140,410 results on '"Social Behavior"'
Search Results
52. Expanding Counseling Center Use through Campus Engagement and Social Norming
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Brennan, Kathleen M. and Gorman, Kimberly S.
- Abstract
Social norms theory offers a useful frame for understanding student use of university counseling centers. This study found engagement in the forms of living and working on campus and estimation of how many students on campus are using the university counseling center was significantly associated with counseling center use. Students' estimation of other students' counseling center use also mediated the relationship between on-campus living and counseling center use. These results suggest a positive campus norm around counseling center use. Recommendations for how student affairs offices can encourage this norm are offered.
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- 2023
53. The Association between College Students' Participation Behavior and Social Media Use
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Kilinc, Emin, Tarman, Bulent, and Yussupova, Saule
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This paper examines college students` participation behaviors and the use of social media tools. The descriptive survey model was applied to investigate university students' participation behaviors. The data was collected through a "Participation Questionnaire" from 284 college students in Kazakhstan. The result showed that students who spend less time on social media are positively related to participatory citizenship. Moreover, students with fewer social media accounts are more likely to engage in political, volunteer, and social events than students with fewer social media accounts.
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- 2023
54. Science and Engineering Education as an Anchor in the Midst of a Changing World: The Case of COVID-19
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Lis-Hacohen, Ronit, Binah-Pollak, Avital, and Hazzan, Orit
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The discourse on science and engineering education focuses on ways of preparing students, as future employees, and global citizens. While this discourse deals with the purposes and characteristics of engineering education, it tends to neglect the students' perspectives. The purpose of this study was to provide insights into the perspectives of undergraduate science and engineering students with respect to six factors, during the COVID-19 pandemic: end-of-semester exams, financial situation, social life, extension of study duration, the future of the labor market, and how the world will look. A comprehensive questionnaire was distributed to all undergraduate students in a research science and engineering university in two consecutive academic years. Descriptive statistics and content analysis were applied. Our findings show that science and engineering students were mostly concerned about their end-of-semester exams. Their social life was the only factor that changed between the two periods in terms of the percentage of students who were concerned with it. As for the other factors, the percentage of students who were concerned about them remained comparatively the same in both academic years. The findings highlight the confidence students had during the pandemic, and demonstrate the resilience of science and engineering, especially in times of volatility.
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- 2023
55. Effectiveness of Gamification on the Community of Inquiry Development in Online Project-Based Programming Courses Conducted on Facebook
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Kiliç, Servet
- Abstract
This study aims to explore how gamification elements influence the development of the Community of Inquiry (CoI) in an online project-based programming course conducted on Facebook. We formed student groups by using a quasi-experimental design from students studying in the computer science department. While both courses were project-based, the experimental group's project development process was enriched with gamification elements. We collected data from the CoI survey, transcript analysis of online discussions, and interviews with students. The results indicated that the use of gamification elements contributed significantly to students' social, cognitive, and teaching presence development. Besides, while a high level of CoI perception was created in both groups in the online project-based learning environment, the design and organization role of the instructor came to the fore in the gamified environment more.
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- 2023
56. New Concepts of Ecological-Social Justice: A Micro-Optic Reflection on Ecological Citizenship Education in Indonesia
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Binawan, Andang L.
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This study aims to explain how the Go Green Movement at schools initiated by the Indonesian government becomes a starting point for reflection on ecological citizenship education and social justice. Reflection on such an initiative reinforces the importance of citizenship education as citizens are associated with a territorial view of the country based on tangible ''land.'' Therefore, the state's role in education is to empower its citizens and create new societal behaviors, or habitus, as part of a social justice concept. In the past, the role of habitus within the context of social justice was easily dismissed. Currently, more availability of social facilities and infrastructures implies environmental care by the state, resulting in new habitus. The relational nature of social justice highlights that the state needs to be recognized and respected as a separate entity. Subsequently, encompassing the environment and caring for its citizens embodied in the ecological habitus, the state plays an important role in attaining ecological-social justice.
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- 2023
57. Educational and Social Impact of Computing Devices for Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)
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Inan, Fethi A.
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The purpose of this study is to examine the perceptions of parents of children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) about computing devices. Seven families with ASD children were interviewed about their children's use of computer devices and their impact on their academic and social behavior. Although parents raised concerns about internet addiction and cybersecurity, these devices were part of their children's daily routines and were used for educational and entertainment purposes. Occasionally, targeted activities such as video modeling have been used to address personal and social behaviors. However, the results suggested that parents were unprepared to help their children due to a lack of knowledge, community support, and resources.
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- 2023
58. A Policy Framework for Bridging the Gender Divide in Digital Technology Courses and Careers in Kenya. Echidna Global Scholars Program
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Brookings Institution, Center for Universal Education and Luvanda, Anthony
- Abstract
Kenya's digital technology advancements--chief among them the mobile money transfer application referred to as Mpesa--has led to the country's status as an emerging digital economy. However, the long strides in the move toward a fully-fledged digital economy are not reflected in the digital technology workforce with regard to gender balance. While digital technology careers are highly touted as the jobs of the future, women occupy less than 30 percent of digital technology positions in Kenya. The root cause of the problem can be traced to disadvantages that girls and young women accumulate throughout their years in education. This study takes a qualitative approach in trying to identify the root causes for the exclusion of girls and young women from digital technology courses at all levels of education--namely lower primary, upper primary, junior high school, senior high school, and the tertiary level in both rural and urban communities. The study identifies various cumulative factors that contribute to fewer women taking up digital technology courses, such as: (1) inadequate infrastructure; (2) insufficient staffing and training of digital technology personnel at learning institutions; (3) the negative impact of gendered social norms; (4) poor advocacy of digital technology careers and the absence of vocational counseling; and (5) the lack of women role models.
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- 2023
59. Deciphering Academic Emotions
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Nair, Harshith B. and Nair, Harshith B.
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This book offers a comprehensive exploration of emotions in the context of education, aiming to shed light on their multifaceted roles and implications. Employing a who, what, when, where, why, how, and "so what" approach, this work delves into various aspects of emotions within educational settings. The book sets out to define emotions, providing an extensive examination of different perspectives and contemporary theories. It explores the intricate relationship between emotions and cognition, tracing their pivotal role in human evolution and adaptation. The book also critically addresses criticisms and controversies in the study of emotions. Drawing on research from diverse fields, this book employs a multidisciplinary approach. It utilises data and analysis methods to explore the types and causes of emotions, categorising them into basic and complex emotions, as well as positive and negative emotions. The book presents key findings related to emotions in education. It highlights the benefits of positive emotions for physical and mental health and their impact on interpersonal relationships and social behavior. Conversely, it examines the costs of negative emotions and their role in stress, anxiety, and depression. Strategies for promoting positive emotions and coping with negative ones are discussed. The book underscores the importance of understanding academic emotions and their impact on academic motivation, engagement, and performance. It delves into the role of educators in fostering positive academic emotions and managing negative ones. Additionally, it explores evidence-based interventions and the ethical considerations in addressing these emotions in education. This book is supplemented with a wealth of resources, including valid and reliable measures of academic emotions, discussions on cultural and contextual factors, and research opportunities in the field. It also explores current trends, interdisciplinary collaborations, and implications for policy, practice, and social justice. "Understanding Emotions in Education" offers a comprehensive overview of emotions in educational contexts. It provides valuable insights and practical strategies for educators, researchers, and policymakers, emphasizing the significance of emotions in shaping the educational experience.
