278 results on '"Anderman, Eric M."'
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2. English language learner perceptions of school climate and teacher–student relationships: role of acculturation and implications for achievement
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Yough, Mike, Slaten, Christopher D., Sankofa, Nicole, Li, Jian, and Anderman, Eric M.
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- 2024
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3. Understanding Parent Aggression Directed against Teachers: A School Climate Framework
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McMahon, Susan D., Bare, Kailyn M., Cafaro, Cori L., Zinter, Kayleigh E., Garcia-Murillo, Yesenia, Lynch, Gabrielle, McMahon, Katie M., Espelage, Dorothy L., Reddy, Linda A., Anderman, Eric M., and Subotnik, Rena
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Teachers experience verbal and physical aggression from a variety of aggressors in schools worldwide. However, most school violence and aggression research is focused on students, with few empirical studies examining teacher aggression from parent offenders. This study investigated the school ecology associated with teachers' experiences of aggression from students' parents. We applied and adapted a school climate framework to examine the qualitative survey responses of 450 United States teachers who reported their most upsetting experiences involving parent aggression. Using a directed content analysis approach, teacher victimization was examined through the four school climate domains of safety, academic, institutional environment, and community. Significant socioemotional and physical safety concerns regarding verbal and physical aggression from parents, often related to school discipline practices, were identified. In the academic domain, parent aggression was associated with parent-teacher disagreements regarding grades and services, challenges with administrative leadership, and job stability concerns. The institutional environment domain illustrated where incidents took place, school resources, and policies regarding security and student placement as key factors in parent aggression. Results from the community domain highlighted issues of communication, mistrust, negative attitudes, accountability, diversity, and neighborhood and societal factors. Teacher experiences and exemplar themes provide context and further elaborate upon the school climate framework. Implications for research, school practice, and policy are presented.
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- 2023
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4. Having Someone to Talk: A Buffer against Maladaptive Academic Behavior during Adolescence?
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Ha, Seung Yon and Anderman, Eric M.
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Background: Adolescents who begin high school with a poor record of academic performance are often at risk for developing maladaptive academic behaviors, which can impede academic success in the long run. Objective: Guided by the substantial literature on the academic and motivational benefits of adolescents' conversations, this study examined the differential effects of having conversations with different socializers. This study aims to identify consolidated and generalizable effects of various sources of support in adolescent lives and contribute to educational practice for adolescent academic adaptation by examining multiple types of socializers using a large nationally representative sample. Methods: Adolescents' conversations about course-taking and personal issues with mothers, fathers, teachers, friends, and school counselors were examined for their potential buffering roles in the relationship between GPA and maladaptive academic behaviors. Data from 22,940 students (49.22% female, 9th through 11th-grade) in 690 U.S. schools from the High School Longitudinal Study of 2009 (HSLS:09) were analyzed using multiple regression analyses that incorporated longitudinal sampling weights and adjusted for clustering within schools. Results: Conversations with friends about personal issues during the 9th-grade year predicted greater subsequent maladaptive academic behavior. Students with lower 9th-grade GPAs were more likely to utilize maladaptive academic behaviors during the 11th-grade. This association, however, was less strong when students had conversations about either course-taking or personal issues with their teachers. Conclusion: Adolescent-teacher conversations about academic and personal issues can buffer against the development of maladaptive academic behaviors during high school, particularly for students who are experiencing academic challenges.
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- 2023
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5. The Role of Parents during the Middle School Years: Strategies for Teachers to Support Middle School Family Engagement
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Bachman, Hadley F., Anderman, Eric M., Zyromski, Brett, and Boone, Barbara
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Family engagement in middle school is essential to ensure optimal learning. Middle-level educators (typically Grades 5 or 6 through Grade 8 in the U.S.) play a pivotal role in helping to guide parents' understanding of their evolving roles in supporting their adolescents' academic success. Students particularly benefit from (a) parental support for learning that is developmentally appropriate, and (b) age-appropriate boundaries and positive relationships resulting in the perception that adults in their lives care. These strategies, supported by open lines of communication and effective partnerships between schools and parents, can support the academic success of middle school students and build collective trust between educators and parents. In this article, we provide research-based strategies for middle-level educators to effectively communicate with parents to bolster developmentally appropriate family engagement. These strategies are paired with examples demonstrating how the research translates into practice.
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- 2021
6. Self-Regulatory Processes within and between Diverse Goals: The Multiple Goals Regulation Framework
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Kim, Yeo-eun, Yu, Shirley L., Wolters, Christopher A., and Anderman, Eric M.
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As the pursuit of multiple goals is an inescapable reality in everyday life, students are consistently challenged to self-regulate toward achieving an array of academic goals as well as social and well-being goals. Nevertheless, prominent self-regulated learning models are limited in explaining and guiding how students can self-regulate in the context of multiple goals. Hence, we developed the multiple goals regulation framework that reconceptualizes how students establish, pursue, and adapt an array of goals. We illustrate specific processes (e.g., goal prioritizing, goal shielding, goal switching) that students can engage in to self-regulate both within and between goals. The new framework contributes to the literature in three main ways. First, we challenge the traditional conceptualization of effective self-regulated learning that focuses on the persistent pursuit of a single academic goal without considering the interdependent nature of goals. Second, we facilitate a sustainable and adaptive cycle of self-regulatory processes by highlighting the importance of navigating and negotiating between multiple academic and nonacademic goals. Finally, our effort offers a more inclusive understanding of students' lived experiences by acknowledging a diverse set of goals that are closely attached to their social and cultural identities.
