31 results on '"SOCIAL conditions of students"'
Search Results
2. Identifying teenage sexual abuse victims by questions on their daily lives.
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Mignot, Stéphanie, Fritel, Xavier, Loreal, Marie, Binder, Philippe, Roux, Marie-Thérèse, Gicquel, Ludovic, and Ingrand, Pierre
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CHILD abuse , *CHILDREN'S sexual behavior , *DOMESTIC violence , *SOCIAL life & customs of students , *SOCIAL conditions of students - Abstract
Abstract Child sexual abuse (CSA) is an international public health problem. While general practitioners are perhaps ideally positioned to detect CSA, a lack of simple tools and their discomfort in bringing up such a sensitive subject reduce the likelihood of its being brought up and flagged in primary care. However, it may be possible to identify victims of CSA by observing its consequences on student well-being, overall well-being and risk behavior. This study investigate the predictive value of daily life events possibly associated with CSA: relationship difficulties with peers and teachers, autolytic attempts, self-mutilation, low self-esteem, addiction, poor body image, physical and psychological violence, low quality of sleep. We carried out a crosssectional survey involving a representative sample of 1719 15 year-old adolescents enrolled in 192 randomly drawn schools from two French regions. In their classrooms, they filled out a version of the Health Behavior in School-Aged Children international (HBSC) self-questionnaire. Compared to their coevals, these youth were more likely to regularly consume cannabis, OR 4.40 [1.85; 10.48] and to express fear of violence, OR 2.05 [1.28; 3,28]. They were less likely to feel satisfied about their weight, OR 2.24 [1.13; 4.40] and more likely to feel unaccepted by others, OR 1.65 [1.03; 2.65]. The C-index (concordance statistic) taking into account gender, regular cannabis consumption, fear of violence, not having the right weight and not being accepted by others, was 0.79. The C-index also including self mutilation and autolytic attempts was 0.83. Indirect thematic could likewise facilitate detection and identification of CSA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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3. The impact of the ERASMUS program on cultural identity: A case study of an Arab Muslim female student from Israel.
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Haj-Yehia, Kussai and Erez, Marlene
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FOREIGN students , *ARAB women , *MUSLIM students , *POLITICAL participation , *PRESSURE groups , *STATUS (Law) , *SOCIAL conditions of students - Abstract
Abstract This article presents a case study of a female Arab Moslem student from Israel who participated in the Erasmus Program student exchange program in Germany. The main goal of the study was to examine dilemmas relating to her cultural identity abroad within the Erasmus Program and to understand the impact of her studies abroad on her social, religious and political behavior associated with her identity. Qualitative methodology employed content analysis to interpret the reflective journals she was asked to write in English as a part of a class assignment. The main findings of the study show that the Erasmus Program experience was in general successful allowing the student to interact with and learn about the culture of the host country and the cultures of other international students although she faced complex dilemmas regarding her cultural identity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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4. Statistical Characteristics of Usage Behavior of Air Conditioners in The University Students’ Dormitories.
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Chen, Shuqin, Zhuang, Yifan, Zhang, Jingyuan, Fu, Yanxi, and Zhang, Hong
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HEATING & ventilation of college buildings ,COST of living ,LANDSCAPE architecture & energy conservation ,SOCIAL conditions of students ,AIR conditioning equipment ,INTERIOR decoration of dormitories - Abstract
With the improvement of students’ living standard in Chinese universities, more and more air conditioners have been installed in the students’ dormitories in recent years, and energy use of dormitories presents the rigid growth. Therefore, it is significant for university energy conservation and power planning to understand the characteristics of usage behavior of air conditioners in dormitories. Aiming at this, by taking a comprehensive Chinese University as an example, questionnaire surveys were carried out in the summer of 2016, to understand students’ air-conditioning usage behavior, and 474 questionnaires were collected. Real-time monitoring of the operation of air conditioners and outdoor and indoor temperature were conducted in four rooms of student dormitories from July to October in 2016. The usage characteristics of air conditioners are analyzed. Variance analysis is used to verify the significance of gender, discipline and educational level on the usage of air conditioners. The relationship between the usage probability of air conditioners and the outdoor temperature is further established by Logistic Regression. The results provide data support for energy consumption prediction and power planning of university campuses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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5. Race/ethnicity and marijuana use in the United States: Diminishing differences in the prevalence of use, 2006-2015.
- Author
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Keyes, Katherine M., Wall, Melanie, Feng, Tianshu, Cerdá, Magdalena, and Hasin, Deborah S.