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- 2023
60. Socio-Spatial Learning Analytics in Co-located Collaborative Learning Spaces: A Systematic Literature Review
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Lixiang Yan, Linxuan Zhao, Dragan Gaševic, Xinyu Li, and Roberto Martinez-Maldonado
- Abstract
Socio-spatial learning analytics (SSLA) is an emerging area within learning analytics research that seeks to uncover valuable educational insights from individuals' social and spatial data traces. These traces are captured automatically through sensing technologies in physical learning spaces, and the research is commonly based on the theoretical foundations of social constructivism and cultural anthropology. With its growing empirical basis, a systematic literature review is timely in order to provide educational researchers and practitioners with a detailed summary of the emerging works and the opportunities enabled by SSLA. This paper presents a systematic review of 25 peer-reviewed articles on SSLA published between 2011 and 2023. Descriptive, network, and thematic analyses were conducted to identify the citation networks, essential components, opportunities, and challenges enabled by SSLA. The findings illustrated that SSLA provides the opportunity to: (1) contribute unobtrusive and unsupervised research methodologies; (2) support educators' classroom orchestration through visualizations; (3) support learner reflection with continuous and reliable evidence; (4) develop novel theories about social and collaborative learning; and (5) empower educational stakeholders with the quantitative data to evaluate different learning spaces. These findings could support learning analytics and educational technology scholars and practitioners to better understand and utilize SSLA to support future educational research and practice.
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- 2023
61. 'It May Be Risky but the Experience Is Worth It': Risk Perceptions of International Students in the U.S.
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Russell D. Ravert and Fatin N. Asnan
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Studying abroad provides excellent opportunities for growth, but can also bring new uncertainties and risks. In this exploratory study, female international students studying in the U.S. (n=29) responded to open-ended questions designed to understand better the types of risks they experience and the ways they respond. Inductive content analysis identified a set of five thematic categories: a) social risk, b) danger risk, c) daily task risk, d) self-development risk, and e) isolation risk. Students reported dealing with these uncertainties through a combination of weighing risks through information and trusting others, playing it safe at times, but pressing forward in other situations to make the most of opportunities.
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- 2023
62. Life under Roman Rule -- In Parts of Present-Day Hungary
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Elisabeth Erdmann
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The Roman Empire covered a large area, including parts of present-day Hungary. There are many still visible remains in the landscape or in museums. In addition to written sources, there are monuments ranging from objects to architecture, pictures and sculptures. This makes it possible to question and compare the significance of the individual sources. In addition, there is the interdisciplinarity, for many insights are only gained by applying scientific but also linguistic and other reference disciplines. Many things from Roman antiquity seem familiar to us at first glance, especially when it comes to concepts such as the state and the republic, but also to things of everyday life. But on closer inspection, the familiarity disappears when it comes to social rules, behaviour and norms. Therefore, there are lots of opportunities to interest and motivate pupils of different ages to learn about history. Selected examples will show how attractive the Roman period in Hungary can be for pupils.
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- 2023
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63. The Construction of Gamer Identity in Narratives about Video Game Playing and Formal Education Learning Experiences
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Jingyang Ai, Beth Cross, and Carole Bignell
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This study investigates how video game play influences gamers' formal education through perceptions of their 'gamer' and 'learner' identities. Based on identity foundation in symbolic interactionism, we take gamer and learner identities as meaning structures with both dynamic and stable dimensions. The basis of this gamer identity perspective is identity has a crucial role in investigating learning. Applying a life history approach, we interviewed 10 participants in one-to-one interviews, with three interviews for each participant. Applying the narrative portrait, we analysed participant data. We found that gamer identity construction from video game playing, as a vital meaning structure, has four main aspects, namely in-game identification, social community expansion, restorative effect and meaning recognition, providing gamers with expansive ways to build learner and personal identity as that can benefit their formal education.
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- 2023
64. The Influence of Teacher Professional Identity on Conformity Behavior: The Mediating Role of Perceived Institutional Norms
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Chuang Xu and Yuan-Cheng Chang
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Based on institutional theory, this study explores the causal relationship between teacher professional identity, perceived institutional norms, and teachers' conformity behavior in colleges and universities in Hunan Province. A questionnaire survey was conducted on 500 teachers from two universities in Hunan Province. The reliability and validity test results and structural equation modeling analysis show that the professional identity of college teachers positively affects their conformity behavior, and that perceived institutional norms partially mediate the relationship between teacher professional identity and teacher conformity behavior. The research enriches the application of institutional theory in university organization and provides an empirical basis for universities to improve teachers' conformity behavior.
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- 2023
65. E-Learning Engagements of Pre-Service Education Students
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Edson B. Bilocura, Mauricio S. Adlaon, and Rhea Mae O. Cuyag
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This study aimed to ascertain the e-learning engagements of selected Pre-service Education students in online distance learning and determined whether the e-learning engagements vary based on the student's profile variables. The study group of the survey comprised 275 first to third-year students of BSED-Sciences, BTVTED and BSED-Mathematics enrolled at Surigao State College of Technology (SSCT), City Campus. A researchers-made questionnaire was used, validated and tested for reliability using Cronbach Alpha internal consistency coefficient with ([alpha]=0.85) for the entire scale (20 items). Distribution of web-based questionnaires through Google Forms followed. The data collected were treated using frequency, percentage count, mean, standard deviation, and analysis of variance (ANOVA). A descriptive survey research design was also employed. Study results indicated that the behavioral, social, cognitive, and technological engagements of the students were generally positive. Particularly, social engagement rated very high with a mean score of 2.97 (SD=0.53) meanwhile, technological engagement rated a lowest mean value of 2.71 (SD=0.55) signifying that students' e-learning engagement is lesser as unstable internet connection was found to be the main technological problem which caused students to get frequent absences during online classes. Additionally, mobile phone devices revealed to be the most useful ICT tool to assist students' in managing the online learning system. Moreover, the e-learning engagements were found not to vary based on students' sex and family income. However, students' age, year level, program and specialization and gadgets used in modular and online classes made a significant difference which shows that the profile differences of Pre-service education students contribute a direct effect towards their online learning engagement. Implications from the results recommend a need to sustain social interaction between stakeholders, increased students' online resources and community support by provision of learners' online learning demands.
