7,533 results on '"HIGH school seniors"'
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2. PjBL-based Digital History Model to Improve Historical Concept Skills and Historical Consciousness
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Jenny Koce Matitaputty, Nanda Saputra, Loso Judijanto, Nugroho Susanto, Muhammad Hanif, Jems Sopacua, and Muhammad Rijal Fadli
- Abstract
Digital history-based project-based learning (PjBL) in history learning is a learning medium that can provide a special attraction for students who can improve historical concept skills and historical awareness. However, there are still many teachers who have not used it, so it is very important to study it. This research aims to analyze the influence of the digital history based PjBL model in improving historical concept skills and historical awareness. The method used is quasi-experimental with two classes, experimental and control. The population used class XI high school students in Lampung, Indonesia and the sample size was 213. Cluster random sampling was used to determine sampling, while data collection was in the form of test instruments. The test instrument questions were analyzed using the gain score and Kruskal-Walli's test to determine the increase in historical concept skills and historical awareness with the help of statistical package for the social sciences (SPSS) 26. The research results confirmed that digital history based PjBL was effective in increasing historical concept skills and historical awareness with a high score, making it the best choice to overcome obstacles in history learning.
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- 2024
3. The Transition to College: Voices from the Class of 2023
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Stanford University, Policy Analysis for California Education (PACE), Alexandria Hurtt, Michal Kurlaender, Christina Sun, and Baiyu Zhou
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This brief examines the experiences of California high school seniors from the graduating class of 2023, offering insights into their preparation, plans, and concerns for college prior to enrollment. Drawing on results from a large-scale survey of seniors, the findings reveal important variation in students' secondary school experiences and their plans for college, particularly by race/ethnicity and gender identity. As students' experiences in high school influence concerns about their college futures, these results represent an important marker of what college going may look like for future graduating cohorts and can help policymakers and practitioners better understand the context of students' postsecondary decisions and pathways.
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- 2024
4. COVID-19 Learning Loss and Recovery in Brazil: Assessing Gaps across Social Groups
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Eveline de Medeiros Miranda and Donald R. Baum
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Students in over 150 countries experienced school closures throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. In the years following, a growing body of literature seeks to estimate the impacts of these education disruptions on a diverse set of outcomes, including student learning. This article adds to this research by examining causal evidence through a difference-in-differences framework (DID). Results suggest that school closures led to learning losses in math for high school seniors in public schools in the Federal District (DF) in Brazil. And while all racial groups experienced learning loss, White and Asian students experienced the most significant losses in 2020. We find no evidence of learning recovery from 2020 to 2021 for any racial groups, suggesting that learning losses persisted into school reopening. We do find, however, possible signs of recovery for female senior students compared to male students. Nevertheless, male and female performance differences are still prominent when analyzing data from 2016 to 2021. The utilization of critical policy analysis and the effectively maintained inequality frameworks can offer insights into significant learning disparities experienced by students.
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- 2024
5. Examining Student Perception on Mobile Augmented Reality Integration, Gender Differences, Learning Styles, Feedback, Challenges, and Opportunities in an Online Physics Class
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Dionafer Bangga-Modesto
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This study aimed to investigate the perception of STEM students (n = 147) on using mobile Augmented Reality (AR) across gender and learning styles in physics online classes. It utilized embedded mixed-method research and purposive sampling. An instrument named Students Perception in Integrating Mobile AR in Physics Class was developed and has undergone a series of validations such as item generation from literature review, content validation, cognitive interview, pilot testing, and exploratory factor analysis revealing two factors, CFA with indices that are of acceptable value, and good Cronbach alpha ([alpha] = 0.86) for reliability. Mean, standard deviation, percentages, two samples t-test, and thematic analysis were used to analyze the data. Results revealed that all students have a source of internet connection as well as a device to use and most of them have a very stable to somewhat stable internet connection. Positive feedback was shown in terms of overall learning experience and perception across gender and learning styles. However, in terms of overall usability, females have more ease of use compared to males and kinesthetic learners only have a positive response. It was also found that there is no significant difference across gender. Moreover, the integration of AR in a physics lesson has received excellent responses from both students with and without prior experience in a classroom setting. All of the difficulties the students encountered were technological in nature. There are also opportunities to improve the integration of mobile AR in the technical and learning process. These results suggest that teachers should integrate mobile AR in online physics classes but should consider factors such as Internet connection, device, gender, and learning styles in developing the application.
