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Haynes, Tara L.; Ruthig, Joelle C.; Perry, Raymond P.; Stupnisky, Robert H.; Hall, Nathan C. – Research in Higher Education, 2006
Although optimism is generally regarded as a positive dispositional characteristic, unmitigated optimism can be problematic. The adaptiveness of overly optimistic expectations in novel or unfamiliar settings is questionable because individuals have little relevant experience on which to base such expectations. In this four-phase longitudinal…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Intervention, Risk, Retraining
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Perry, Raymond P.; Hladkyj, Steven; Pekrun, Reinhard H.; Clifton, Rodney A.; Chipperfield, Judith G. – Research in Higher Education, 2005
Although self-initiative is recognized as instrumental to success in college, some students do not take responsibility for their academic development and fail to make the transition from high school to college. This problem is exacerbated when bright, highly skilled students drop courses or quit college entirely. Research into this paradox of…
Descriptors: College Students, Academic Failure, Academic Achievement, Longitudinal Studies
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Perry, Raymond P.; Dickens, Wenda J. – Research in Higher Education, 1987
A study that examined how four types of feedback affected perceived control and student achievement in different instruction settings is described. College students wrote an aptitude test that provided either contingent, low noncontingent failure, high noncontingent failure, or no-performance feedback. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Aptitude Tests, College Faculty, College Instruction
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Schonwetter, Dieter J.; Clifton, Rodney A.; Perry, Raymond P. – Research in Higher Education, 2002
Examined the relationships between student differences, prior experience with the subject material, past performances, teaching behaviors, and perceived learning and achievement. Found that achievement is affected by test anxiety and high school GPA, and that content-unfamiliar students, unlike content-familiar students, are more positively…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, College Students, Familiarity, Higher Education
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Magnusson, Jamie-Lynn; Perry, Raymond P. – Research in Higher Education, 1992
A study investigated college students' (n=226) academic help-seeking behavior under task-involved and ego-involved classroom conditions, students' attributions for failure, and two types of help source (instrumental, in which the student finds his own solution, and executive, in which a solution is disclosed). Implications for classroom teaching…
Descriptors: Academic Ability, Attribution Theory, Classroom Techniques, College Instruction
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Perry, Raymond P.; And Others – Research in Higher Education, 1993
Attributional retraining, the restructuring of an individual's explanations for events in his environment, is proposed as one method of enhancing college student motivation and achievement, particularly for high-risk students. Drawing on previous research and theory, the most promising strategies for using attributional retraining with this…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attitude Change, Attribution Theory, Change Strategies
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Perry, Raymond P.; And Others – Research in Higher Education, 1994
A study with 288 college psychology students investigated the relationship between students' perceptions of the reasons for their academic success or failure (explanatory schemas) and the quality of instruction. Results are discussed in terms of the role of explanatory schemas as buffers or compensations for ineffective instruction. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: Academic Ability, Academic Achievement, Attribution Theory, College Instruction