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- 2023
66. Investigation of Social Media Addiction in Terms of Social Appearance Anxiety and Social Desirability
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Özge Canogullari, Yasin Yilmaz, and Emel Uysal Atabay
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When the studies are examined, it is seen that social media addiction (SMA) increases in adolescents with high social desirability and social appearance anxiety (SAA). For this reason, the aim of this research is to examine SMA in adolescents in terms of SAA and social desirability and to determine at what level social desirability and SAA predict SMA. The research was designed as a descriptive study in the relational survey model. A total of 484 students, 338 of whom were girls (69.8%) and 146 (30.2%) were boys studying at secondary school institutions in the central districts of Hatay province, participated in the study using the convenience sampling method. The Social Media Addiction Scale, the Social Appearance Anxiety Scale, and the Social Desirability Scale were used as data collection tools. The T test and multiple regression analysis were used in the analysis of the data. As a result of the research, it was found that SMA and social desirability do not differ by gender, and it was also seen that SAA differed significantly according to gender, and girls were more concerned about their social appearance. In consequence of the research, it was also found that social desirability and SAA significantly predict SMA.
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- 2023
67. That's Your Cue: Comparing Male and Female Students' Perceptions of Social Norms around Involvement on Campus
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Amber D. Dumford, Angie L. Miller, and Armando A. Rijo
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Co-curricular activities have been shown to impact many measures of academic success, such as academic self-confidence, leadership abilities, identity development, personal development, and student thriving. Borrowing from established research paradigms on pluralistic ignorance, the current study sought to explore whether first-year and senior students' perceptions of themselves and others vary when it comes to attending and participating in campus activities and whether sex has an impact on those perceptions. Using data from the 2018 National Survey of Student Engagement, the study included 10,512 students attending 33 institutions. The results suggest significant differences across the sexes and within reference group (self vs. other) for attending campus activities and participating in co-curricular activities. These findings can help guide faculty, advisors, and administrators to better understand how students' perceptions of peer co-curricular activities might relate to their own, and how those perceptions might affect their behavior positively and negatively.
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- 2023
68. Recognising and Expressing Emotions: Difficulties of Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder in Learning a Foreign Language and How to Resolve Them
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Ayse Tuna
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Recognising emotions, facial expressions and tone of voice and body language, expressing and managing their own emotions, and understanding and responding to other people's emotions are often difficult for children with autism spectrum disorder. Since the emotional codes of individuals with autism spectrum disorder are different, those people will possibly be awkward in expressing some throughout their lives. Although it might seem that children with autism spectrum disorder do not respond emotionally, the ability to understand their facial expressions could lead to an improvement in their social interaction difficulties. In addition, since autistic expressions might be unique to each child, recognising their emotions is important when delivering a personalised intervention to a child with autism spectrum disorder. In recent decades, researchers have become increasingly interested in the role of emotions in learning and teaching a foreign language beyond heavily investigated topics such as foreign language anxiety and motivation and attitudes towards the foreign language. In this paper, how emotions impact the motivation and success of children with autism spectrum disorder while they are learning a foreign language is presented. Challenges, opportunities and future research directions in this domain are given.
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- 2023
69. An Investigation of Sociomathematical Norms Perceived by Students Regarding the Legitimacy of Solutions
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Gülburnu, Mehmet and Gürbüz, Ramazan
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With the study reported on here we aimed to determine what learners perceived as normative in the mathematics classroom. For this reason, we focused on negotiation of the problem solutions and we attempted to determine the sociomathematical norms perceived by learners (SNPS). Audio recordings of dialogues among learners, individual reports, and interviews were used as data collection instruments. The research participants were learners in the seventh grade. The study was conducted over a period of 10 weeks covering the second semester of the academic year. Three SNPS (functionality, inclusiveness, connectivity) regarding the legitimacy of the solutions were determined. The determined norms contributed to the understanding of learners' mathematical preferences, thus bringing more inclusive and complementary understanding about the norms perceived by the learners to the literature. It has been observed that learning opportunities emerging through the negotiation of norms contribute to collective mathematics learning by shaping the interaction among class members. In this context, it was deemed necessary to continue research on norms perceived by learners to create general ideas of mathematics learning and teaching.
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- 2023
70. Exploring Student Perceptions of K-12 Synchronous Remote Education
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Hrastinski, Stefan, Akerfeldt, Anna, and Bergdahl, Nina
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Despite increased interest in synchronous remote K-12 education, there is limited research on how students perceive such education. This article explores student perceptions of remote education, tutor support, social presence, learning and satisfaction. We developed a survey, and after distributing it and analyzing the results, the survey was offered to practitioners as a formative assessment tool. The findings showed that students were slightly positive toward synchronous remote education. Key factors that correlated with student perceptions of social presence, learning and satisfaction were positive perceptions of tutors and, to some extent, being enrolled in a smaller class. Some students appreciated the flexibility and quality of remote education, although many experienced technical and communication challenges. Our findings suggest that it is not sufficient only to engage qualified teachers in their subject; there is also a need to consider the continuous development of teaching practices and how to support and use digital technologies in remote education.
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- 2023
71. 'I Keep Forgetting You're Still Alive': Unmasking Impoliteness in the Xsphere
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Esmaeel Ali Salimi and Seyed Mohammadreza Mortazavi
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Pragmatic competence entails awareness-raising of impoliteness. This paper delves into the pragmatics of impoliteness in online communication, focusing on X (Twitter) interactions, with a particular emphasis on 126 replies to Elon Musk's controversial tweet. Utilizing Culpeper's (2011) model of impoliteness formulae and implicational impoliteness, the study analyzes responses to this tweet, exploring the multifaceted dimensions of impoliteness. The research also investigates the moral order expectations expressed by the repliers, shedding light on the factors influencing their reactions and responses. By employing qualitative content analysis and thematic analysis, the study reveals the nuanced forms of impoliteness and the underlying moral order themes inherent in these online exchanges. "Responsible wealth behavior," "appropriate and non-offensive language," "respect and decency," "refraining from political narratives," "engaging in social responsibility," and "showing transparency, accountability, and ethics" were the identified moral order expectations. The findings underscore the relevance of examining impoliteness in the digital age, where public figures' tweets can have far-reaching consequences and provoke diverse reactions from the online community. This research contributes to a deeper understanding of impoliteness in online discourse and its implications for social media interactions by language learners, which are currently lacking in language classrooms.