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- 2024
6. Developing Students' Chemical Literacy through the Integration of Dilemma Stories into a STEAM Project on Petroleum Topic
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Yuli Rahmawati, Erdawati Erdawati, Achmad Ridwan, Novita Veronica, and Deni Hadiana
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The aim of this study was to develop students' chemical literacy by integrating dilemma stories into a Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Mathematics (STEAM) project on petroleum. Chemical literacy can help students face future challenges by applying what they learn about chemistry subjects at school to solve problems in their daily lives. A qualitative research method was employed that included interviews, observations, reflective journals, chemical literacy tests, and student activity sheets, as data collection tools. Thirty six secondary school students participated in the research using a project-based approach consisting of five steps: value reflection, problem-solving, project monitoring and evaluation, project development, and transformation. This study used four chemical literacy components according to Shwartz, Ben-Zvi and Hofstein (2006) namely scientific and chemical content knowledge, characteristics of chemistry, chemistry in context, higher-order learning skills, and affective aspect. STEAM integrated with dilemmas stories provides opportunities for students to develop chemical literacy through value reflection, problem solving, and STEAM project. This study uses a dilemma story to understand chemistry concepts whereby students can develop a project by integrating chemistry and STEAM principles. The STEAM Project involved making alternative fuel to find a solution to a problem presented in the dilemma story. The researchers were challenged by the need to find a suitable chemistry-based dilemma story to integrate with a STEAM project while also empowering students and managing time resources.
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- 2024
7. The Relationship between Middle Grades Algebra and Advanced Carnegie Credits: A QuantCrit Analysis
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Kristian Edosomwan, Jemimah L. Young, and Jamaal R. Young
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This study examines the impact of early Algebra I coursework on advanced Carnegie credits among 12th graders from diverse racial/ethnic backgrounds, using data from the NCES HSTS (1990-2019). Findings indicate that early Algebra students, particularly Black and Latinx, earn more advanced credits, revealing a widening gap in advanced course attainment. The study underscores the importance of early Algebra in college readiness and STEM preparation, highlighting the need for interventions to address educational disparities. Future research should explore additional factors influencing college readiness.
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- 2024
8. Pre-College Summer Program in Entrepreneurial and Design Thinking Influences STEM Success for African American Students
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Caesar R. Jackson, Dawayne Whittington, and Tanina Bradley
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Sustained innovation and economic strength of the U.S depends on a greater participation of underrepresented minorities in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). University-based outreach programs that serve African American and other minority populations should do more to infuse invention education in activities that engage pre-college students from these groups to motivate them to pursue STEM degrees. The Research, Discovery, and Innovation (RDI) Summer Institute is a design and science entrepreneurship program that is offered at North Carolina Central University to high school seniors who have been accepted for admission to a STEM degree program at the university. This study found the RDI Summer Institute program to be effective based on proximal outcomes of gains in composite entrepreneurial thinking skills (entrepreneurial, managerial, engineering design, and technical skills) as perceived by the participants and measured by pre- and post-surveys. Eighty-seven percent of the pre-college participants were African Americans, showed high levels of creativity and innovativeness, and presented product ideas that were conscientious in meeting their community needs. Program impact was assessed based on near-term and distal academic outcomes in college through a rigorously designed quasi-experiment which compared 31 case-control matched pairs of students who had been RDI participants and non-RDI participants. A conditional logistic regression showed first-year retention in STEM degree programs for students who had been RDI participants was five times that of students who had been non-RDI participants. Additionally, first-year STEM retention in differential comparisons favored female students, students from very low/low SES households, and students from single parent households. Also, students who had been RDI participants performed higher in STEM gatekeeper courses, and a strong positive impact of the RDI Summer Institute program was associated with higher STEM persistence even two and three years after pre-college students participated.