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PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of marijuana , *ETHNICITY & society , *ETHNICITY , *HISPANIC American students , *BLACK students , *MONITORING the Future study , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *SOCIAL conditions of students - Abstract
Background: Marijuana use has been decreasing in the past several years among adolescents, though variation in the extent and rate of decrease across racial/ethnic groups is inadequately understood.Methods: The present study utilized nationally-representative data in Monitoring the Future from 2006 to 2015 to examine trends over time in past 30-day marijuana use. We examine whether differences in trends over time by race and ethnicity also differ by individual-level, school-level, and state-level factors. Sample included 131,351 8th grade students, 137,249 10th grade students, and 123,293 12th grade students; multi-level models and difference-in-differences tests were used.Results: In 10th grade, Black students had a positive linear increase in marijuana use (est=0.04, SE=0.01, p<0.001), and the magnitude of the increase was significantly greater than among non-Hispanic White students (est=0.38, SE=0.009, p<0.001). The increase trend among Black students was greater among those in large class sizes. In 12th grade, all racial ethnic groups except non-Hispanic Whites demonstrated a linear increase in prevalence across time. The magnitude of the increase among Hispanic students was greater among those in urban areas and large class sizes. The magnitude of the increase among Black students was greater in states with a medical marijuana law before 2006 (est=0.06, SE=0.03, p=0.02), among other state-level covariates.Conclusion: Together these results suggest that the next stage of public health approaches to reducing the harms associated with adolescent drug use should attend to shifting demographic patterns of use among adolescents and ensure that services and programmatic approaches to adolescent prevention are applied equitably. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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6. Using sociometric techniques to assess the social impacts of inclusion: Some methodological considerations.
- Author
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Avramidis, Elias, Strogilos, Vasilis, Aroni, Katerina, and Kantaraki, Christina Thessalia
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SOCIOMETRIC techniques ,SOCIAL integration ,SOCIAL conditions of students ,SOCIAL cognitive theory ,SPECIAL classes (Education) - Abstract
In recent years, sociometric techniques have been increasingly used to assess friendship development in children with special educational needs integrated in regular educational settings. In this paper, the findings produced by different techniques are contrasted with a view to examining whether the variable findings reported can be attributed to the technique employed. The analysis revealed that peer nominations have been used to determine pupils' social status and have overwhelmingly produced negative results. Peer ratings have been used to ascertain the level of acceptance pupils enjoy within their class network and have also produced negative results. Social Cognitive Mapping has been used to obtain information about the nature of social networks and the relations among peers and has produced mixed to positive results. As such, Social Cognitive Mapping could be viewed as a more robust approach that addresses more thoroughly the complexities of young children's social relations than the other two classic sociometric techniques. The paper concludes with highlighting methodological challenges surrounding the application of sociometric techniques and advocates their embedding within innovative multi-method research designs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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7. Facilitating the social participation of pupils with special educational needs in mainstream schools: A review of school-based interventions.
- Author
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Garrote, Ariana, Sermier Dessemontet, Rachel, and Moser Opitz, Elisabeth
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INCLUSIVE education ,MAINSTREAMING in special education ,SOCIAL conditions of students ,SOCIAL participation ,TEACHER work groups ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Inclusive education of pupils with special educational needs (SEN) has become a global trend. However, a considerable number of studies have shown that mere enrolment in mainstream classrooms is not enough to support the social participation of pupils with SEN. These children are at risk of experiencing difficulties in their involvement with peers at school. Thus, the question arises of how social participation can be fostered in mainstream classrooms. A systematic review of 35 studies was conducted to investigate which interventions are effective in inclusive mainstream preschool and elementary classrooms. Teaching interaction strategies to typically developing pupils, group activities in the academic context (cooperative learning and peer-tutoring), support groups for pupils with SEN, and training paraprofessionals to facilitate social interactions, were found to improve the social participation of pupils with SEN in general education classrooms. Nevertheless, there is need for more intervention studies implementing a variety of strategies and including different groups of pupils with SEN. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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8. Teleconsultation: The use of technology to improve evidence-based practices in rural communities.
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Bice-Urbach, Brittany J. and Kratochwill, Thomas R.