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- 2023
72. How Learning Occurred in a Group Leadership Program: The Importance of 'Ba,' 'Omoi,' and Psychological Safety
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John M. Hinck, Steven B. Davis, and Derrick J. Iwanenko
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This research confirms that incorporating concepts of Ba and Omoi with action research promoteshigher levels of learning. Currently, action research, Ba, and Omoi are understudied in militaryinstitutions and college programs. Using a case study approach and two cycles of action research, thisproject addressed how learning occurred for students and instructors in a two-term program at amilitary university. Findings showed how Ba and Omoi were integral in establishing a psychologicallysafe learning environment, learning and growth occurred on multiple levels for students and instructorsas they struggled with imposter phenomenon, and students struggled with negative capability.
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- 2023
73. Autistic Adults' Inclination to Lie in Everyday Situations
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Ralph Bagnall, Ailsa Russell, Mark Brosnan, and Katie Maras
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Autistic children and adolescents often have greater difficulty engaging in deception than their non-autistic peers. However, deception in autistic adulthood has received little attention to date. This study examined whether autistic and non-autistic adults differed in their inclination to lie in everyday situations and the factors that underpin this. Forty-one autistic and 41 non-autistic participants completed self-report measures relating to their inclination to lie, ability to lie and moral attitudes about the acceptability of lying. Participants also undertook a reaction-time test of lie-telling, as well as theory of mind and working memory measures. Autistic and non-autistic adults did not significantly differ in their inclination to lie in everyday situations. The degree to which lying was viewed as morally acceptable positively predicted both groups' inclination to lie. The remaining factors underpinning the inclination to lie differed between groups. Lower self-rated lying ability and slower lie speed predicted a reduced inclination to lie in autistic participants, whereas higher theory of mind and working memory capacity predicted a reduced inclination to lie in the non-autistic group. Implications for our understanding of deception in autistic and non-autistic adults are discussed.
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- 2024
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74. A Multilevel Analysis of Educational Transition Rates at Secondary Level in Sub-Saharan Africa
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Marcos Delprato and Alejandro Farieta
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Estimates show that, in 2019, only 41 per cent of students completed lower secondary and 28 per cent upper secondary education in the sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) region (UNESCO, 2021). One of the reasons for the low completion rates is the poor transition across secondary education due to the significant impact of factors at individual, household, and community levels shaping demand and supply constraints. This article employs a three-level logit to investigate the key determinants for transitions and their variability across countries and communities, and explores whether less wealth inequality is at odds with increasing countries' and communities' performances. It finds that variation on transition rates is 40-50 per cent larger between communities within countries than between countries themselves, and that heterogeneity is larger for upper secondary transition. Leading sources of inequality are wealth, gender, and communities' prevalence of early marriage. Further, the article finds that the equity-performance trade-off does not hold across countries, but it does at the community level where communities with stronger rates of transitions are more unequal. The analysis suggests policies to improve SSA youth chances to move up to the next level of secondary education, starting for narrowing heterogeneity across communities, boosting chances for the poorest groups and female youth living in communities with weak social norms, and measures to diminish the impact of community wealth on their transition performance.
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- 2024
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75. University Students' Interpretations of Study-Related Peer Sociality
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Toni Kosonen, Marita Mäkinen, Johanna Annala, and Leena Penttinen
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This article explores university students' interpretations of peer sociality in the context of academic studies. The study draws on thematic interviews with Finnish students (n = 28) representing two sets of study fields (humanities and human sciences, and technological sciences) in three regional Finnish universities. The study applies a discourse analytic methodology to capture variation in students' accounts about their social encounters and activities and ways of being social in everyday study contexts. The analysis identifies four interpretative repertoires that were named the social well-being repertoire, the pedagogical repertoire, the academic community repertoire, and the networking repertoire. The results show how these repertoires are informed by broader societal and cultural discourses about peer sociality that students need to negotiate as they make sense of and legitimate their ways of being social.
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- 2024
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76. University Education and Entrepreneurial Intentions of European Students: Insights into the Theory of Planned Behaviour Complemented by Skills
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Luca Ferri, Rosanna Spanò, Grigorios Theodosopoulos, and Nicholas Tsitsianis
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Despite its ever-growing volume, research on entrepreneurial intentions remains largely confined within the context of entrepreneurial education and training. To enhance our understanding of the construct within broader layers of context, we evaluate the role of skills developed during general--not specific to entrepreneurship--university education. Employing a large sample of 2553 observations from various universities and fields of specialisation, in four European countries, we explore learners' entrepreneurial intentions, conditional upon the assertions of the Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB) with the added dimension of skills. Our hypotheses are tested via a Structural Equation Modelling (SEM) analysis which enables effective identification of similarities and differences across diverse contexts. Our findings reaffirm the significance of attitudes, social norms, and behavioural control, as statistically significant predictors of learners' motivation to engage in entrepreneurial activities. This contributes to the unifying power of TPB through testing its in-breadth predictive power. Moreover, the role of skills is highlighted as the main construct affecting university student's intentions to engage in entrepreneurial activities.
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- 2024
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77. Social Isolation & Toxic Behavior of Students in E-Learning: Evidence during the Time of the COVID-19 Pandemic
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Asadullah Khaskheli, Yushi Jiang, Syed Ali Raza, and Sara Qamar Yousufi
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The global COVID-19 pandemic has led educational institutions to shut down and adopt e-learning practices through computer-mediated communication. An unanticipated switch of online classes from face-to-face classes isolates students from social groups and teachers, causing online disinhibition. Therefore, this paper investigates factors influencing university students' toxic disinhibition behavior in online classrooms, WhatsApp groups, and Telegram groups. Also, social isolation has been used as a moderating variable to identify whether social isolation strengthens or weakens the proposed association. The research holds the basis of "Social Cognitive Theory" and "Theory of Planned Behavior." The data from 506 university students have been collected for analysis. The proposed framework and research hypotheses have been assessed via PLS-SEM using Smart PLS software. Findings from the study show that toxic behavior victimization, attitude, subjective norms, and behavioral control are factors that positively & significantly affect toxic disinhibition online. Furthermore, motives and self-efficacy showed an insignificant influence on toxic disinhibition. Additionally, toxic disinhibition significantly & positively affects toxic behavior. At last, social isolation is likely to have a moderation effect on the variables. Hence, the research yields guidance on reducing toxic disinhibition online. Further, implications and recommendations are discussed at the end of the study.