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- 2024
9. Strengthening Research Pedagogy: Student's Online Research Experiences, Challenges, and Effective Teaching Strategies
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Princess Gerbie C. Durante
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Given the growing trend of delivering classes through online and virtual environments, it is vital to gain a nuanced understanding of students' online research learning experiences, the factors that contributed to their choice of learning modality, the challenges they encountered, and the effective online research teaching practices and strategies that supported them in completing the course. Although some studies have looked into this area, there is limited literature on research courses conducted online. Thus, this study attempts to fill that gap. Using a mixed-methods approach, the results revealed that overall, there is a significant difference in the projected performance of 204 asynchronous students compared to their actual achievement. Likewise, a significant difference is also evident in the projected performance of the 67 synchronous students compared to their actual achievement. Furthermore, it is of note that the synchronous students projected higher performance and actually attained better marks, with a significant difference in actual achievement compared to their asynchronous counterparts. Analysis of qualitative data also revealed factors that influenced the disparity, including internet connection issues, communication challenges, learning environment, time management, and group dynamics. Additionally, effective teaching practices that facilitated the completion of collaborative research projects include clarity of learning materials, reasonable deadlines, teacher support and understanding, availability for consultation and feedback, and interactive and engaging teaching methods. Consequently, these results can be used to inform and improve research teaching practices, learning materials design, and assessment tool development. More significantly, it may be used as the basis for institutional policies about online research learning.
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- 2024
10. How Adolescents' Perceived Teachers' Mindset Beliefs Influence School Engagement in China: Roles of Perceived Classroom Goal Structures and Adolescents' Mindset Beliefs
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Xiaoyu Jia, Ping Li, Jing Zhao, and Yuchi Zhang
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Students' perception of teachers' mindset beliefs (TMB) is associated with their school engagement (SSE). Based on SSE's contextual-personal interplay, perceived classroom goal structures (CGS) and students' mindset beliefs (SMB) were considered. Data from 1071 high school students were analyzed. The results show that CGS significantly mediated the negative connection between perceived headteachers' fixed mindset beliefs and SSE. Students who perceived headteachers to endorse more fixed mindset beliefs aligned with classroom performance goal structure (PGS) rather than mastery goal structure (MGS) environments, predicted fewer engagements. SMB played a moderated role. The effect of MGS on SSE was much stronger for students with low fixed mindset beliefs, whereas the effect of PGS on SSE was significant only for students with high fixed mindset beliefs. These findings corroborate SSE's development-in-sociocultural-context theory, indicating the value of inculcating growth mindset among teachers, and the fitness of classroom-student motivational systems to improve adolescents' engagement.
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- 2024
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11. Taking Literature off Page! The Effectiveness of a Blended Drama Approach for Enhancing L2 Oral Accuracy, Pronunciation and Complexity
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Simona Floare Bora
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This article intends to add to the rising discussion related to the employment of authentic plays and drama within a high school compulsory curriculum for enhancing learners' foreign language (L2) oral skills. In particular, it examines the pedagogical use of authentic contemporary plays for developing learners' L2 oral production in terms of (1) complexity -- syntactic and mean length of AS-units (MLAS) and (2) accuracy -- global and pronunciation accuracy. For this purpose, a class of 10 final year high school students with a lower-intermediate to upper-intermediate level of language in an Italian context was exposed longitudinally to a blended-drama approach -- the use of literary play scripts, drama games and techniques, and a full-scale performance -- conducted over two terms for a total of 40 hours in-class lessons. A control group was taught through a traditional approach over the same period. Quantitative data were collected through a pre-test/post-test design with three tasks under different conditions regarding status and interaction: oral proficiency interview (OPI), story-retelling and guided role-play (GRP). Findings revealed that drama significantly improved learners' pronunciation accuracy, syntactic complexity and MLAS. There was no significant statistical result on global accuracy between the two groups. Pedagogical implications for teaching practice will be discussed.