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- 2023
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7. Leveraging Community Partnerships: Conversion of a Sexual Health Curriculum as a Virtual Teaching Tool for Middle Schoolers
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Allsop, Yvonne, Saxbe, Sarah, Abbott, Virginia, Ha, Seung Yon, Irwin, Mary Kay, Liu, Xingfeiyue, Martinez Calvit, Adriana I., Sheng, Yue, Tilak, Shantanu, Van Petten, Lauren, and Anderman, Eric M.
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The disruption of in-person delivery of a sexual health education curriculum to students in 19 urban middle schools in the Midwestern United States was one of many complications in education due the COVID-19 pandemic. Given time constraints and need for program delivery, community partners collaborated to convert the curriculum for virtual delivery. A team of school health education experts, sexual health education professionals, educational psychologists, and an E-learning professional worked together in curriculum conversion, leveraging knowledge and expertise for production of a virtual sexual health education curriculum tool for educators to use for teaching middle school students learning in a virtual format and as an aid for future in-person delivery.
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- 2023
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8. Investigating Social Studies Teachers' Implementation of an Immersive History Curricular Unit as a Cybernetic Zone of Proximal Development
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Tilak, Shantanu, Glassman, Michael, Lu, Monica, Wen, Ziye, Pelfrey, Logan, Kuznetcova, Irina, Lin, Tzu-Jung, Anderman, Eric M., Martinez Calvit, Adriana, Ching, Kimiko, and Nagpal, Manisha
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This qualitative study presents 27 students' insights about four teachers' implementation of an immersive Native American history curricular unit designed to equip students with digital skills to critically navigate complex, polarizing social issues. The Digital Civic Learning (DCL) curriculum used Google Suite and Google Classroom or Schoology to provide collaborative slides supporting immersive 2D-graphics, children's books/resources, immersive activities/artefact-creation, and multimodal tools (e.g., discussion posts, Flipgrid video-essays). Teachers regulated student thinking/behavior towards cohesive outcomes, and encouraged open-ended exploration, operationalizing the design framework as a zone of proximal development (ZPD). The history unit incorporates four cybernetic design features (DF) that enable teachers to steer student-centered collaboration within the curricular unit. The teacher serves four diverse roles (guide, facilitator, modeler, participant observer) mapping onto the DF. Results of focus group interviews with students, which were analyzed based on a theory-informed coding scheme and narrative inquiry, suggest ways for social studies teachers to operationalize the DCL immersive history unit as a cybernetic ZPD by adapting its basic structure to technologies accessible in their schools by adapting its basic structure to technologies accessible in their schools. [For the corresponding grantee submission, see ED627933.]
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- 2023
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9. Social Network Analysis and Its Applications to School Psychology: A Tutorial
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Gilman, Rich, Carboni, Inga, Perry, Andrew, and Anderman, Eric M.
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Social network analysis (SNA) consists of a broad set of frameworks and methods to assess how direct and indirect relationships influence individual functioning. Although interest in SNA has steadily increased in the psychological sciences, school psychology has not kept pace. This article provides a general overview of core SNA concepts, including how network data is typically collected in schools. Following this overview, we provide some caveats to considerations for school psychology researchers interested in collecting network data. Finally, we highlight the potential value of SNA to school psychologists by describing the networks of older adolescents as it pertains to aggression and the bystander effect.
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- 2022
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10. Rates and Types of Student Aggression against Teachers: A Comparative Analysis of U.S. Elementary, Middle, and High Schools
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McMahon, Susan D., Cafaro, Cori L., Bare, Kailyn, Zinter, Kayleigh E., Murillo, Yesenia Garcia, Lynch, Gabrielle, Anderman, Eric M., Espelage, Dorothy L., Reddy, Linda A., and Subotnik, Rena
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Student perpetrated violence against teachers is widespread, yet few studies differentiate teacher experiences of violence by school level (i.e., elementary, middle, and high school). This study, based upon 2,558 pre-kindergarten through 12th grade teacher survey responses, revealed differences in types of student aggression against teachers by school level. Middle and high school teachers were more likely to report verbal harassment compared to elementary school teachers. Middle school teachers were most likely to report property offenses. Elementary and middle school teachers were more likely to report physical aggression than high school teachers. Demographic predictors of teacher-directed violence were also examined at each school level. Across all school levels, urban teachers had a greater probability of experiencing a violent incident. For elementary teachers, race/ethnicity and teaching experience were also significant risk factors. Future research, policy, and practice implications and recommendations are discussed.
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- 2022
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11. Texting: A Simple Path to Building Trust
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Bachman, Hadley F., Allen, Elise C., Anderman, Eric M., Boone, Barbara J., Capretta, Thomas J., Cunningham, Patrick D., Masonheimer, August T., and Zyromski, Brett
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Middle school brings rapid developmental changes for adolescents, and parent engagement is as essential as ever. However, what worked for parent-teacher partnerships in elementary school doesn't fit so well in middle school. Adolescents are building their autonomy, and teachers must help empower parents' efforts to bolster students as independent learners through academic socialization. The authors explore how a brief texting intervention might build trust between teachers and parents, empower parents to support their children, and contribute to students' confidence and belonging in school. Results indicate that brief communications sent by text may bolster parent engagement efforts in middle school.