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- 2024
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78. Examining Individual and Service Delivery Context Variables and Their Association with the Effectiveness of QPR Suicide Prevention Gatekeeper Training
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Kim Gryglewicz, Christine M. W. Totura Garrison, Kristina K. Childs, Christa D. Labouliere, and Marc S. Karver
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Suicide prevention training programs have spread rapidly within child and public-serving organizations, due to the alarming increase in youth suicide rates. Yet, within these organizations, roles and responsibilities can shape attitudes and intentions related to suicide prevention, thereby influencing the uptake of prevention efforts. As such, various organizational and individual factors can predict uptake, adoption, and maintenance of prevention efforts (Fixsen et al., 2005). To date, few studies have examined the service delivery context in understanding training effectiveness, especially as it relates to QPR (Question Persuade and Refer), one of the most widely disseminated suicide prevention gatekeeper programs. The purpose of this longitudinal study was to evaluate whether individual and organizational characteristics influenced the effectiveness and sustainability of training outcomes, and whether such differences existed among diverse child and public-serving delivery sectors. Several training outcomes that align with the Theory of Planned Behavior (Ajzen, 1991) were examined, including confidence, attitudes, social norms, and suicide prevention behaviors. Measures were assessed prior to and 90 days after the QPR program among a sample of 858 professionals. Community support personnel uniquely showed improvements on social norms while juvenile justice and child welfare workers engaged in more suicide prevention behaviors post training. While trainees across sectors had improved suicide prevention attitudes, law enforcement personnel were the exception. Organizational climate predicted change in suicide prevention attitudes, confidence, and social norms. Trainees who were older, Latinx, and Black had the most improvement on several training outcome variables, but these findings also varied within service sectors.
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- 2024
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79. A Multi-Method Investigation into Learning Words from Social Cues during Discourse
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Crystal Yujin Lee
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Children learn words in a social environment. In my dissertation, I examine how caregivers' social cues facilitate young children's word learning in settings that mirror their typical, dynamic learning environments. In Chapter 1, I overview prior work examining how social cues may support word learning, focusing on possible mechanisms underlying their benefits. In Chapter 2, I investigate how social cues support children's word learning over the time course of discourse topics, as opposed to the focus on single labeling events in prior studies. In Chapter 3, I expand these findings to understand how caregivers use social cues during natural discourse at home. Finally, in Chapter 4, I explore whether neural synchrony (the alignment of neural activity) within caregiver-child interactions has the potential to explain relations between caregivers' social cues and children's word learning. Together, my findings suggest that, despite the information-density and messiness of natural learning environments, social cues reduce referential ambiguity during natural caregiver-child discourse in a way that ultimately supports children's word learning. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
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- 2024
80. Othering in the Newly Sex-Desegregated International Schools of Saudi Arabia: Identity, Gender Roles and Social Engagement
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Abdullah Almutairi, Abdulaziz Aldossari, Rashed Aldoosry, Huda Alsalem, and Maha Alboqami
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Two of the goals of elementary school are to help students to develop a healthy sense of identity and learn social communication skills. However, there are many factors figure into students' experience during their early years of school. Othering by the other sex is one of these factors, especially in Saudi Arabia, which has just sex-desegregated their elementary schools for the first time. Through in-depth, semi-structured interviews and field observations, the authors explore the role of othering in the experience of students in first to third grade. Open and focused coding of the interviews and structured observations help to identify the mechanisms of othering and resistance, which shape the students' sense of identity, their understanding of gender roles, and their social interactions with one another.
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- 2024
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81. Vaccine Hesitancy among College Students and Individuals Seeking Healthcare: A Social Norms Perspective
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Danielle L. Terry, Patricia A. Hui, Christopher P. Terry, and Allison Trabold
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Objective: Health behavior research suggests that perceived social norms impact health decisions. This study aimed to (a) examine reasons for vaccine hesitancy among a sample of college students compared to a clinical sample (b) examine the accuracy of perceptions of others' receptivity and intention to seek out the COVID-19 vaccine, and (c) determine whether greater self-other normative discrepancies (SODs) were associated with increased likelihood to seek out the COVID-19 vaccine. Participants: Participants included 227 students at a Northeastern private college and 140 patients seeking medical care. Methods: College students completed an online, anonymous survey. Patients completed a paper-and-pencil survey distributed at appointment check-in. Results: Compared to their perceptions of others, participants had more positive beliefs about vaccines. The most common reason prompting individuals to seek out the vaccine was to return to "normal life." Conclusions: Future research might examine use of social norms interventions to decrease vaccine hesitancy.
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- 2024
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82. The Impact of Mentoring Youth Placed At-Risk on the Socialization of Preservice Physical Educators
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Karen Lux Gaudreault, Denis Schulz, Victoria N. Shiver, and Theresa Allgaier
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Purpose: Grounded in occupational socialization theory, the purpose of this study was to investigate the influence of mentoring underserved youth on the socialization of preservice teachers within a community-engaged after-school program. Methods: Data consisted of semistructured interviews, critical incident accounts, and field notes. All interviews were audio-recorded and transcribed. Data were analyzed inductively using elements of grounded theory and constant comparison. Findings: Four themes were developed. First, each participant entered teacher training to provide positive experiences for students. Second, the practical experience supported preservice teachers in feeling more comfortable in their roles as educators. Third, preservice teachers developed personal relationships with the students in the after-school program. Fourth, preservice teachers internalized the obligation to model healthy social-emotional behaviors. Conclusions: Findings indicate the benefits of mentoring in a community-engaged learning project. Interacting with a diverse population of students can positively impact teacher socialization and feelings toward students and teaching.
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- 2024
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83. To Accept or Reject? Hindu and Muslim Children's Views of Religious, Moral, and Conventional Norms
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Mahesh Srinivasan and Audun Dahl
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Faced with myriad societal norms, children must decide which norms to accept and which to reject. These decisions hold consequences for how norms change over time. Decisions about norms are particularly salient for religious children in pluralistic societies, who encounter norms both from their own as well as from other religious and non-religious communities. Although children follow norms and disapprove of their violation from early in life, this should not be taken to mean that children "approve" of the norms themselves: a person can disapprove of a norm that they follow and enforce upon others. The present study examined religious children's views about the authorship, utility, changeability, and changeworthiness of norms. Ninety-seven Hindu and Muslim 9- to 14-year-olds (46 female and 51 male) in India were interviewed about familiar religious, moral, and conventional norms. As predicted, children's views about whether a norm should be changed (its "changeworthiness") were predicted by how good they perceived the norm to be (its "utility"). Also as hypothesized, children's views about who, if anyone, could change a norm (its "changeability") was predicted by their views about who made the norm (its "authorship"). Children distinguished between norms based on their perceived authorship, utility, changeability, and changeworthiness. Age and religious differences also emerged. Together, these findings elucidate how children come to accept or reject norms, which ultimately affects how norms persist, change, or disappear over time.