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- 2024
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12. Information without Guidance: Managing the College Search Process in Urban Schools
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Shomon Shamsuddin
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Despite high aspirations, many students do not complete postsecondary education. Some scholars advocate for providing more college information to increase enrollment and reduce attainment gaps but this approach overlooks what school counselors and students do with information. Based on interviews and participant observations drawn from 20 urban high schools, this study explores how counselors and students make use of online college information in postsecondary education guidance. The findings reveal that counselors feel students hold responsibility for many aspects of their college searches. Students easily find college information online but experience challenges in understanding it, which leaves them with unanswered questions. Abundant college information may enable counselors to adopt the role of managing the college search process instead of directly guiding students. Scaffolding, active engagement, and additional resources are needed to support counselors and students in college guidance.
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- 2024
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13. Combating Summer Melt: The Impact of Near-Peer Mentor Matriculation Program in New York City
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Vivian Yuen Ting Liu, Alexandra Haralampoudis, and Isabel Polon
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College education plays a crucial role in upward social mobility. However, despite applying to and being accepted by colleges, students often fail to matriculate -- a phenomenon known as "summer melt". The summer after high school graduation is a vulnerable period for these students due to limited counseling support from both high schools and accepted colleges. While summer counseling has been studied as an intervention to address summer melt, little research exists on programs using "near-peer" counselors, despite evidence from smaller-scale interventions suggesting their positive impact and cost-effectiveness. This study utilizes administrative data for 54,000 New York City high school seniors who graduated in June 2020 at the peak of the COVID-19 Pandemic. It aims to examine the impact of a remote near-peer college matriculation support program on students' enrollment in Fall 2020 using propensity score matching. The results indicate that the program increased matriculation by seven percentage points. Notably, it proved particularly effective for Black and Hispanic students, as well as students residing in low-income neighborhoods -- groups that are typically underserved in higher education. These findings, drawn from the largest public school system in the nation, offer evidence supporting the efficacy of near-peer mentoring programs in promoting college matriculation.
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- 2024
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14. Effect of Robotics-Enhanced Project-Based Learning Approach on Students' Conceptual Understanding and Motivation in Linear Motion in Physics in Selected Rwandan Secondary School
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Jean Claude Gasana, Pheneas Nkundabakura, Theophile Nsengimana, Olivier Habimana, Pascasie Nyirahabimana, and Ezechiel Nsabayezu
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Various researchers have reported that learners still have a limited conceptual knowledge of linear motion which may affect their learning achievement and motivation towards this subject matter. For this purpose, an investigation was conducted to find out the effect of the Project-Based Learning (PBL) approach with educational robotics on senior students' conceptual understanding of linear motion and learning motivation. This study used a quasi-experimental non-equivalent group design with a quantitative research approach. Participants were 78 senior students selected purposively from one school whose teachers have been trained on PBL by Rwanda Quality Basic Education for Human Capital Development project. A linear motion achievement test and a 5-point Likert motivation scale questionnaire were administered to the same groups of students. Descriptive and inferential statistics were used to analyse data quantitatively using Ms Excel and SPSS. Results have shown that students who were taught through PBL had more motivation toward learning linear motion and conceptualized better linear motion. The study recommends implementing Project-Based Learning (PBL) approaches, including educational robotics, and providing professional development for teachers to improve senior students' conceptual understand and motivation in linear motion.