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- 2022
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12. The Relations of Inattention and Hyperactivity to Academic Cheating in Adolescents with Executive Functioning Problems
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Anderman, Eric M., Gilman, Richard, Liu, Xingfeiyue, and Ha, Seung Yon
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We examine the relationships of executive functioning problems (EFP) to academic cheating in a sample of 855 adolescents. Participants completed assessments of inattention, hyperactivity, and depression using the BASC-2, as well as peer-reports of externalizing behavior. After controlling for known predictors of cheating (e.g., demographics and depression), multiple regression analyses indicated that inattention emerged as a predictor of greater cheating behaviors (R[superscript 2] = 0.20). We also found that the positive relation between inattention and cheating was mediated by hyperactivity.
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- 2022
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13. Violence against Educators and School Personnel: Crisis during COVID. Technical Report
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American Psychological Association (APA), Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Ohio State University, University of California, Berkeley. Graduate School of Education, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, McMahon, Susan Dvorak, Anderman, Eric M., Astor, Ron Avi, Espelage, Dorothy L., Martinez, Andrew, Reddy, Linda A., and Worrell, Frank C.
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Current and future decisions to leave the field of education affect the quality of schools and the next generations of learners, teachers and school leaders in the nation. Physical and verbal violence directed against teachers may be exacerbating reports of high stress, transfers and leaving the profession. This technical report outlines key initial findings from the American Psychological Association (APA) Task Force's Violence Against Educators and School Personnel survey. The APA Task Force administered an online survey to teachers and other school personnel (i.e., staff, social workers, psychologists, and administrators) across the United States (U.S.) during the 2020-2021 school year. This report specifically captures interests and plans to quit or transfer, victimization experiences, perceptions of safety, and recommendations during the COVID-19 pandemic from about 15,000 participants. As teachers and schools learn to adjust to the realities of education during COVID, it is important to understand school safety concerns and how to best address them to create an effective and safe environment for students, teachers, and school staff. [For the brief, see ED622136. DePaul University is a collaborator on the report.]
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- 2022
14. Violence against Educators and School Personnel: Crisis during COVID. Policy Brief
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American Psychological Association (APA), Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Ohio State University, University of California, Berkeley. Graduate School of Education, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, McMahon, Susan D., Anderman, Eric M., Astor, Ron Avi, Espelage, Dorothy L., Martinez, Andrew, Reddy, Linda A., and Worrell, Frank C.
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The US is experiencing trends of dramatic employee turnover in our nation's schools. Current and future decisions to leave the field of education affect the quality of our schools and the next generations of learners, educators, and school leaders in the nation. Physical and verbal violence directed against educators may be exacerbating reports of high stress, transfers, and leaving the profession. In this policy brief, we present the viewpoints and concerns of school personnel across the country and offer recommendations based on their reports for what can be done to prevent and address this trend. This brief presents findings from a national survey of violence against educators and school personnel in the US. The survey was conducted from July 2020 to June 2021 as the nation faced several significant challenges (e.g., racial unrest, a global pandemic, concerns over student mental health, and the aftermath of a disputed Presidential election). School stakeholders were asked to rate their experiences during COVID (since March 2020). [For the technical report, see ED622134. DePaul University is an collaborator on this brief.]
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- 2022
15. Is Your Deeper Learning Instruction Boring Students?
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Anderman, Eric M. and Calvit, Adriana I. Martinez
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Deeper learning is great for exploring a topic in great depth, but it will fail if student motivation isn't taken into account. Researchers Eric Anderman and Adriana Calvit discuss how to align your deeper learning curriculum with motivational strategies for successful lessons.
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- 2021
16. Having Someone to Talk: A Buffer Against Maladaptive Academic Behavior During Adolescence?
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Ha, Seung Yon and Anderman, Eric M.
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- 2022
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17. Developing Sexual Self-Efficacy Beliefs During Adolescence: Do Health Teachers Really Matter?
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Allsop, Yvonne and Anderman, Eric M.
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- 2022
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18. Educational Psychology: Developing Learners, 11th Edition
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Ormrod, Jeanne Ellis, Anderman, Eric M., Anderman, Lynley H., Ormrod, Jeanne Ellis, Anderman, Eric M., and Anderman, Lynley H.
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"Educational Psychology" is known for its exceptionally clear and engaging writing, its in-depth focus on learning and its extensive concrete applications. The text's unique approach moves seamlessly between theory and application, helping you understand concepts by examining your own learning and then showing you how to apply these concepts as teachers. Compelling application-based examples and authentic artifacts are included throughout the book to help you connect educational psychology to real children and classrooms. The 11th Edition reflects the most current research on learning, development, motivation and assessment. It features extensive and integrated coverage of diversity, technology, contexts of learning and neuropsychology.
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- 2023
19. Classroom Goal Structures and Communication Style: The Role of Teacher Immediacy and Relevance-Making in Students' Perceptions of the Classroom
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Iaconelli, Ryan and Anderman, Eric M.
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We examined the relationships between teachers' communication styles and students' perceptions of the classroom goal structure. Within the context of high school health classes focused on teaching about HIV/STD/pregnancy prevention, we surveyed 456 students about their teachers' immediacy behaviors, efforts to make course content relevant, and their perceptions of the classroom goal structure. We found that the more teachers stressed the relevance of course material and used verbal and nonverbal immediacy behaviors, the more students perceived a mastery goal structure in their classrooms. Conversely, when teachers did not emphasize these immediacy behaviors, students were more likely to perceive an avoidance goal structure. Immediacy behaviors were not related to perceptions of an extrinsic goal structure. Our results suggest that teachers can help create a positive, mastery-oriented classroom by communicating with students in a way that demonstrates authentic care and concern for students' learning. Implications for future research into cues students rely on when perceiving classroom goal structurers and implications for instruction are discussed.
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- 2021
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20. Administrator Turnover: The Roles of District Support, Safety, Anxiety, and Violence from Students.
