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Pub Date: |
2013-00-00 |
Pub Type(s): |
Journal Articles; Reports - Research |
Peer Reviewed: |
Yes |
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Descriptors:
Homework; Self Management; Secondary School Students; Grade 8; Affective Behavior; Student Attitudes; Grades (Scholastic); Teacher Student Relationship; Feedback (Response); Correlation; Television Viewing; Gender Differences; Surveys
Abstract:
The authors examined empirical models of variables posited to predict homework management at the secondary school level. The participants were 866 eighth-grade students from 61 classes and 745 eleventh-grade students from 46 classes. Most of the variance in homework management occurred at the student level, with affective attitude and homework interest appearing as 2 significant predictors at the class level. At the student level, homework management was positively associated with learning-oriented reasons, affective attitude, self-reported grade, family homework help, homework interest, teacher feedback, and adult-oriented reasons. On the other hand, homework management was negatively associated with time spent watching television. In addition, Black girls, compared with Black boys, were more likely to manage their homework assignments. (Contains 3 tables.)
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Pub Date: |
2013-03-00 |
Pub Type(s): |
Journal Articles; Reports - Research |
Peer Reviewed: |
Yes |
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Descriptors:
Student Attitudes; Secondary School Students; Early Adolescents; Bullying; Child Rearing; Family Environment; Parenting Styles; Semi Structured Interviews; Focus Groups; Victims; Qualitative Research; Conflict; Spouses; Family Violence; Intervention; Prevention
Abstract:
The present paper uses a qualitative method in order to study the ways in which bullying is discursively organized among young adolescent students in relation to the family factors related to it. Only a few studies have linked aspects of parenting and family functioning to bullying through the use of students' discourses despite the fact that family views and policies have a significant impact on bullying and the role the adolescent takes in relation to it, as well as the phenomenon. In the present study, 5 schools with a total number of 90 students in 14 focus groups participated through semistructured interviews. The analysis was facilitated by QSR NVivo, and three themes emerged under the heading of family-related factors of bullying: (a) difficult home environment with many conflicts between the spouses or between the parents and the young adolescents, (b) parenting styles such as parental overprotection, lack of supervision, or excessive control, and (c) domestic abuse. The findings of this study confirm patterns of bullying and its relation to familial factors in the international literature. The implications of the findings are discussed in light of intervention, as well as prevention.
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Author(s): |
White, John |
Source: |
London Review of Education, v11 n1 p1-6 2013 |
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Pub Date: |
2013-00-00 |
Pub Type(s): |
Journal Articles; Opinion Papers |
Peer Reviewed: |
Yes |
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Descriptors:
Student Evaluation; Evaluation Methods; Educational Testing; Testing Programs; Educational Change; Foreign Countries; College Bound Students; College Entrance Examinations; Secondary School Students
Abstract:
It is time to replace the examination regime at 16 and 18 by something more appropriate. The coalition government has been solidifying its place by its Baccalaureate reforms at both ages, but this is a move in quite the wrong direction. Whatever the wider purposes that the examination system may serve, its core aim is to find out how well students are faring in their learning. The author argues that the examination regime has many faults, among them financial, psychological, sociological and ethical. It also has epistemological deficiencies. These are more serious in that they strike at the heart of what examining is supposed to be. As the people have seen, a fundamental problem with public examinations is that candidates are only numbers. If the basic reason for assessing students is to find out how well they are doing, for all but more rule-bound achievements assessors have to know something about examinees' wider intellectual and perhaps ethical or aesthetic horizons. And for that, assuming, rightly, that they lack extensive written evidence of this, they need personal contact with those being tested. This all points to school-based, rather than nation-wide, assessments.
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