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- 2024
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84. Pornography Use, Perceived Peer Norms, and Attitudes toward Women: A Study of College Men
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Prachi H. Bhuptani, Shannon R. Kenney, Lucy E. Napper, and Lindsay M. Orchowski
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Men's negative attitudes toward women represent a known risk factor for sexual aggression perpetration. Sexual aggression is a widespread public health concern, especially among emerging adults, and is associated with a multitude of negative consequences. The current study evaluated whether pornography-related perceived peer norms, own approval, and self-reported use are associated with negative attitudes toward women in a sample of college men. Types of pornography examined included pornography (in general); pornography that included portrayals of bondage, whipping, and spanking but without explicit dissent (i.e., pornography that depicted bondage/physical aggression); as well as pornography consisting of sexually explicit rape depictions in which force is used. Self-report measures assessing the frequency of pornography exposure, self-acceptance of pornography use, and perceived peer norms were collected from 283 college men. A multiple linear regression model revealed that only perceived peer norms for acceptance of pornography that depicted rape was positively associated with negative attitudes toward women. Findings highlight the importance of better understanding and addressing perceived peer norms in sexual assault prevention programs for college men.
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- 2024
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85. It's on You! The Development and Assessment of an Instagram-Based Social Norms Message to Increase Bystander Intervention among College Students
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Leticia Couto Fazio de Albuquerque Lira
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Health messaging can be a successful tool in encouraging pro-social behavior, such as bystander intervention in sexual violence situations. This dissertation explored the development of a social media message to encourage bystander intervention among college students using multiple theoretical frameworks: social norms approach and bystander intervention barriers. After the development of these messages, an experiment was conducted to assess the effect of the messages on attitudes, perceived norms, efficacy, intentions to intervene, and intentions to take responsibility as they relate to bystander intervention. The experiment conditions were four: a norms-based condition, a behavior-based condition, a combination condition, and a control condition. The norms-based condition had an effect on perceived norms and intentions to intervene. The combination condition had an effect on intentions to intervene. These results have implications for our current understanding of bystander intervention models and message development to encourage bystander intervention in sexual violence situations among college students. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
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- 2024
86. International Students' Employability: A Language Socialization Perspective
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Behnam Soltani and Michael Tomlinson
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Purpose: This study introduces a non-orthodox approach to the dominant policy-based approaches to graduate employability through contextualizing international students' everyday experiences within their educational and wider structural contexts of the labour market. Design/methodology/approach: The study used narrative frames to collect data from 180 international students from China, Hong Kong, India, Sri Lanka, Vietnam and Nepal at a New Zealand tertiary institution. Narrative frames as a research tool in educational contexts are used to ellicit the experiences of individuals in the form of a story as participants reflect on their experience. The frames use sentence starters to draw responses from participants about their experiences (Barkhuizen and Wette, 2008). Findings: This study argues that, through a socialization process, international students develop identities that fit an ever-changing labour market. This process is catalysed by a higher education landscape that produces career-ready subjects capable of appropriating different social spaces that prepare students and graduates to enter the labour market. Further, it argues that graduate employability should be understood as a complex process through which students and graduates socialise themselves through negotiating the socioacademic spaces by (1) familiarising themselves with the dominant workspace norms, (2) positioning themselves as more career-ready individuals, and (3) imagigining employable selves capable of meeting the needs of the job market. Research limitations/implications: This study has limitations. Only one data collection source has been used. It would have been great to use narrative frames along with interviews. In addition, the data would have been stronger if the researcher could have used classroom observations, which could be a future initiative. Practical implications: This study could provide practical insights to tertiary institutions about international students' developing capabilities and identities so they could better prepare themselves for the world of work. Further, this study provides insights about some of the challenges that international students face in tertiary contexts to become career-ready. Hence, educators could employ strategies to better support these learners in their everyday learning spaces. This study also has useful benefits for future and current international students and international graduates regarding what investments they need to make so they can better socialize themselves in their tertiary and workplace practices. Social implications: This study has social implications. It helps international students better understand the social, cultural and academic expectations of their host countries. Therefore, they could better socialize themselves into those practices and contribute more effectively to their academic and workplace communities. The study also helps academic and workplace institutions strategize more effectively to address the social and cultural needs of international graduates. The study also contributes to the social and cultural understanding of the teachers that engage with international students on a daily basis by helping them devise activities that better address these students' and graduates' needs. Originality/value: The study adds theoretical and methodological value to the debates around graduate employability. It includes the voices of 180 students and unravels their day-to-day experiences of capability building and employability development from their own perspectives.
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- 2024
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87. Enhancing Social Skills Development in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder: An Evaluation of the 'Power of Camp Inclusion' Program
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Aikaterini Dolyka, Christina Evaggelinou, Katerina Mouratidou, Irini Koidou, Efthymia Efthymiou, Eleni Nikolaou, and Dimitra Katsarou
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This study investigates the effectiveness of the "Power of Camp Inclusion" program in enhancing social skills among children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) in an integrated educational environment of a camp. Caregivers, who received pedagogical training on disability issues, evaluated the program. The study involved 22 individuals with ASD, aged 7-25 years (mean age: 14.82), and 22 companions, aged 20-56 years (mean age: 25.27). Caregivers received in vivo training on social skills to support their role in the program. The Autism Social Skills Profile (ASSP) was used to assess social skills, including Social Reciprocity, Social Participation, and Harmful Social Behaviors, as well as the overall index of social skills. In addition to ASSP, all participants underwent semi-structured interviews. Statistical analysis examined demographic data, internal consistency of variables, their correlation, and t-test analyses of a sample and paired observations. The results indicated that the implementation of the "Power of Camp Inclusion" program had positive effects on the development of social reciprocity, social participation, overall index of social skills, and reduction of harmful social behaviors among children with ASD. The findings of this study highlight the importance of educational programs that support the development of social skills for children with ASD and emphasize the need for such programs to be integrated into modern educational policies.
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- 2024
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88. A Review of Factors Affecting Teacher Intervention in Peer Bullying Incidents: A Call for More Nuanced Professional Development
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Shannon O. O'Brien, Marilyn Campbell, and Chrystal Whiteford
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Bullying, once considered a "rite of passage" among school children, is increasingly recognized as a serious public health issue. Schools are tasked to both prevent and intervene effectively in bullying; however, the problem does not appear to be decreasing. We know that if teachers see bullying among students and do nothing, then bullying is likely to increase. Teachers are influenced by a number of factors to intervene or not. We discuss these factors, such as teachers' ability to recognize bullying, judgments about how serious a bullying incident is, normative beliefs about bullying, the gender and popularity of the students involved, their own self-efficacy, their empathy, their own stress, the lack of time to effectively intervene and the support of the school leadership. We argue that teacher professional development, including pre-service education, needs to be more nuanced for teachers to take into account these factors to reduce bullying in schools.