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Perry, Andrew H., Reddy, Linda A., Martinez, Andrew, McMahon, Susan D., Anderman, Eric M., Astor, Ron A., Espelage, Dorothy L., Worrell, Frank C., Swenski, Taylor, Bare, Kailyn, Dudek, Christopher M., Hunt, Jared, Martinez Calvit, Adriana I., Lee, Hyun Ji, and Liu, Xi
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Researchers have examined the importance of school administrative support for teacher safety, victimization, anxiety, and retention; however, studies to date have rarely focused on school administrators' perceptions of support by their district leaders, and its relation to administrators' anxiety/stress, safety, and their intentions to transfer or quit their jobs. In the current study of 457 PreK-12th grade school administrators in the United States, structural equation modeling was used to examine relations between administrators' perceptions of support from their district leaders and their anxiety/stress, safety, and intentions to transfer or quit their jobs. Administrator experiences of violence by student offenders served as a moderator. Results indicated that administrators' perceptions of district leaders' support were associated with lower intentions to transfer or quit their positions both directly and indirectly as a function of decreased anxiety/stress. District support was positively related to administrator safety, particularly for administrators who reported experiencing more student violence. Findings highlight the importance of district support of administrators for reducing mental health concerns and transfer/quit intentions in the context of student violence against school administrators. Implications of findings for research and practice are presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. School Goal Structures and Violence Against Educators Before and During COVID-19.
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Anderman, Eric M., Perry, Andrew H., Lee, Hyun Ji, McMahon, Susan D., Astor, Ron A., Espelage, Dorothy L., Martinez, Andrew, Reddy, Linda A., and Worrell, Frank C.
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SCHOOL environment ,VICTIMS ,SAFETY ,PSYCHOLOGY of teachers ,VIOLENCE ,RESEARCH funding ,GOAL (Psychology) ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,COVID-19 ,JOB performance ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
We examined relations of U.S. teachers' perceptions of mastery and performance goal structures to violence perpetrated against them before and during COVID-19. We hypothesized that perceptions of an instructional emphasis on mastery (i.e. mastery goal structure) would be related to lower levels of victimization, whereas perceptions of an emphasis on performance (i.e. performance goal structure) would be related to greater victimization. Using a sample of 9,363 teachers, we conducted negative binomial regression analyses, controlling for teacher and school characteristics. Perceptions of a performance goal structure were related to higher levels of teacher-directed violence, whereas perceptions of a mastery goal structure were related to lower levels of violence. Results underscore the benefits of school mastery versus performance goal structures for bolstering student motivation and teacher safety. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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22. Sparking Student Motivation: The Power of Teachers to Rekindle a Love for Learning
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Anderman, Eric M.
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Facing a classroom of attentive, focused, and ready-to-learn students is a teacher's dream. Nevertheless, this is not always the reality, and pulling students along when they don't seem interested is frustrating. Too often, a teacher's daily experience does not align with the dream. This book is here to show how you, as a classroom teacher, "can" generate enthusiasm, confidence, and joy in your students. You "can" affect motivation and make a difference in their lives. Delve into the "what," "why," and "how" by reflecting on your own experiences and unpacking multiple factors that affect motivation. Then, learn how to spark motivation using practical, research-informed strategies that address how to: (1) Hone student grouping, rewards, technology, and competition for positive impact; (2) Confront and disarm testing conflicts to make assessments a pleasant student experience; (3) Examine and empower teacher-student relationships; and (4) Rethink rules and procedures to improve behavioral outcomes.
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- 2020
23. Longitudinal Relations of Classroom Goal Structures to Students' Motivation and Learning Outcomes in Health Education
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Won, Sungjun, Anderman, Eric M., and Zimmerman, Rick S.
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Little attention has been paid to goal structures in health education, despite their well-established roles in motivation and learning. The primary goal of this study was to examine the longitudinal relations of classroom goal structures to high school students' (N = 636) motivation and learning outcomes in health education. We incorporated two aspects of motivation: self-efficacy for negotiating condom use and task values for learning new information about HIV and pregnancy prevention. Results revealed that students' perceptions of a mastery goal structure were positively related to their self-efficacy and task values, and also their knowledge and behavioral intentions one year after the health education curriculum had been delivered. In contrast, students' perceptions of an extrinsic goal structure were not related to their motivation and learning outcomes. Our findings suggest that the implementation of instructional practices focusing on mastery may enhance the efficacy of HIV and pregnancy prevention programs.
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- 2020
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24. Addressing Violence against Teachers: A Social-Ecological Analysis of Teachers' Perspectives
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McMahon, Susan D., Peist, Eric, Davis, Jacqueline O., McConnell, Elizabeth, Reaves, Samantha, Reddy, Linda A., Anderman, Eric M., and Espelage, Dorothy L.
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Much research has been dedicated to supporting school communities in combating the problem of school violence. However, violence directed toward teachers is under-investigated, and knowledge of how to support teachers is limited. This qualitative study used conventional content analysis to assess teachers' recommendations for preventing and improving the response to teacher-directed violence. The sample included 245 prekindergarten through 12th grade teachers, all of whom experienced school violence and participated in a larger national survey study on violence against teachers. Using a social-ecological framework and conventional content analysis, teacher recommendations for addressing teacher victimization were identified and organized at the individual, school, community, and society levels. Themes around conflict resolution strategies; improving policies, resources, and relationships with administrators; increasing parental involvement; and changing culture and laws were highlighted. Implications for research, practice, and policy are discussed.