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PSYCHIATRIC consultation , *PROBLEM solving , *STUDENTS' conduct of life , *EMOTIONS , *SOCIAL conditions of students , *RURAL school administration , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Problem-solving consultation in schools has been found to be an effective method of service delivery to support teachers who are struggling to address student social–emotional behavioral (SEB) concerns. Despite its benefits, a number of barriers (e.g., lack of time and limited access to trained professionals) restrict the use of consultation within schools, especially in rural settings. The purpose of the study was to examine the impact of teleconsultation designed to improve behavior support to students living in rural communities. Both student outcomes and teacher perceptions were evaluated. Results indicated that (a) student disruptive behaviors improved through the implementation of an individualized behavior support plan developed through teleconsultation, and (b) teachers found the teleconsultation experience acceptable and feasible. As the demands placed on psychologists and the quality of videoconferencing continue to increase, teleconsultation is becoming a viable option for service delivery within rural school settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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9. Poverty & privilege: Primary school inequality in South Africa.
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Spaull, Nicholas
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PRIMARY schools , *EQUALITY , *SOCIAL conditions of students , *APARTHEID , *RACE discrimination , *EDUCATION policy - Abstract
Abstract: The strong legacy of apartheid and the consequent correlation between education and wealth have meant that, generally speaking, poorer South African students perform worse academically. Although racial segregation has been abolished for 18 years now, schools which served predominantly White students under apartheid remain functional, while those which served Black students remain dysfunctional and unable to impart the necessary numeracy and literacy skills students should be acquiring by this level. The present study provides an overview of this dualistic nature of the primary education system in South Africa, with special attention paid to the bimodality of student performance. It argues that there are in fact two different education systems in South Africa and thus two different data-generating processes. These two sub-systems can be seen when splitting student performance by former-department, language, or socioeconomic status. The implications of such a dualistic schooling system are also elucidated, with special emphasis on government reporting and econometric modeling. The recently released SACMEQ III dataset is used for the econometric modeling. The study finds that when modeling student performance separately for the wealthiest 25% of schools on the one hand, and the poorest 75% of schools on the other, there are stark differences in the factors influencing student performance. Only five of the 27 factors are shared between the two models for mathematics, and 11 of the 30 factors for reading. This suggests a bifurcated system where the process which converts inputs into outputs is fundamentally different for each sub-system. Ultimately the paper has two logical conclusions: 1) Observing averages in South African education is uniquely misleading and overestimates the educational achievement of the majority of students, and 2) Modeling a single schooling system when there are in fact two school systems can lead to spurious results and misleading policy conclusions. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
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10. School violence, social support and psychological health among Taiwanese junior high school students
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Chen, Ji-Kang and Wei, Hsi-Sheng
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SCHOOL violence & psychology , *JUNIOR high school students , *SOCIAL support , *MENTAL health of junior high school students , *SUBJECTIVE well-being (Psychology) , *SCHOOL environment , *BULLYING & psychology , *CRIMES against students , *PREVENTION , *SOCIAL conditions of students - Abstract
Abstract: Objectives: This paper examines how peer social support mediates the association between school victimization and student psychological health among junior-high students in an Asian context (Taiwan), and further examines how gender and ethnicity differ in the interrelationships of school violence, peer social support and psychological health. Methods: Data were obtained from a large-scale random sample of 1650 junior-high students (grades 7–9) in one diverse county of Taiwan. Students were given an anonymous structured questionnaire, including items regarding basic demographics and school social experiences. Results: The results of structural equation modeling analysis provided a good fit for the sample as a whole. The final model accounted for 26% of the variance in student psychological health. Overall findings showed that student psychological health is not significantly directly associated with victimization by students and student maltreatment by teachers; however, student psychological health is indirectly associated with victimization by students, mediated through peer social support. Similar findings were found for both male and female and both Han Chinese and Indigenous students. Conclusion: The findings imply that peer social support plays an important mediating role between exposure to school violence and student psychological health. The findings provide empirical evidence and information to help school practitioners and policymakers justify developing or incorporating social support into prevention and intervention strategies. The findings suggest that interventions or policies promoting social support incorporated at a national level could be effective across genders and ethnicities in Taiwan. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
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11. Factorial validity of the Chedoke-McMaster Attitudes towards Children with Handicaps Scale (CATCH)
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Bossaert, Goele and Petry, Katja
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CHILDREN with disabilities , *CHILDHOOD attitudes , *MIDDLE school students , *GENDER differences (Psychology) , *AWARENESS , *FACTOR analysis , *SOCIAL conditions of students , *SOCIAL history - Abstract
The Chedoke-McMaster Attitudes towards Children with Handicaps Scale (CATCH) has been developed to measure the attitudes of children toward peers with disabilities. The present study aims to evaluate the factorial validity of the CATCH in a sample of 2396 students in 7th grade, including 179 students with disabilities and 2217 typically developing students. Each classroom included at least one student with a disability. The structure of the scale, as proposed by the developers, was tested and its stability was evaluated across gender, disability status, awareness of the disability status of classmates and having a classmate with a disability as a friend. Confirmatory factor analysis did not support the originally proposed subscale structure. Instead of the three proposed subscales, a single subscale including seven items was found. Strict factorial invariance was obtained across gender, disability status, awareness of the disability status of classmates and being friends with a classmate with a disability. Implications of these findings will be discussed. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