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- 2024
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89. An Exploratory Study Examining Student Social, Academic, and Emotional Behavior across School Transitions
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Malena A. Nygaard and Heather E. Ormiston
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While there is evidence suggesting school-based transitions impact student mental health and academics (Lester et al., 2013), it is unknown how these transitions specifically impact the domains of social, academic, and emotional behavior, as measured via the Social, Academic, and Emotional Behavior Risk Screener (SAEBRS). The purpose of this study was to explore the relationship between school-based transitions and teacher ratings of student SAEBRS scores in a midsize, suburban school district. Using paired t-tests and McNemar's test we examined changes in SAEBRS scores and benchmark risk levels across grade level changes and school-based transitions. SAEBRS scores decreased significantly from 8th to 9th grade (school-based transition) in the total, academic, and emotional subscales, although risk level did not increase significantly during this transition. In contrast, SAEBRS scores increased significantly in each subscale as students transitioned from 7th to 8th grade (no school-based transition). Implications for research and school psychology are discussed.
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- 2024
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90. Booming Internet Use during Pandemic on Indonesian Students' Faith: Threat and Opportunity for Sustainable Religious Education and Religious Inherency Formation
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Pratiwi Tri Utami
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Focusing on Indonesia's case, this research discusses how booming internet use impacts students' faith, functioning as both threat and opportunity concerning students' religious inherency and sustainable religious education (RE). This qualitative study analyses six public junior high schools and 48 interviewed participants. To reveal various religions' views, the participants belong to six recognised religions in Indonesia: Islam, Christianity (Protestant), Catholicism, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Confucianism. According to thematic analysis, the findings show that teachers and students face challenges in the early shift to online RE, such as technical problems and learning ineffectiveness. These challenges impede student understanding, study preparation and learning motivation, resulting in decreased social skills, lack of communication, declining faith, and weak religious inherency. However, the internet fostered RE continuity during the pandemic, especially contributing to the time efficiency of RE. Therefore, this research formulates the concept of tri-centred religious education, which integrates the roles of family, school, and society to create the students' self-control. Religious values and social norms should be connected to strengthen students' religious inherency.
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- 2024
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91. Young Children's Trust and Sharing Decisions
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Hüseyin Kotaman and Mustafa Aslan
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The purpose of this study is to investigate how young children define trust and to find out if there is a relationship between the people whom they trust and the people with whom they share their favorite food and toy. The participants consist of 273 kindergarteners enrolled in five public kindergartens. Research assistants asked the participants questions such as what they think trust is, who they trust, with whom they want to share their favorite food and favorite toy, and why. Findings did not reveal age or gender as factors for children's trust and sharing decisions. Children's trust decisions were not associated with their sharing decisions. Accordingly, it appears that children perceive trust and sharing as two separate concepts. This might be due to the abstract nature of trust and the social nature of sharing, in which immediate reciprocity might play a more important role in children's sharing decisions. Children mentioned reciprocity as the second highest reason for their sharing decisions.
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- 2024
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92. Antecedents to and Outcomes Associated with Teacher-Child Relationship Perceptions in Early Childhood: Further Evidence for Child-Driven Effects
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Elif Dede Yildirim, Cynthia A. Frosch, António J. Santos, Manuela Veríssimo, Kristen Bub, and Brian E. Vaughn
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Preschool teachers' perceptions about relationships with students (teacher-child relationships [TCRs]) predict children's subsequent social competence (SC) and academic progress. Why this is so remains unclear. Do TCRs shape children's development, or do child attributes influence both TCRs and subsequent development? Relations between TCRs and other measures were examined for 185 preschoolers (107 girls, 89 longitudinal, and [approximately]75% European American). Teachers rated TCRs and child social/affective behaviors. Teacher-child interactions (TCIs) and children's affect expressiveness were observed. Child SC and receptive vocabulary were assessed. TCRs were significantly correlated with each type of outcome. TCIs, SC, expressed affect, and teacher-rated behaviors also predicted TCRs longitudinally. Results suggest that TCR ratings predict subsequent adaptation because they summarize children's behavioral profiles rather than on TCR quality per se.
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- 2024
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93. Pre-K Attendance and Social Development: The Moderating Role of Kindergarten Classroom Experiences. Registered Report Stage 2
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Kathryn Zimmermann, Qingqing Yang, Kelly Purtell, and Arya Ansari
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Although academic benefits of pre-K are well established, the associations between pre-K attendance and social and learning behaviours are less clear. Some research suggests that pre-K attenders may enter and exit kindergarten exhibiting less optimal social and learning behaviours than their non-attending peers, and little attention has been paid to how aspects of kindergarten experiences, like academic rigour, activity settings and teacher-student relationships, may contribute to these patterns of development. The current study addresses these gaps in knowledge by using nationally representative data from the ECLSK:2011 (n = 14,260) to examine the social and learning behaviours of pre-K attenders and nonattenders at kindergarten entry and exit. Our results reveal that pre-K attenders are not consistently underperforming their non-attending peers on social and learning behaviours in kindergarten. However, teachers reported that pre-K attenders exhibited more externalising behaviour problems at kindergarten entry and exit, and non-attenders made greater gains in learning behaviours over the kindergarten year. We also found no evidence of moderation when examining our focal classroom experience variables.
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- 2024
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94. Pre-K Attendance and Social Development: The Moderating Role of Kindergarten Classroom Experiences. Registered Report Stage 1
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Kathryn Zimmermann, Qingqing Yang, Kelly Purtell, and Arya Ansari
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Many studies have established that there are important life-long benefits of attending pre-K. At the same time, recent research suggests that pre-K attenders may enter and exit kindergarten exhibiting less optimal social and learning behaviours than their non-attending peers, and little attention has been paid to what factors may contribute to these patterns of development after children enter kindergarten. The current study will address these gaps in knowledge using nationally representative data from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study Kindergarten Class of 2011 to examine the social and learning behaviours of pre-K attenders and nonattenders at kindergarten entry and exit. Moreover, we will determine the extent to which children's social and behavioural skills change at differential rates across the kindergarten year as a function of pre-K attendance and their kindergarten classroom experiences, with a focus on the academic rigour, activity settings and teacher-student relationships.