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- 2020
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25. Academic, social, and well-being goals in the classroom: The dynamic interplay between multiple goals and self-regulatory processes
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Kim, Yeo-eun, Yu, Shirley L., Wolters, Christopher A., and Anderman, Eric M.
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- 2021
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26. Personalized Feedback as a Strategy for Improving Motivation and Performance among Middle School Students
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Koenka, Alison C. and Anderman, Eric M.
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Feedback is a powerful means for promoting learning, but not all forms of feedback are equally effective. Guided by a large body of feedback research, we argue that personalized feedback provides a particularly important opportunity for enhancing motivation and achievement among middle school students. In this article, we review the extant literature on personalized feedback strategies and discuss four recommended feedback principles. We provide specific examples for applying them in middle school classrooms to promote student motivation and achievement. In addition, we discuss how each recommended principle aligns with the developmental needs of middle school students. We conclude with an example of how technology can facilitate the personalized feedback process.
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- 2019
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27. "Why do people do sex?" an analysis of middle school students' anonymous questions about sexual health.
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Allsop, Yvonne, Black, Arianna, and Anderman, Eric M.
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PSYCHOLOGY of middle school students ,CURRICULUM ,RESEARCH funding ,SEX education ,HUMAN sexuality ,MASTURBATION ,TEACHING methods ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,AGE distribution ,THEMATIC analysis ,SEX customs ,SEXUAL intercourse ,STUDENT attitudes ,WELL-being - Abstract
Sexual health education should meet the needs of all students. One strategy educators can use to ensure instruction meets students' needs is to encourage the submission of anonymous questions, allowing students to gain information without fear of instructor or peer reactions. We investigated anonymous questions submitted by middle school (7th-grade, ages 12-13) students during a sexual health education curriculum in Ohio, USA. Questions (n=893) were organised into 12 categories: reproductive anatomy (n=186), LGBTQ+ topics (n=130), sexual behaviour (n=120), class-related questions (n=99), pregnancy (n=78), slang (n=52), STIs (n=44), protection/birth control (n=33), relationships (n=19), consent (n=14), health services (n=9), abstinence (n=1), and unrelated questions/comments (n=108). After categorising questions, we conducted thematic analysis with the three largest categories (reproductive anatomy, LGBTQ+ topics, sexual behaviour). Results revealed students wanted to know about the normality of the processes and functions of their bodies. Students also expressed concern and had internalised social norms about LGBTQ+ topics. Student questions about sexual behaviour suggested they wanted to learn more about the purposes and processes of sex, e.g., how people have intercourse. Findings underscore the need for inclusive, comprehensive and medically accurate sexual health education for early adolescents. We discuss implications for student health/well-being, educator development, and school staff. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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28. Associations between ethnic identity and motivational beliefs in internationally adopted youth and the mediating role of school belonging
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Koenka, Alison C., Anderman, Eric M., Anderman, Lynley H., and Won, Sungjun
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- 2020
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29. Achievement motivation theory: Balancing precision and utility
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Anderman, Eric M.
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- 2020
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30. Profiles of perfectionism and their relations to educational outcomes in college students: The moderating role of achievement goals
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Lee, You Joung and Anderman, Eric M.
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- 2020
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31. Math and Science Motivation in Internationally Adopted Adolescents
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Anderman, Eric M., Koenka, Alison C., Anderman, Lynley H., and Won, Sungjun
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Despite prior studies documenting learning difficulties among internationally adopted youth (IAY), none has explored academic motivation within this population. The current study addressed this gap by examining expectancies for success and task values in math and science among internationally adopted, domestically adopted, and nonadopted high-school students. Differences in students' math achievement and parents' beliefs about their ability were also explored. A subsample of 7,420 11th-grade students was selected from the "High School Longitudinal Study" data set (Ingels et al., 2011). After controlling for prior motivation, achievement, demographics, and clustering, analyses revealed that IAY held less adaptive motivational beliefs in math. Compared with their nonadopted peers, internationally adopted students reported lower expectancies for success, attainment value, and intrinsic value in math. Few differences in science motivation emerged, and no differences in math achievement were observed.
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- 2018
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32. Teachers' Reactions to Experiences of Violence: An Attributional Analysis
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Anderman, Eric M., Eseplage, Dorothy L., Reddy, Linda A., McMahon, Susan D., Martinez, Andrew, Lane, Kathleen Lynne, Reynolds, Cecil, and Paul, Narmada
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Violence perpetrated against teachers is prevalent and has the potential to adversely affect teachers' well-being, efficacy, and longevity in the profession. In this study, we examined teachers' reactions after having experienced violence, specifically examining the roles of attributional processes. In collaboration with the American Psychological Association, National Education Association, and American Federation of Teachers, data were collected via a survey instrument from teachers across the United States. We examined responses from 2505 participants who described the most upsetting incident of violence that had been perpetrated against them in their roles as teachers. We examined predictors of (1) communicating with others after the incident and (2) implementing intervention strategies with the perpetrators of violence. Emotions were tested as mediators of the relations between attributions and outcomes. Results indicated that characterological and behavioral self-blame were predictive of negative affect, which in turn predicted the majority of outcomes. Study limitations and implications for research and practice are discussed.
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- 2018
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33. Rural Adolescents' Reading Motivation, Achievement and Behavior across Transition to High School
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Cantrell, Susan Chambers, Rintamaa, Margaret, Anderman, Eric M., and Anderman, Lynley H.