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12. Achievement for All: Improving psychosocial outcomes for students with special educational needs and disabilities
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Humphrey, Neil, Lendrum, Ann, Barlow, Alexandra, Wigelsworth, Michael, and Squires, Garry
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PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *SPECIAL needs students , *EARLY intervention (Education) , *STUDENTS with disabilities , *INTERVENTION (Social services) , *STUDENTS' conduct of life , *SOCIAL conditions of students , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Students with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) are at a greatly increased risk of experiencing poor psychosocial outcomes. Developing effective interventions that address the cause of these outcomes has therefore become a major policy priority in recent years. We report on a national evaluation of the Achievement for All (AfA) programme that was designed to improve outcomes for students with SEND through: (1) academic assessment, tracking and intervention, (2) structured conversations with parents, and (3) developing provision to improve wider outcomes (e.g. positive relationships). Using a quasi-experimental, pre-test–post-test control group design, we assessed the impact of AfA on teacher ratings of the behaviour problems, positive relationships and bullying of students with SEND over an 18-month period. Participants were 4758 students with SEND drawn from 323 schools across England. Our main impact analysis demonstrated that AfA had a significant impact on all three response variables when compared to usual practice. Hierarchical linear modelling of data from the intervention group highlighted a range of school-level contextual factors and implementation activities and student-level individual differences that moderated the impact of AfA on our study outcomes. The implications of our findings are discussed, and study strengths and limitations are noted. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2013
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13. The role of goal orientations and goal structures in explaining classroom social and affective characteristics
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Polychroni, Fotini, Hatzichristou, Chryse, and Sideridis, Georgios
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GOAL (Psychology) , *CLASSROOM environment , *PSYCHOLOGY of students , *PEERS , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *SOCIAL conditions of students , *TEACHER-student relationships - Abstract
Examining motivational variables may prove to be particularly fruitful towards our understanding of classroom processes, student behaviors and school outcomes. The present study examined the role of personal and contextual goals (goals and goal structures) towards explaining social relationships (peer, teacher–student and home–school). 1493 fifth and sixth grade primary school students (10 to 12 years of age) from different areas of Greece formed a representative sample. Questionnaires were administered assessing students'' goal orientations, goal structures and classroom relationships. The data were analyzed using latent variable modeling. Mastery goal structures had significant effects on positive school relationships such as student relations, teacher–student relations, peer inclusion, and peer conflict (the latter two reversely coded). Performance goal structures exerted negative or null effects on the same processes, demonstrating their negative propensities. In addition, the effects of mastery goal structures were partially mediated by the effects of personal mastery goals with regard to teacher–student relations with the former exerting both direct and indirect effects. On the contrary, the negative effects of performance goal structures were not buffered by the presence of high levels of personal performance goals. The findings have significant implications for educational practice in terms of the importance of classroom contexts as predictors of classroom relatedness specifically where mastery goals are concerned. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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14. Teacher practices as predictors of children's classroom social preference
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Mikami, Amori Yee, Griggs, Marissa Swaim, Reuland, Meg M., and Gregory, Anne
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SCHOOL failure , *PSYCHOLOGY of teachers , *SCHOOL psychology , *SOCIAL conditions of students , *CLASSROOMS , *PEER relations - Abstract
Abstract: Students who do not get along with their peers are at elevated risk for academic disengagement and school failure. Research has predominantly focused on factors within such children that contribute to their peer problems. This study considers whether teacher practices also predict social preference for children in that classroom. Participants were 26 elementary school teachers and 490 students in their classrooms followed for one school year. Results suggested that teachers who favored the most academically talented students in the fall had classrooms where children had lower average social preference in the spring after statistical control of children''s fall social preference and externalizing behavior problems. Teachers who demonstrated emotionally supportive relationships with students in the fall had classrooms where children had greater possibility of changing their social preference from fall to spring. Although children with high externalizing behaviors tended to experience declining social preference over the course of the school year, teachers’ learner-centered practices attenuated this progression. However, teachers’ favoring of the most academically talented accentuated the negative relation between externalizing behaviors and social preference. Implications for school psychology practitioners are discussed. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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15. Educational systems efficiency in European Union countries
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Giambona, Francesca, Vassallo, Erasmo, and Vassiliadis, Elli
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EDUCATIONAL planning , *EDUCATION research , *EDUCATIONAL resources , *SOCIAL background , *DATA envelopment analysis , *STATISTICAL bootstrapping , *SOCIAL conditions of students - Abstract