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- 2024
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15. Finding Reasons to Choose a Campus: The Impact of Social Media and Brand Strategy
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Nofrizal, Undang Juju, and Aznuriyandi
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This study comprehensively identifies the determinants in students' campus selection decisions, emphasizing the crucial role of brand pride in the process. With the participation of 704 students in an online survey through the Google Forms platform and analysis using SEM-SmartPLS 4.0 Structural Equation Modelling, this study presents a solid empirical foundation. The results confirm that social media and content marketing strategies are not just supporting tools, but play a significant role in building brand equity. In addition to being relevant for understanding the dynamics of student decisions, this research provides in-depth insights into the optimization of university brand image through social media and content marketing. Its contribution is not only limited to the academic realm, but also has practical implications that can help universities increase institutional appeal through improving their marketing strategies.
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- 2024
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16. High School and College Students' Graph-Interpretation Competence in Scientific and Daily Contexts of Data Visualization
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Theerapong Binali, Ching-Hwa Chang, Yen-Jung Chang, and Hsin-Yi Chang
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This study surveyed 183 college and senior high school students' graph-interpretation competence in scientific and daily contexts. Specifically, whether students' graph interpretation in scientific and daily contexts differed across educational levels was investigated. Furthermore, the questions of whether students' graph interpretation competence in scientific contexts might predict their graph interpretation in daily contexts were explored. Other factors including age and gender were also considered and examined to discern significant factor(s) predicting graph interpretation competence in daily contexts. Results indicated that there were statistically significant differences across educational levels in terms of graph interpretation competence in both scientific and daily contexts. Furthermore, the students' graph interpretation competence was related between scientific and daily contexts. The important factors predicting students' graph interpretation in daily contexts include age and graph-interpretation in scientific literacy. Implications are discussed.
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- 2024
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17. Promoting Productive Thinking and Physics Learning Achievement of High School Students through STEAM Education
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Polmart, Piyathida and Nuangchalerm, Prasart
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Through STEAM education, this action research aims to improve senior high school students' ability to think critically and learn effectively. The target group for this study consisted of 36 senior high school students from one school in Thailand. A STEAM education lesson plan, a test of productive thinking, and a test of learning achievement were used as research tools. Statistics tools including mean, standard deviation, and percentage were used to analyze the data. The study showed that throughout the first and second cycles, students had scored 51.16% and 65.15% on the productive thinking scale respectively. The learning organization improved the academic performance of the students in each cycle. It is reasonable to infer and consider the potential that STEAM education can support students' intellectual development. It is useful for scientific instruction in schools, but teachers also need to be knowledgeable about how to organize their classes.
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- 2023
18. Influence of the Coronavirus Pandemic on High School Seniors' Views: College and Career Choices, Challenges, and Opportunities. ACT Research. Issue Brief
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ACT, Inc., Bobek, Becky L., and Schnieders, Joyce Z.
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In the spring of 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic began to substantially disrupt the educational experiences of high school students. In addition to experiencing the pandemic disruption in high schools, students were also likely aware of disruptions in colleges and in the labor market. Fast-forward to the spring of 2023. The students who are now graduating from high school are those who started high school shortly before the pandemic began to significantly affect the U.S. The pandemic was a defining aspect of their high school journey, leading to many circumstances that made these students' high school years different from those of other graduating classes. To understand how the pandemic affected students' thoughts about their college and career choices, the authors surveyed a random sample of 12th-grade students in September 2022. As part of a broader survey on the college and career preparation of students from the class of 2023, the authors asked students to indicate which, if any, of the thoughts they had about college and career choices were affected by the pandemic. As a follow-up, the authors also included an open-ended question asking for more details on how the pandemic affected these thoughts. In this brief, the authors share what they learned from 1,549 high school students from the class of 2023.