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The authors examined 1,781 rural students' reading motivation and behavior across the transition from middle to high school. Using expectancy-value theory, they investigated how motivational variables predicted changes in reading behavior and achievement across the transition in terms of their expectancies, values, and out-of-school reading behaviors. A repeated measures analysis of variance indicated significant increases in vocabulary, intrinsic value, and out-of-school reading, whereas significant decreases were found in attainment value. Hierarchical regression analysis indicated students' subjective expectancy for success was a significant predictor of increases in both comprehension and vocabulary scores. Students' utility value interacted with intrinsic value in predicting reading comprehension scores. In terms of change in students' reading behavior, their perceptions of intrinsic value and utility value were significant predictors. Gender interacted significantly with expectancies in predicting behaviors. Findings have implications for instructional support, particularly as it relates to reading motivation across the transition from middle to high school.
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- 2018
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34. Addressing violence against educators through measurement and research
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Reddy, Linda A., Espelage, Dorothy L., Anderman, Eric M., Kanrich, Jaclyn B., and McMahon, Susan D.
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- 2018
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35. The Relation between Academic Motivation and Cheating
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Anderman, Eric M. and Koenka, Alison C.
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Academic cheating occurs frequently in schools. Cheating is a deliberative act, in that students make a conscious decision to engage in academic dishonesty. Students' achievement goals, which are malleable, often guide the ways that students make such decisions. Educators can incorporate various instructional practices and support academic policies that enhance positive motivational beliefs (e.g., mastery goals), potentially reducing academic dishonesty.
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- 2017
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36. Present and Possible Selves during Early Adolescence.
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Anderman, Eric M. and Anderman, Lynley Hicks
- Abstract
Two studies examining the role of present and possible (future) academic selves are presented. In the first study, the relations between present and future selves, and changes in grade point average between the sixth and seventh grades, were examined. Results indicated that positive present and future academic self-concepts were related to positive changes in grade point average. In addition, when adolescents' present academic selves were higher than their future academic selves, GPA increased; whereas, when present social selves were higher than future social selves, GPA decreased. In the second study, using a different sample, the relations between present and future selves, and mastery and performance-approach achievement goals were examined. Results indicated that a present good-student self-concept was related positively to both performance and mastery goals whereas a future good-student self-concept only was related positively to performance goals. A factor analysis was used on the first study. Path analysis was used to model the relationships between demographic and self variables in the second study. Results are discussed in a context of changes in academic performance and motivation during the middle school years. (Author/EMK)
- Published
- 1998
37. Adolescents' Fears and School Violence.
- Author
-
Kimweli, David M. S. and Anderman, Eric M.
- Abstract
Researchers have used numerous research strategies in an effort to understand and potentially curb violence and drug use. One such approach, which considers school violence from a social learning perspective and examines it as a result of the interaction between environmental events and personal/psychological factors, is presented in this research review. Variables which may predict violence in schools are isolated and violence was operationalized in terms of being attacked at school and avoiding certain places in school. Substance abuse was operationalized in terms of students' perceptions of substance abuse in school. Analysis of research literature indicates that older students reported higher levels of substance abuse, but lower incidents of violence than did younger students. Income, gender, and ethnicity were not strong predictors of any of the outcomes. The perceived presence of weapons in school was related to avoiding certain "dangerous" places in school and the perceived presence of weapons is not a strong predictor of actually being attacked or of perceived drug usage. The perception of rules as being inefficacious was related to more incidences of being attacked, and greater perceptions of substance abuse at school. A model of violence prevention is presented. Contains approximately 80 references. (RJM)
- Published
- 1997
38. School Violence during Early Adolescence.
- Author
-
Anderman, Eric M. and Kimweli, David M. S.
- Abstract
Although school violence is an important topic to the U.S. public, little research has examined issues of violence and bad behavior in schools, particularly among early adolescents. To fill this need, research on the transition from elementary to middle grades, to include the domain of violence, is covered in this paper. Three aspects of violence are defined: victimization at school, getting into trouble for bad behavior at school, and perceptions of school as having serious problems. Special emphasis was placed on studying predictors of violence during early adolescence. Drawing on data from a national educational longitudinal study, it was found that students reported being victimized and perceived their school as having serious problems more often in school when the transitions from elementary to the current eighth-grade school occurred during early adolescence. Students who made the transition into their current eighth-grade school during grades 3, 4, or 5 were less likely to report being victimized and were less likely to report perceiving their schools as dangerous or as having problems when compared to other students. It is thought that schools with certain grade structures tend to engage in practices that are incompatible with the developmental needs of early adolescents. Contains approximately 70 references. (RJM)
- Published
- 1997
39. Violence and Substance Abuse in Schools: Adolescents' Fears and School Violence.
- Author
-
Kimweli, David M. S. and Anderman, Eric M.
- Abstract
Violence and drug use in schools have plagued, not only American society, but societies throughout the world. To explore this issue, some of the personal, psychological, and contextual variables hypothesized to predict violence in schools were examined. Violence was operationalized in terms of being attacked at school or avoiding certain places in school. Substance abuse was defined in terms of students' perceptions of substance abuse in school. Demographic characteristics that were examined include age, gender, and socio-economic status. Some of the psychological attitudes studied were worry, hope, willingness to talk to parents about school, and being challenged at school. Data for the study came from the 1993 National Household Education Survey which included students in grades 6 through 12 (N=6,504). Analysis of results indicate that older students reported higher levels of substance abuse, but lower incidences of violence, than did younger students. Income, gender, and ethnicity were not strong predictors of any of the outcomes. The presence of weapons in school was related to avoiding certain dangerous places in school. The perception of rules as ineffective was related to more attacks and greater perceptions of substance abuse. (Contains 86 references.) (RJM)
- Published
- 1997
40. Motivation and Cheating during Early Adolescence.
- Author
-
Anderman, Eric M.