Abstract: We use the PISA 2006 results to analyse students’ proficiency in EU countries with regard to two indexes that represent the home background, viz the educational resources available at home and the family background of students. However, many factors affect proficiency and therefore, using a DEA-bootstrap, we intend to measure the efficiency of the European educational systems as capability to ensure high students’ competencies despite adverse conditions about the educational resources available at home and the family background. Results show an unexpected differentiation among EU countries. In particular, the most developed countries often show disappointing students’ proficiency despite good levels of home background. In this case, an important role is played by the social and economic context. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2011
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16. Student status and academic performance: Accounting for the symptom of long duration of studies in Greece
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Katsikas, Elias and Panagiotidis, Theodore
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ACADEMIC achievement , *EDUCATION research , *PERFORMANCE , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *SOCIAL conditions of students , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Abstract: This study employs administrative and survey data to assess the relationship between students’ socioeconomic background and educational outcomes, using regression and quantile regression methods. We take into account the existing institutional framework which allows differentiation in the duration of studies among students. We examine the association of students’ status – working and non-working – with degree grades and whether the documented negative influence of long duration of studies on grades is associated to students’ status. The findings reject both hypotheses; working students do not achieve lower grades than their non-working peers; the negative impact of the length of studies on grades is not linked to status, and affects both working and non-working students in the same way. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2011
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17. Norm-transgression sequences in the classroom interaction at a Madrid high school
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Alcalá Recuerda, Esther
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INTERACTION analysis in education , *CLASSROOM environment , *SOCIOLINGUISTICS , *ETHNOLOGY , *CATEGORIZATION (Linguistics) , *HIGH school students , *PSYCHOLOGY of students , *SOCIAL conditions of students - Abstract
Abstract: This paper studies high school classroom sequences, compiled through critical sociolinguistic ethnography, where norm-transgression is made explicit, and how authority is recovered by the teacher after an open period where class participants generally seize to digress. This way, we will be able to approach several dimensions of linguistic practices: First, the treatment given to the transgression in the classroom by the participants: how norms are generated, by whom, and in order to do what (norms here construct the frame within which evaluation arise). Second, how the fact of assessing a norm-transgression activates categories about students behaviours. And third, how these categorisation processes play an important role in the socio-academic lives of students, mainly of those constructed as transgressors along the sequence. These students are categorised as conflictive students, sometimes accepting and playing the role of the class clown and achieving all but academic or institutional success. The incidence and treatment of diversity in the classroom is crucial and will be also discussed. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
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18. The effect of peer socioeconomic status on student achievement: A meta-analysis.
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van Ewijk, Reyn and Sleegers, Peter
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ACADEMIC achievement ,SOCIAL status ,ECONOMIC conditions of students ,SOCIAL conditions of students ,META-analysis ,PEER pressure - Abstract
Abstract: Previous studies on the effects on students’ test scores of their peers’ socioeconomic status (SES) reported varying results. A meta-regression analysis including 30 studies on the topic shows that the compositional effect that researchers find is strongly related to how they measure SES and to their model choice. If they measure SES dichotomously (e.g. free lunch eligibility) or include several average SES-variables in one model, they find smaller effects than when using a composite that captures several SES-dimensions. Composition measured at cohort/school level is associated with smaller effects than composition measured at class level. Researchers estimating compositional effects without controlling for prior achievement or not taking into account the potential for omitted variables bias, risk overestimating the effect. Correcting for a large set of not well-thought-over covariates may lead to an underestimation of the compositional effect, by artificially explaining away the effect. Little evidence was found that effect sizes differ with sample characteristics such as test type (language vs. math) and country. Estimates for a hypothetical study, making a number of “ideal” choices, suggest that peer SES may be an important determinant of academic achievement. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
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19. Social capital and student achievement in Norwegian secondary schools
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Huang, Lihong
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ACADEMIC achievement & society , *SECONDARY education , *EDUCATIONAL psychology , *FACTOR analysis , *PSYCHOLOGY of students , *SOCIAL conditions of students , *LEARNING ability - Abstract
Abstract: This paper investigates student social capital in Norwegian secondary schools and its effects on student achievement. Using data from the national survey ‘Young in Norway 2002’, it explores the concept and measurement of social capital in the school context by applying factor analysis. The paper also tests an analytical model that links student home background, social capital at school and student academic achievement, using a structural modelling technique. Control variables in the analysis are student age, gender, school size and home community. Testing the analytical model with female and male student subgroup data takes gender perspectives into consideration. Finally, statistical results are presented and discussed, and implications for further research are provided. The study finds that student social capital, generated from student social relations with parents, teachers and peers, has a significant influence on student achievement. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
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20. Individual, familial and community determinants of child physical abuse among high-school students in China
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Wong, William Chi Wai, Chen, Wei Qing, Goggins, William B., Tang, Catherine S., and Leung, Phil W.