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- 2023
19. How Rhode Island Increased the Value of a High School Diploma
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Infante-Green, Angélica
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A high school diploma should mean that all students are ready for college "and" a career, but in Rhode Island, it did not. According to a 2019 audit, just four in a hundred Rhode Island seniors were prepared for both college and a career, and more than half graduated without concrete career skills. When the author became commissioner of the Rhode Island Department of Education (RIDE) in 2019, she committed to ensuring that Rhode Island would start providing all its high school students with equitable opportunities for postsecondary success. RIDE pressed ahead during the pandemic. In June 2020, XQ and RIDE staff presented audit findings to the Rhode Island Council on Elementary and Secondary Education, or K-12 Council for short, which is organized under the state board of education and oversees K-12. This article presents how the council challenged educators to identify solutions and create a plan to address the barriers Rhode Island students faced.
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- 2023
20. Impact of Hunger on School Participation in Title 1 High School Seniors
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Villanueva, Louis A.
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The purpose of this study was to examine the impact of hunger on school participation in Title 1 high school seniors. The study was conducted in a large urban Title I school district in Texas where the majority of the population falls into a lower socioeconomic group. The guiding question states, "Can hunger caused by food insecurity cause high school students, specifically seniors, to have a low participation rate in extracurricular activities?" The baseline data was collected around the socioeconomic status of the focus district. This data was cross-referenced with the qualitative student self-report survey data from a sample of 34 high school seniors who attended the focus district. The study found that the subject group surveyed were less likely to participate in extracurricular activities and as an average only participated in .08 of these activities per high school senior. The state average is 2 extracurricular activities per high school senior. Within the focus group, students who were food insecure were less likely to participate in extracurricular activities than students who were not food insecure and that hunger had a negative impact on student participation in extracurricular activities and academic performance.
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- 2023
21. Beyond College Access: An Exploration of the Short-Term Impact of a Dual Enrollment Program
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Jennifer M. Johnson, Joseph H. Paris, Juliet D. Curci, and Samantha Horchos
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The purpose of this qualitative case study is to gain insights into the activities and outcomes associated with participation in the Temple Education Scholars (TES) dual enrollment program, an initiative for seniors attending high school in a large city in the Northeast region of the United States. The objectives of this study are twofold: (1) to inform the design and implementation of dual enrollment programs as a model for facilitating students' transition from secondary to postsecondary education and supporting their future success in college; and (2) to describe the short-term impact of participation in a dual enrollment program on participants' choices about postsecondary education. Our analysis revealed the ways that participating in this dual enrollment program shaped students' attitudes, motivations, and perceptions about college knowledge, college readiness, and college opportunities. Implications for policy and practice are discussed.
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- 2024
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22. Men Don't Ask for Directions: Gendered Social Capital and the Path to College at an Urban High School
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Suneal Kolluri
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Young Black and Latino men transition from high school to 4-year universities at rates considerably lower than their peers. College-going disparities by gender are partly influenced by young men's constrained access to social capital in high school. This research explores how gendered inequalities in social capital arise for college-aspiring seniors at an urban high school. The data suggest that young men were more reluctant than their young women to "ask for directions" on their way to college because they were concerned about being perceived as bothersome, and they believed their social disadvantages were insignificant. Young men who were in contexts that allowed them to overcome these challenges successfully collected important college-going social capital. These findings can support researchers and practitioners who seek to expand college access in marginalized communities.
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- 2024
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23. Visible and Invisible Voices: Where Is the Power for Change?
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Neryl Jeanneret
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At the 2016 Commission in Birmingham, I reported on a Quality Music Education Framework that Dr Emily Wilson and I had developed for the Victorian Department of Education, which was to become a framework for the delivery of "quality" music education across the State of Victoria for the school years, Foundation to Year 10. In this address I review the outcomes of this framework, which was launched in 2018, against a more recent music policy development -- a curriculum for the senior years of high school for implementation in 2023 that is assessed by a high stakes external examination. These developments highlight for me enduring questions about how and why archaic teaching practices continue to flourish, and who holds the real power for positive change?