- Abstract
Why do some adolescents cheat and others do not? To answer this question, the relationship between motivational factors and self-reported cheating beliefs and behaviors was examined in a sample of early adolescents. It was hypothesized that cheating and beliefs in the acceptability of cheating would be more likely to occur when students perceived an emphasis on performance and ability, rather than on mastery and improvement. Questionnaires were administered to 285 students in an urban middle school in a southeastern state. Analysis of their answers indicate that students who reported cheating in science perceive their classrooms as being extrinsically focused (e.g., maintaining grades, getting the right answer, avoiding trouble) and perceive their school as being focused on performance and ability. Students who believe in the acceptability of cheating also report personal extrinsic goals. Likewise, students who cheat worry about school, although worry was unrelated to beliefs about the acceptability of cheating. A relationship between cheating and self-handicapping was also evident, with students who engage in self-handicapping behaviors being likely to report that they cheat. Demographic factors were unrelated to cheating and no sex differences were found. The hypothesis was largely proven correct. Contains approximately 80 references. (RJM)
- Published
- 1997
41. School Reform and the Transition to Middle School.
- Author
-
Anderman, Eric M.
- Abstract
This paper presents findings of a study that used goal orientation theory as a guiding framework for a collaborative effort with middle school principals, teachers, and parents over a 3-year period. The intervention sought to change policies and practices so that they would reflect more of a task-goal orientation and less of an ability-goal orientation. The study assessed students' perceptions of the goal emphases in their classrooms; their personal orientation to task, ability, and extrinsic goals; their reported use of deep processing strategies; and their academic efficacy beliefs in mathematics and English 1 year before the transition to middle school and again at the end of the sixth and seventh grades in both the "demonstration" school and a comparison school. Fifth-grade students scheduled to attend the demonstration school and students scheduled to attend the comparison school demonstrated no differences on any of the measures. After the transition, students in the demonstration school exhibited a more positive profile of personal goals, efficacy beliefs, and perceptions of the classroom goal structure than did students in the comparison school. Results are discussed in terms of implications for middle school reform and with regard to the use of goal-orientation theory to guide school reform efforts. Five figures and four tables are included. (Contains 71 references.) (LMI)
- Published
- 1996
42. Classroom Influences on the Value of Reading.
- Author
-
Anderman, Eric M.
- Abstract
A study examined changes in students' valuing of reading during middle childhood and early adolescence. The study evaluated reading teachers' instructional practices as well as students' achievement motivation. Subjects were 254 male students and 276 female students: 140 in third grade; 142 in fifth grade; and 248 in sixth grade. The sample of 54 teachers included 43 female and 11 male, with a range of full time teaching experience from 1 to 41 years, in 1990. In examining reading teachers' instructional practices, results indicated that female teachers use supplemental materials in reading and writing instruction more than do male teachers; teachers of younger students use parents as tutors more than do teachers of older students; and elementary school teachers use rewards and parents as tutors more than do middle school teachers. In examining student-level data, results indicated that females and younger children value reading more than do males and older children. Finally, student and teacher level data were combined, using hierarchial linear modeling (HLM). Findings reveal: (1) performance oriented instructional strategies and cooperative learning techniques are negatively related to gains in valuing of reading over time; (2) the relationship between self-concept of ability and valuing of reading is somewhat lower in classrooms that are ability-grouped for reading instruction; and (3) reading is valued less in middle school than in elementary school. (Contains 9 tables of data and 29 references.) (Author/CR)
- Published
- 1996
43. Changes in Achievement Goal Orientations after the Transition to Middle School.
- Author
-
Anderman, Eric M. and Midgley, Carol
- Abstract
Studies suggest that the transition to middle school is associated with a decline in motivation and performance for a number of children. This longitudinal study examined changes in motivation in English and mathematics across and after the transition from elementary to middle school. Of particular interest were changes in personal goal orientations (task and ability), perceptions of classroom goal structures (task and ability), academic efficacy, and grades in school. Main effects and interactions of gender, ability, subject, and time were highlighted in the surveys. Data were collected from students as they progressed from fifth to seventh grade. Results suggested that students become somewhat less focused on task goals and more focused on ability goals when they enter middle school. Personal task goals, ability goals, and academic efficacy changed both during and after the middle school transition. Students' task goals declined across the three grades, while ability goals increased across the grade five-grade six transition for English, and then decreased between grades six and seven. Ability goals in math did not change much across the three years. Academic efficacy dramatically decreased across the transition, and then increased some after the transition between grades six and seven. Four tables present statistical analysis. Contains 66 references. (Author/RJM)
- Published
- 1996
44. The Middle School Experience: Effects on the Math and Science Achievement of Learning Disabled Adolescents.
- Author
-
Anderman, Eric M.
- Abstract
This study examined the relationship between transition from elementary to middle school and achievement gaps in math and science in eighth graders with (N=296) and without (N=1608) learning disabilities (LD). An abundance of research suggests that motivation and achievement decline during the early adolescent years, and that this decline is often attributable to the transition from elementary to middle grade schools during early adolescence. Using data from the National Education Longitudinal Study, the study found that on average there is a strong gap in achievement between LD and non-LD early adolescents. Hierarchical linear modeling was used to examine school effects on these achievement gaps. Results indicated that the gap between LD and non-LD adolescents is greatly reduced for adolescents who do not make a school transition until at least the ninth grade. Findings suggest that the policies and practices of typical middle grade schools are particularly incompatible with the educational and psychological needs of early adolescents with LD. (Contains 39 references.) (Author/DB)
- Published
- 1996
45. Motivation and News-Seeking Behavior.
- Author
-
Linnenbrink, Lisa and Anderman, Eric M.
