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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.
101

The effect of prompted self-revision on student performance in the context of open-ended problems using Randomized Control Trials

Vinayakumar, Meghana Kasal 15 May 2020 (has links)
Assessments improve student learning. More than 50 years ago, Benjamin Bloom showed how to conduct this process in practical and highly effective ways when he described the practice of mastery learning (Bloom, 1968, 1971). Open-ended problems in assignments, as opposed to more closed-ended problems where there are a small set of known correct responses, offer an opportunity for students to demonstrate their understanding by articulating their underlying thought processes. In such problems, students are required to explain in a sentence or two, how to solve a particular problem or how they arrived at a solution. Open-ended responses stimulate a thought process in a student and allow teachers to better evaluate the student’s deeper understanding of a topic beyond what can be observed in other problem types. Due to the open-ended nature of student responses to these problems, however, it is sometimes difficult for teachers to devote time to assessing student work, which causes students to apply lower effort or disengage from such problems if it is believed that a teacher is unlikely to attend to it. In order to promote better student engagement with these open-ended questions and to motivate them to apply more effort in answering these questions, I have built an infrastructure to conduct RCTs(Randomized Control Trials) with open-ended problems within ASSISTments, an online assessment tool; I have built an infrastructure that caters to machine learning models for the automated assessment of the student work. I am using this infrastructure to design an RCT that will evaluate the effect of prompted self-revision on the quality of the student responses.
102

Aid available to college students of today.

Quirk, Thomas Joseph 01 January 1943 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
103

Devising a new home report card for a secondary school.

Mullaly, John A. 01 January 1950 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
104

The presentation of a method for recording the vocational follow-up information at the Ashfield high school.

Bristol, Gilbert Dearborn 01 January 1945 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
105

Student councils in Massachusetts.

Clark, William E. 01 January 1948 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
106

Handling marginality in feminist organizations :: a study of the structural choices and the organizational problems of campus - based women's centers.

Sweeney, Joan L. 01 January 1984 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
107

Common criticisms of student teachers.

O'Donnell, James T. 01 January 1955 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
108

Effect of Review and its Format on Student Performance of a “Mixed Activity”

Dauphinee, Sharon Lee January 1975 (has links)
1 volume
109

KIDS ON THE MOVE: IMPACT OF URBAN SCHOOL MOBILITY ON THE OHIO SCHOOL RATINGS

RHODES, VIRGINIA L. 14 July 2005 (has links)
No description available.
110

A Study of Personal Attributes Associated with Marginality and Failure of Preservice Teachers in the Terminal Field Experience

Bancroft, Sharon Irene 01 January 1994 (has links)
This study examines the impact of personal attributes on student teachers' failure to pass or marginal success in the terminal field experience. Interviews were conducted of faculty at five Washington and two Oregon teacher education programs, who served as supervisors of student teaching. The interview was of the "depth" type described by Masserik (1981,) open-ended, interactive, and designed to encourage the sharing of case histories and subjective experience according to interpretive inquiry protocol as outlined by Lincoln and Guba (1985.) Its goal was to surface fundamental assumptions about and idiosyncratic language used to describe those attributes deemed critical to a preservice teacher's success. The format was flexible to allow respondents to guide and determine the final shape of the study (Goetz and LeCompte, 1984.) Interviews were tape-recorded, and transcripts re-submitted to respondents for additions, corrections, and elaborations. Interview transcripts were analyzed by a process of modified analytic induction (Bogdan and Biklan, 1982) and comparative analysis (Spradley, 1979) for recurring precepts and constructs related to personal attributes and the labels used to identify them. These were further collapsed into categories of cover and included terms, and used to construct a taxonomic model of personal attributes implicated in failure and marginality in student teachers. Initial categories which emerged were Extrapersonal, Irremediable, Intrapersonal and Interpersonal Attributes. Respondents' identified as critical the Intrapersonal and Interpersonal categories, which were further collapsed into three major attribute domains: Efficacy (including ego strength, locus of control, flexibility, and reflection) Relatedness (including empathy, self-assertion, and people-skills) and Heartfeltedness (including belief system, commitment, effort and passion.) Additional attributes identified by respondents as bridging and connecting the domains were imagination, authenticity, responsiveness and with-it-ness. Several themes emerged: 1) Respondents ascribe failure and marginality primarily to personal attributes, citing technical incompetence as causal only in combination with attribute deficits; 2) reluctance to judge subjectively produces formal evaluations that do not adequately reflect the role of personal attributes; 3) pressure to pass marginal students is seen as both cause and effect of a failure of the gatekeeping function; and 4) early identification of personal attributes likely to require and/or intractable to remediation is deemed essential.

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