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- 2024
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95. Psychoanalytical Perspective of Shakespeare's Characters in Love
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M. Malathy and Senthil Kumar Sivamathiah
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This paper delves into the intricate realm of Shakespearean characters in love, employing a psychoanalytical lens to unravel the depths of their emotions, desires, and conflicts. Drawing on psychoanalytic theories, particularly those of Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung, this paper aims to dissect the subconscious motivations and psychological intricacies of characters such as Romeo and Juliet, Orsino and Viola, and other iconic figures. Through this analysis, the paper seeks to offer a nuanced understanding of how Shakespeare masterfully crafted characters whose emotional journeys resonate with universal human experiences. In addition to exploring the psychoanalytical aspects of Shakespearean characters' love, this paper also investigates the socio-cultural influences shaping their romantic dynamics. By examining the historical context in which these plays were written and performed, it aims to illuminate the ways in which societal norms and expectations intersect with individual psychology to influence characters' behaviors and choices. Furthermore, it analyzes how Shakespeare's portrayal of love reflects broader themes of power, gender, and identity, shedding light on the complex interplay between personal desire and societal constraints in Renaissance England. Through this multidimensional approach, it endeavors to provide a comprehensive examination of Shakespearean love that resonates with contemporary audiences while honoring the timeless brilliance of the Bard's storytelling.
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- 2024
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96. The Basketball Boys: Young Men from Refugee Backgrounds and the Symbolic Value of Swagger in an Australian State High School
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Georgie Harwood, Kristiann C. Heesch, Marguerite C. Sendall, and Mark Brough
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Schools are critical spaces for young men from refugee backgrounds. They play an integral role in literacy development, educational attainment, and providing a sense of belonging. Inclusive education practices for this group?are?largely absent in Australian schools. Research shows focusing on these young men from a non-deficit position assists with inclusivity. There is a lack of research exploring the agentic practices of young men from refugee backgrounds within?schools. This paper explores the symbolic value of swagger for a group of young men from refugee backgrounds at a high school?in?Australia. A Bourdieusian theoretical framework guided?critical awareness of power in schools. This research shows how a group of young men found a meaningful way to acquire social and cultural capital. Despite the school's constraints, this group?developed a group identity reflected in their clothing and embodied dispositions referred to here as swagger. Our findings demonstrate the complex power relations at work, including the opportunity for the?young men to resist and be included. In the spirit of Bourdieu's concern for reflexivity our findings point to the need for schools, teachers, and education policy makers to consider the workings of power in schools in more considered ways.
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- 2024
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97. Fostering Positive Relationships among Classmates: Useful Models for Social Pedagogical Actions
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Eleftheria Beazidou and Kafenia Botsoglou
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The scope of this study was to discriminate factors, which could improve students' social relationships in kindergarten classrooms. In this research, 147 volunteer children participated, 67 female students and 80 male students. Every student was between 4.5 and 5.5 years old and they were all attending urban public kindergarten located in central Greece. This study focuses on factors associated with the students' social ability to develop healthy relationships in kindergarten classrooms. Direct observations of children's friendship skills and social play participation, questionnaires for children's social behaviour filled out by teachers and sociometric data were gathered for data analysis. The collected data ware analysed through correlational and Multiple Linear Regression Analysis. Results indicate that social behaviour, social play and social skills for developing friendships have an impact on children's relationships. Higher scores in 'cooperation', 'social collaborative game' and 'social skills for sustaining friends' are positively associated with peer acceptance and friendship. All of the above are highly significant variables for the prediction of healthy relationships in early childhood. All models showed effects, which are meaningful in socio-pedagogical applications.
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- 2024
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98. 'Not to Judge by the Looks but You Can Tell by the Looks!' Physical Capital as Symbolic Capital in the Individualization of Health among Young Norwegians
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Linda Røset, Ken Green, Lorraine Cale, Thorsteinn Sigurjónsson, Hege Tjomsland, and Miranda Thurston
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In this paper we explore how 15-16-year-old Norwegians experience social and cultural norms that shape their relationship with health and physical activity (PA) in a country where participation in PA is normative, in the sense that it is not only a widely shared practice but, in having significant cultural traction, is commonly understood as a 'normal' part of Norwegian daily life. The study draws upon qualitative data generated from 31 focus groups involving 148 10th graders (15-16-year-olds) in eight secondary schools in Norway. A key finding was that health was primarily viewed as synonymous with physical health and physical health as closely related to PA. A symbolic marker for physical condition -- and, by extension, physical health -- was physical appearance and 'looks' (in other words, physical attractiveness), revolving around gender normative bodily 'shape'. In this vein, the youngsters tended towards individualistic views of health -- seeing health as a responsibility that lay largely in their hands. We argue that the significance of growing up and living in a wealthy, social democratic nation-state, with high living standards and high social and cultural expectations, can have profound implications for youngsters' perceptions of health and PA, the impact of neoliberalism notwithstanding.
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- 2024
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99. Associations between Non-Parental Adult Support and Youths' Individual and Contextual Characteristics
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Barbara Mirkovic, Bernadine Brady, and Charlotte Silke
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While the role parents play in supporting young people is well established, support from other caring adults also becomes important during adolescence, particularly when young people are facing problems in their lives. The goal of this paper is to reflect on youth support seeking when facing problems, exploring differences between youth who seek support from parents only and those who seek support from parents and other non-parental adults. This paper outlines the findings of a secondary analysis of data from the third wave of the Growing up in Ireland child cohort at 17/18 years, collected from primary caregivers and youth. From 6126 young people in the national sample, 91.3% answered the selective question about the type of adult support they seek. Of this cohort, 36% of young people seek support from a parent and 48% go to a parent and another adult. Comparing these groups, there are significant differences found in both their individual and contextual characteristics, with better outcomes for youth with additional non-parental adult support, including using active coping strategies, better self-esteem, and identity resolution. While the findings indicate that non-parental adults have a positive influence in different areas of youth well-being, further research is required to better understand the ways in which support from non-parental adults helps young people in their transition to adulthood.
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- 2024
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100. Youth Literacy and Social Practices in a Gaming Club
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Abdul Rehman Siddiqui
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One of the growing phenomena of our digital age is the proliferation of digital fan spaces (Gee, 2018). Dedicated to a specific fandom or activity, these spaces have allowed participants to play competitively, share videos with each other, create fanfiction, provide feedback to one another and engage in a host of literacies around something they share an affinity for (Black, 2009; Gee, 2017a). Through advances in technology, access to multiple tools and highly specialized knowledge of specific subjects, youth can now create communities in online spaces where they can engage in complex activities with their friends and fellow gamers without the presence of external moderation. As this social phenomenon has grown, so has the research around it in educational spaces. Some scholars now increasingly conduct educational research beyond what is "focused upon learning as instantiated in social institutions," (Hayes & Duncan, 2012, p. 10), or more specifically, schools. The argument presented is that schools, while an important part of learning, account for just a fraction of youths' time spent and do not account for many of the literacies and social practices they engage in when involved in these self-selected spaces. This study explores various literacy and social practices of youth in an online gaming environment. The purpose is to better understand how youth engage in literacy and social practices within spaces they themselves create and moderate in pursuit of their own interests. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
- Published
- 2024
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