- Abstract
This study focuses on students' acquisition of current events knowledge, attitudes about the news, and motivation to seek the news as it relates to news seeking behavior and studying current events in school. A current events knowledge test of 53 true/false items and a questionnaire assessing motivation strategy use toward current events were administered to 451 students from 5 midwestern high schools, 1 southeastern high school, and 1 middle school. A sub-sample of the students from two classrooms in one of the schools was further examined with teacher interviews on how they incorporate the study of current events into their classrooms and their goals for use of current events knowledge. In general, those students who watched the least amount of television news and read the news the least had the poorest responses on the current events knowledge test, news attitudes measures, and motivational measures, while those who watched television and read the news the most had the most adaptive responses on these measures. Contains 12 references. (EH)
- Published
- 1995
46. Learning To Value Mathematics: Individual Differences and Classroom Effects.
- Author
-
Anderman, Eric M.
- Abstract
Hierarchical linear modeling was used to examine the effects of individual and classroom level factors on reported value of mathematics for students (n=557) in grades three, four, and six. Data for this study came from the "Childhood and Beyond" study. Results indicated that the use of computers and computer efficacy were both positively related to students' valuing of mathematics. A negative relationship was found between teachers giving parents positive feedback and students' levels of valuing math in classrooms. This is in contrast to prior studies that suggest parents' ratings of students' abilities in math are related to students' interest in math. It was determined that grade level is not a significant predictor of valuing mathematics, but that attending a middle level school has detrimental effects on students' valuing of mathematics. The results of the study suggest that teachers do make a difference and that, after controlling for various student characteristics, classroom-level variables still have important effects on students' valuing of mathematics. (SYB)
- Published
- 1995
47. Achievement Goals and Current Events Knowledge.
- Author
-
Anderman, Eric M. and Johnston, Jerome
- Abstract
This study examines the effects of school contexts, individual differences, and motivational goals and benefits on current events knowledge. A review of the literature focuses on motivation study of goal theory and self-efficacy. The sample includes 798 students from nine high schools (grades 9-12) in diverse geographical locations and of various socioeconomic levels and who had access to Channel One news programs in the school. Data came from a pre-test and post-test, conducted in February and May 1993. Findings suggest that students who study current events in school or watch TV news in school know more, are more interested, and are more likely to engage in news-seeking behaviors outside of school. The study presents a model which suggests that the relationship between school/contextual factors and current knowledge is mediated by goals, efficacy beliefs and news-seeking behaviors beyond the classroom setting. The question also is raised about the difference between "watching the news" and "studying the news" in the classroom. Contains 43 references. (EH)
- Published
- 1994
48. Motivational Influences on Adolescents' Current Events Knowledge.
- Author
-
Anderman, Eric M. and Johnston, Jerome
- Abstract
This paper describes a study that examined relationships among students' goals, efficacy beliefs, news-seeking behavior, and current events knowledge. The study expands on previous work on students' achievement related goals by examining the effects of goals and self-efficacy on knowledge of current events, a sub-domain of social studies. A sample of students from four middle schools and nine high schools (n=1148) completed a current events test, and a motivational inventory in May 1993. The sample was 50 percent male and 50 percent female, and 55 percent of the students studied current events in school as part of a course. Using path analysis, the researchers found that males in middle schools are more self-efficacious toward the news, while males in high schools are more performance oriented and seek news outside of school more than females. The study found that grade point average (GPA) is related positively to holding mastery goals toward the news for high school, but not middle school students. In both samples, mastery and performance goals only have indirect effects on knowledge, through either efficacy beliefs or news seeking behavior. In both samples, students who study current events in school are less mastery oriented than those who do not study the news in school (Author/DK)
- Published
- 1994
49. Present and Possible Selves Across the Transition to Middle Grades School.
- Author
-
National Center for School Leadership, Urbana, IL. and Anderman, Eric M.
- Abstract
Changes in students' (N=313) present and possible "good student" selves over the transition from elementary school to middle school are examined by this study. Findings indicate that both present and possible selves decline over the transition, and that the decline is greater for males than for females. Holding mastery goals is related to self-schemata at elementary and middle school. Self-efficacy is related to present and possible selves only during elementary school. Holding performance goals becomes related to one's future possible self during the sixth grade. This result corroborates other research suggesting that middle school environments are more focused on grades, comparisons, and relative ability than elementary schools. Three tables and one figure present data and statistical analysis. One table presents sample items for the student efficacy and goal orientation scales that were used in this study. Contains 11 references. (Author/TS)
- Published
- 1994
50. Perceptions of Mathematics Classroom Climate: A Multilevel Study.
- Author
-
Anderman, Eric M.
- Abstract
One framework for conceptualizing the study of classroom effects on student motivation asserts that students' perceptions of the classroom environment mediate the relationship between teacher practices and student performance outcomes. This study examined within- and between-classroom effects on 356 fifth-grade students' perceptions of the quality of instruction in their mathematics classes. Results suggest that a positive classroom instructional climate is related to several individual difference variables, including low perceptions of differential treatment by gender and ability. Several classroom level variables were related to positive class instructional climate, including the use of extrinsic motivational incentives, and the infrequent use of individualized forms of instruction. Teachers who used "mastery" oriented instructional strategies tend to have students in their classes who perceive a diminished relationship between teacher expectancies and classroom instructional climate. Contains 10 references. (MKR)
- Published
- 1993
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