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CHILD abuse , *DOMESTIC violence , *CRIMES against youth , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *SOCIAL status , *SOCIAL conditions of students , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
While many risk factors for child physical abuse are known, little research exists examining these in multilevel contexts including both individual and environmental influences. The authors examined the roles of individual-, family- and community-level factors such as socioeconomic status (SES) in determining the likelihood of child physical abuse in Guangzhou, China. Twenty-four schools were recruited by stratified random sampling, with 6628 junior high-school students aged 13–16 years participating. Parental child physical abuse experience, together with family and community levels of SES among students were measured and their relationships were investigated by applying univariable, multivariable and multilevel logistic regression models. Univariable, multivariable and multilevel logistic regression models were applied. Six-month prevalence of minor, severe and very severe assaults were 23.2%, 15.1% and 2.8%, respectively. A U-shaped association between family SES and likelihood of severe assaults was identified. In the multilevel model, indicators of low family SES, mother's higher occupational and educational status remained significantly independent predictors of physical abuse. Internal migration status was associated with higher risk as was younger age. The authors suggest that previous categories of risk factors for physical abuse may be too simplistic, and that further research on social and environmental influences may usefully inform intervention programs. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
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21. Effective high school teachers: A mixed investigation
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Schulte, Don P., Slate, John R., and Onwuegbuzie, Anthony J.
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HIGH school teachers , *TEACHER effectiveness , *QUALITATIVE research , *QUANTITATIVE research , *COLLEGE students , *DISCRIMINANT analysis , *SOCIAL conditions of students , *TEACHER-student relationships - Abstract
Abstract: The researchers conducted a sequential qualitative–quantitative mixed analysis of the characteristics of effective high school teachers as perceived by 615 college students, predominantly Hispanic, at two Hispanic-Serving Institutions. Qualitative analyses revealed the presence of 24 themes: Caring; Communication; Creative; Disciplinarian; Fairness; Flexible; Friendly; Fun; Knowledgeable; Listening; Manages Classroom; Uses Different Modalities; Involving; Motivating; Organized; Passion for Teaching; Patience; Builds Relationships; Shows others respect; Challenges; Service; Teaches Well; Good Personality; and Understanding. These themes were quantitized and statistically analyzed to determine whether differences were present as a function of gender, ethnicity, student status, and generational status. All possible subtests discriminant analyses revealed statistically significant differences in dominant themes in these areas. In addition to providing a model of mixed analysis, implications are discussed. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
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22. Motivation beliefs of secondary school teachers in Canada and Singapore: A mixed methods study
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Klassen, Robert M., Chong, Wan Har, Huan, Vivien S., Wong, Isabella, Kates, Allison, and Hannok, Wanwisa
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ACADEMIC motivation , *SECONDARY education , *SOCIAL status , *EDUCATION , *HIGH school teachers , *RESEARCH , *TEACHERS , *SCHOOL environment , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *SOCIAL conditions of students , *BEHAVIORAL assessment - Abstract
A mixed methods approach was used to explore secondary teachers’ motivation beliefs in Canada and Singapore. Results from Study 1 revealed that socio-economic status (SES) was the strongest predictor of school climate in Canada, and that collective efficacy mediated the effect of SES on school climate in Singapore, but not in Canada. In Study 2, interviews were conducted with 10 teachers in Canada and 14 teachers in Singapore. Teachers in both settings discussed students’ social and behavior problems, but the range of the social problems was greater in Canada than in Singapore, and had a stronger impact on teachers’ motivation beliefs. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
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23. Children's perceptions of the classroom environment and social and academic performance: A longitudinal analysis of the contribution of the Responsive Classroom approach
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Brock, Laura L., Nishida, Tracy K., Chiong, Cynthia, Grimm, Kevin J., and Rimm-Kaufman, Sara E.
