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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.
1

Student attitudes toward introductory sociology : a comparison of different student subcultures

Kessler, Joseph M. January 1978 (has links)
This thesis investigated relationships between undergraduate students' general attitudes toward university education and specific attitudes toward introductory sociology. A sample of 238 students enrolled in introductory sociology returned a questionnaire regarding attitudes toward introductory sociology as a course and sociology as a discipline. Using self-identifying questions, students were divided into five subcultural groups based on attitudes toward general university education. The subcultures were then compared to determine differences in attitudes toward introductory sociology as well as the discipline of sociology.The primary results indicated that there were no significant differences between the different student subcultures in attitudes toward introductory sociology or sociology as a discipline and that students have a favorable attitude toward introductory sociology and sociology as a discipline although they show some dissatisfaction toward the teaching methodology used by sociologists. It was concluded that teaching methods need to be improved to minimize student dissatisfaction with introductory sociology.Ball State UniversityMuncie, IN 47306
2

A quasi-experimental study to assess the effect of an undergraduate social foundations of education course on selected student attitudes /

Bridges, Winston Thomas, January 1975 (has links)
Thesis--University of Florida. / Description based on print version record. Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 129-131).
3

Parental stress on college, high school achievement, measured intelligence, and college plans

Richards, Rosanda Rae, January 1966 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1966. / eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references.
4

Inequality and school performance the effect of the No Child Left Behind Act on the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills Test /

Martinez-Cantu, Veronica A. Rodeheaver, Daniel Gilbert, January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of North Texas, Dec., 2007. / Title from title page display. Includes bibliographical references.
5

Undergraduate Student Satisfaction with the Sociology Program at Portland State University

Sullivan, Katherine 07 November 1996 (has links)
An examination of sociology student satisfaction levels is performed and an attempt is made to explain variations in degree program satisfaction. A comparison is made between current student and alumni regarding the coursework and experiences they feel should be offered in the undergraduate degree program in sociology at Portland State University (PSU). The study population consists of all PSU students who have obtained an undergraduate degree in sociology since the program's inception and all students currently attending PSU and majoring in sociology. The typical respondent is female (the ratio of females to males being higher for current students than for alumni) and is 39 years old. Close to half of the respondents have at least one parent with a college degree. Most current students work while attending school. Current students earn less than alumni (they are also more likely to work part-time). Around half of the alumni respondents stop their educational career with their undergraduate degree. The majority of those who continued beyond the undergraduate level do so in a field outside of sociology. Alumni are predominantly employed in white collar jobs involving computers and writing -- skills they rank as important attributes of a good department. The majority of current students are full-time seniors who transferred from another institution, and chose to attend college to gain personal knowledge and to prepare for employment. When asked about their goals, the majority of current students intend to find employment in the six months after graduation. Current students are more satisfied with the degree program than alumni respondents. Age is not related to a stronger vocational orientation. The level of financial hardship incurred by alumni to attend college is positively correlated with a vocational orientation. This was not the case for current students who show no relationship between the two variables. Degree program satisfaction is positively correlated with job satisfaction, but the relationship is weak. The more vocationally oriented students and alumni are more satisfied with the degree program. Finally, the more useful the student feels sociology is in their present job, the more satisfied they are with the program.
6

“Det är nu pressen kommer igång” : En kvalitativ studie om socionomstudenters hantering av stress samt upplevelse av stress i samband med övergången från digital till fysisk undervisning / "IT'S NOW THE PRESS STARTS" : A qualitative study of social work students' handling of stress and experience of stress in connection with the transition from digital to physical education

Kugel, Natalie, Habbo, Sali January 2022 (has links)
Syftet med denna studie är att undersöka hur socionomstudenter hanterar samt upplever stress i relation till utbildningen under övergången från digital till fysisk undervisning. Målgruppen var socionomstudenter på termin två, termin tre samt termin sju på ett universitet i mellansverige. En kvalitativ intervjustudie genomfördes där en semistrukturerad intervjuguide användes och fem respondenter deltog. Teorin om hantering av stress användes för att tematisera och analysera resultatet från intervjuerna. Resultatet i studien visar att socionomstudenter upplever stress under utbildningen i samband med övergången från digital till fysisk undervisning. Resultatet visar att den upplevda stressen kan vara kopplat till osäkerhet kring restriktioner i relation till fysisk undervisning samt ökade svårighetsgrader på kurserna. Resultatet visar även att socionomstudenterna använder sig utav socialt stöd samt problemfokuserade strategier vid hantering av stress i samband med utbildningen. Slutsatsen i denna studie är att det kan vara svårt att veta vilka faktorer som påverkar socionomstudenternas upplevda stress samt att socionomstudenters använder flera strategier för hantering av stress i samband med utbildningen. / The purpose of this study was to investigate how social work students handle and experience stress in connection to their education during the transition from digital to physical education. The target group was social work students in term two, term three and term seven at a university in central Sweden. A qualitative interview study was conducted where a semi-structured interviewguide was used and five respondents participated. The coping theory was used to thematize and analyze the results from the interviews. The results of the study show that social work students experience stress during their education in association to the transition from digital to physical education. The results show that the perceived stress may be linked to uncertainty about restrictions in connection with physical education and increased degree of difficulty in the courses of the program. The results also show that the social work students use social support and problem-focused strategies when managing stress in connection to their education. The conclusion of this study is that it can be difficult to know which factors that effect social work students' perceived stress and that social work students use several strategies for managing stress in connection to their education.

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