and Self Concepts

Shaw, Calvin C. 12 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to determine the effects that certain classroom management techniques would have on the self concepts and choice status of sixth grade students and to assess the potential of these techniques. All sixth grade students (86) enrolled in one elementary school participated in this study. There were four class sections, two of which made up the experimental group and two of which made up the control group. Only those students who were enrolled at the beginning of the study were included in the final data analysis. The IPAT Children's Personality Questionnaire, What You Do and What You Think (1963) provided a measurement of self concept. This instrument was reported to be a standardized self evaluation scale that assessed fourteen factors of personality. The sociometric test of specific criteria was used to identify students of low choice status. These two instruments were administered in January of 1972 and again in May of 1972.
54

What Changes in the Decatur Elementary School Curriculum should be Made to Meet the Needs of the Maladjusted Child

Morris, Eval, P. 08 1900 (has links)
The problem of this thesis is to study the types, causes, and effects of maladjustments found in analyzing certain pupils of the sixth grade. Also the problem seeks to determine why the present curriculum is not meeting the needs of these maladjusted children of the Decatur Elementary School.
55

Children's Causal Attributions in Success and Failure Situations and Academic Performance

Riley, Mary Margaret 08 1900 (has links)
To determine correlates of better academic performance, a scale was devised for this study to measure children's attributions to ability and effort in academic success and failure situations. These measures as well as measures of locus of control an d perceived contingency of teacher rewards and punishments were related to achievement test scores, grades, and a teacher's ratings of the helplessness or competence of classroom behaviors. Subjects were 137 sixth-graders (66 girls and 71 boys). Intercorrelations of the variables show consistent relationships between attributions to lack of effort in failure situations and to ability in success situations and better academic performance. Locus of control was only weakly related to academic achievement measures. The contingency measures, also devised for this study, were disappointingly unreliable.
56

Learned Helplessness, Locus of Control, and Academic Achievement

Mount, Suzanne Amidon 08 1900 (has links)
To determine the relationship among learned helplessness, locus of control, and academic achievement, data from 86 sixth graders were gathered and intercorrelated. Contingency of teacher-administered rewards and punishments as perceived by school children, and helpless behavior of students as judged by their teachers were measured. The Children's Nowicki-Strickland Locus of Control Scale was used to measure locus of control orientation. A positive relationship between academic achievement and locus of control was found. The contingency of reward scale was found to be predictive of academic achievement and helpless behavior. Virtually no significant relationships were found between any of the other variables and the contingency of punishment scale. Helpless behavior was found to be predictive of low academic success and an external locus of control.
57

The Effect Of Self-esteem Enrichment Bibliocounseling Program On The Self-esteem Level Sixth Grade Students

Karacan, Nurten 01 September 2009 (has links) (PDF)
This study aims to design and investigate the effect of Self-Esteem Enrichment Bibliocounseling Program on the self-esteem level of sixth grade students. Twenty four subjects (13 female, 11 male) out of 166 total sixth grade students from a university affiliated private middle school in Ankara, were randomly selected based on Coopersmith Self-Esteem Inventory (CSEI) total scores and assigned to treatment and no-treatment control group conditions. An experimental design with one selfesteem treatment group and one no-treatment control group, and two measurements (pre and post) were used to investigate the effectiveness of Self-Esteem Enrichment Bibliocounseling Program. The treatment program developed by the researcher was introduced to subjects during eight weeks. The group sessions were held once a week. Each session lasted 80 minutes. Mixed Design (one between and one within factor) Repeated-Measures Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) was employed to the pre-test and post-test CSEI scores of experimental and control group subjects. Results indicated that, the Self-Esteem Enrichment Bibliocounseling Program employed to the treatment group produced significant increase in treatment group subjects self-esteem scores.
58

An exploration of the reading strategies used by sixth grade students of varying reading abilities when reading Internet sources to answer questions / Title on signature form: Exploration of the reading strategies used by sixth-grade studetns of varying reading abilities when reading Internet sources to answer questions

Schilling, Heather Anne 06 July 2011 (has links)
This current study explored the reading strategies that emerged through the case studies of five sixth-grade students as they read Internet websites. Data was collected from student surveys, field notes, and transcripts of three separate Internet sessions that required participants to think aloud about the reading process as they explored web sites to answer questions. Despite the varying reading abilities of the subjects, upper elementary children use traditional as well as additional reading strategies when they read online articles. Using grounded theory, four reading strategy themes emerged consistently from three different reading sessions: determining importance (DI), matching skills (MS), monitoring understanding (MU), and navigating (N). Through this study, the researcher hoped to provide another snapshot of how the typical students in the upper elementary might read Internet resources which would ultimately allow classroom teachers to focus on the development of those strategies. / Department of Elementary Education
59

Étude de la performance dans la construction de la notion de proportion, en situation de groupe, selon une perspective constructiviste de l'éducation /

Côté, Carole. January 1990 (has links)
Mémoire (M.A.)--Université du Québec à Chicoutimi, 1990. / Document électronique également accessible en format PDF. CaQCU
60

Skills training and social influences for violence prevention in middle schools : a curriculum evaluation /

Orpinas, Pamela. Parcel, Guy S., January 1993 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, School of Public Health, 1993. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 164-178).

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