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TEACHING methods , *STUDENT attitudes , *CLASSROOM environment , *ACADEMIC achievement , *SOCIAL conditions of students , *PERCEPTION in children - Abstract
This study examines the contribution of the Responsive Classroom (RC) Approach, a set of teaching practices that integrate social and academic learning, to children's perceptions of their classroom, and children's academic and social performance over time. Three questions emerge: (a) What is the concurrent and cumulative relation between children's perceptions of the classroom and social and academic outcomes over time? (b) What is the contribution of teacher's use of RC practices to children's perceptions and social and academic outcomes? (c) Do children's perceptions of the classroom mediate the relation between RC teacher practices and child outcomes? Cross-lagged autoregressive structural equation models were used to analyze teacher and child-report questionnaire data, along with standardized test scores collected over 3 years from a sample of 520 children in grades 3–5. Results indicate a significant positive relation between RC teacher practices and child perceptions and outcomes over time. Further, children's perceptions partially mediated the relation between RC teacher practices and social competence. However, the models did not demonstrate that child perceptions mediated the relation between RC practices and achievement outcomes. Results are explained in terms of the contribution of teacher practices to children's perceptions and student performance. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
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24. Social status and aggressive and disruptive behavior in girls: Individual, group, and classroom influences
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Estell, David B., Farmer, Thomas W., Pearl, Ruth, Van Acker, Richard, and Rodkin, Philip C.
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AGGRESSION (Psychology) in children , *PSYCHOLOGY of girls , *CLASSROOM environment , *SOCIAL ecology , *PROSOCIAL behavior , *SOCIAL conditions of students , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Recent studies have found distinct subtypes of aggressive youth, marked by either high social status or social marginalization, and that various measures of status differentially associate with aggression. The majority of these studies, however, focused on boys, adolescents, and/or relational aggression in girls. The current research examined how the kind of status measured and the social ecology affect the association between overt aggression and social status in a sample of 187 3rd grade girls. Cluster analysis uncovered aggressive-popular, aggressive-unpopular, and prosocial-popular configurations. Although likeability was related solely to prosocial behavior, other measures of status co-occurred with both prosocial and aggressive behavior. Peer-group behavior complemented that of individuals, though peer-group and classroom acceptance of aggression were not related to cluster prevalence. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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25. Student victimization by educational staff in Israel
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Khoury-Kassabri, Mona
- Subjects
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SOCIAL conditions of students , *TEACHERS , *EDUCATION , *CHILD abuse - Abstract
Abstract: Objectives: This study examines the relationships between physical, emotional, and sexual victimization of school students by educational staff with a number of variables describing the student (gender, age, and relationship with teachers) and the school (the socioeconomic status (SES) of the students’ families and school''s neighborhood, school level, and ethnic affiliation). Method: The study is based on a nationally representative sample of 17,465 students in grades 4–11 in 319 schools across Israel, who completed questionnaires during class. In addition, data were obtained on SES of students’ families and the school''s neighborhood. Hierarchical linear modeling (HLM) was used to examine the relationships. Results: Almost a third of the students reported being emotionally maltreated by school staff, and almost a quarter of primary and junior high students and a fifth of high school students were physically victimized by school staff. Almost 8% of secondary school students reported being sexually maltreated by school staff. The most vulnerable students were boys, Arab children, and children in schools in low SES neighborhoods. Conclusion: The study shows that students in Israel are exposed to high levels of maltreatment by educational staff, but not all students are equally likely to be victimized by school staff. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2006
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26. Les effets directs et indirects des stéréotypes sociaux sur une décision d'orientation scolaire.
- Author
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Channouf, A., Mangard, C., Baudry, C., and Perney, N.
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MIDDLE school teachers ,NINTH grade (Education) ,SOCIAL conditions of students ,SOCIAL background ,DECISION making - Abstract
Copyright of European Review of Applied Psychology is the property of Elsevier B.V. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2005
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27. The social networks of academic performance in a student context of poverty in Mexico.
- Author
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Ramírez Ortiz, María Guadalupe, Caballero Hoyos, José Ramiro, and Ramírez López, María Guadalupe
- Subjects
SOCIAL conditions of students ,SOCIAL networks ,POOR children ,ACADEMIC achievement ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Purpose: To describe the structure of the social network of junior high school students from a low socioeconomic status and assess the association between centrality measurements and academic performance. In the centrality positions (eigenvector, closeness, degree, and betweenness), the female gender and “only study” were significant predictors of high academic performance. The density of the student social network was presented by homophilic associations that hint at the existence of subcultures at school. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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28. Individual characteristics, early adolescent peer affiliations, and school dropout: an examination of aggressive and popular group types
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Farmer, Thomas W., Estell, David B., Leung, Man-Chi, Trott, Hollister, Bishop, Jennifer, and Cairns, Beverley D.
- Subjects
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MIDDLE school students , *SCHOOL environment , *SOCIAL conditions of students - Abstract
Individual characteristics (i.e., teacher-rated aggression and popularity) and peer group membership type in 7th grade was examined in relation to school dropout. Peer group type was characterized according to the proportion of group members who were high on teacher-rated aggression and popularity. Both aggressive and popular group types were linked to dropping out. Being a member of an aggressive group was associated with increased rates of dropout for aggressive, but not nonaggressive, youth. Membership in popular (i.e., majority of members were popular) and zero-popular (i.e., no popular members) groups was linked to dropping out, while membership in a nonpopular group (i.e., a few popular members) appeared to be protective for aggressive youth. Both popular and nonpopular youth who affiliated with aggressive peers had elevated rates of school dropout. All aggressive participants who were socially isolated dropped out, while nonaggressive youth who were socially isolated tended to complete school. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
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29. Children's reports of emotional, physical and sexual maltreatment by educational staff in Israel.
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Benbenishty, Rami, Zeira, Anat, and Astor, Ron Avi
- Subjects
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SOCIAL conditions of students , *CHILD sexual abuse , *SOCIAL status , *POOR children , *TEACHERS - Abstract
This article reports the first nationally representative study on the prevalence of emotional, physical, and sexual victimization of children by school staff in Israel. The study identified groups of children that were at higher risk for such maltreatment. It examined the differences in staff-induced victimization by the children's gender, age group, cultural groups and by socioeconomic status of the children's families. Overall, children reported high rates of victimization by staff members. Almost a quarter of all children participating in this study reported being emotionally maltreated by a staff member, almost a fifth reported being a victim of at least one type of physical forms of maltreatment, and 8.2 percent reported on at least one sexually inappropriate behavior by a staff member.
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- 2002
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30. Inequalities in access to higher education in Africa: How large are they? Do they mirror the situation in the metropole 60 years ago?
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Carr-Hill, Roy
- Subjects
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RIGHT to education , *HIGHER education , *SOCIAL conditions of students , *AFRICAN students , *POSTSECONDARY education , *SOCIAL reproduction , *EDUCATIONAL equalization - Abstract
• No data about (in-)equalities of access to Higher Education in Sub-Saharan Africa. • Unique data on socio-economic background of students to a graduate programme. • Course is entirely funded because 'there is no access for poor African students'. • Analysis of questionnaire completed on entry shows that students are relatively rich. • Rather sad similarity with situation prevailing in Europe 50 years ago. There have been many studies of the socio-economic background of students in developed countries; but – apart from extensive commentary on the gender gap – far fewer in developing countries. In Africa, this is mostly because the University record systems do not record corresponding data; and because the international standard household surveys such as DHS only ask about educational attainment of household members which of course mainly excludes current students. This paper uses the record systems of the African Institute of Mathematical Sciences (AIMS) and specifically the Pre-Assessment form completed by all students on entry with information about their parental background. The combination of parents not having more than primary education, renting and not owning land identified only between 1 and 3 students a year. Taking the opposite extreme, the percentage of entrants reporting that their parents had a post-Secondary qualification is considerably higher (around 57% on average) than the norm at the time the parents would have been studying (around 7%). These students were certainly not poor, they are upper middle class. Further analysis identifies differences in the patterns for those at Anglophone or Francophone centres; and trends over the last four years. The paper then reviews the trends in inequality in access to higher education in the 'mother' countries – UK and France – from about sixty years ago until recently, to ask whether the social inequalities observed among AIMS students can be seen as 'derived' from those in the mother countries, with a nuanced positive conclusion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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31. A Focus on Health Disparities.
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Greene, Geoffrey
- Subjects
- *
BLACK students , *HEALTH equity , *SOCIAL conditions of students - Abstract
The article discusses various reports published within the issue, including one by Fahlman and colleagues on the dietary habits of black middle school students of low socioeconomic status, one by Zoellner and colleagues on economically disadvantaged black females' idea of MyPyramid messages, and one by Miller and Miller on non-traditional health disparities.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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