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- 2023
24. Relationships between Epistemological Beliefs and Conceptual Understanding of Evolution by Natural Selection
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Baytelman, Andreani, Loizou, Theonitsa, and Hadjiconstantinou, Salomi
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This study researches relationships between 12th-grade students' epistemological beliefs towards science and their conceptual understanding of evolution by natural selection. Forty-two 12th-grade students in a suburban high school in Cyprus, who participated in a biology course, completed measures of their: (1) epistemological beliefs towards science before the intervention of being taught evolution; (2) conceptual understanding of evolution by natural selection after evolution intervention; and (3) epistemological beliefs towards science after evolution intervention. Based on previous research, we hypothesised there would be a significant relationship between students' epistemological beliefs and their conceptual understanding of evolution by natural selection after the evolution intervention. We also hypothesised that inquiry-based intervention on evolution by natural selection would foster students' epistemological beliefs. Our results indicate that participants' initial epistemological beliefs predict very modestly and statistically non-significant learning achievements on conceptual understanding of evolution by natural selection. However, our results show a significant improvement in participants' epistemological beliefs after engagement in an inquiry-based intervention on evolution by natural selection. The educational significance of this and its implications are discussed
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- 2023
25. Collaborative Research Writing in the New Normal: Students' Views, Challenges, Coping Strategies, and Takeaways
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Roxas, Mark Joshua
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The 'new normal' setup of education posed challenges on courses requiring learners' collaboration. Despite the proven advantages of collaborative writing, several challenges still confront the learners which may affect the quality of their output. Collaboration per se is already a challenge for learners in face-to-face classes, more so in online distance learning. Thus, this study explored the views, challenges, coping strategies, and takeaways of senior high school students in collaborative research writing in the 'new normal.' Thirty (30) reflective essays written by senior high school students from three (3) academic strands, namely Humanities and Social Sciences, General Academic, and Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics were analysed. Ten (10) sample essays from each strand were selected through Critical Case Sampling. Findings revealed that students view collaborative research writing in general as easy, while some see it as difficult. The students met challenges in research technicalities, communication, and collaboration. Varied coping strategies were identified, such as having a positive mindset, being patient, considerate and determined, seeking help from others, maintaining proper communication and collaboration, seeking spiritual guidance, and taking a break. Ultimately, the takeaways of the students were not limited to academics or cognitive aspects--they were also able to gain important values.
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- 2023
26. The Android-Based Comic of Gajah Mungkur Dam: Improving Mathematical Representation and Critical Thinking Abilities
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Priyadi, Ahmad and Kuswanto, Heru
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This research aims to: (1) develop a feasible Android-based comic media of Gajah Mungkur Dam, and (2) reveal the effectiveness of the developed comic media in improving mathematical representation and critical thinking abilities on the materials of work and energy. The research subjects are senior high school students, consisting of 262 students for the empirical testing, 36 students for the limited trial, and 72 students for the field trial. This research is research and development applying the 4D model, consisting the stages of definition, design, development, and dissemination. The research instrument includes a validation sheet, evaluation sheet, questionnaire, lesson plans, comic media, and mathematical representation and critical thinking ability tests. The developed comic media contains an introduction, comic's work and energy materials, users' manual, instructional video, and discussion column. The data analysis used the MANOVA test. The finding shows that the developed Android-based comic media of Gajah Mungkur Dam is feasible to use with the assessment score of 3.70 or in a very good category from the validator, and score of 3.10 or in a good category from students in the limited trial. The MANOVA test result shows that there is a significant difference between the control class and experimental class. The developed comic is effective in improving mathematical representation ability in the small effect category and in improving critical thinking skill in the medium effect category.
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- 2023
27. Socioscientific Modelling as an Approach towards Justice-Centred Science Pedagogy
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Lesnefsky, Rebecca R., Kirk, Eric A., Yeldell, Jasmyne, Sadler, Troy D., and Ke, Li
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Justice-centred science pedagogy has been suggested as an effective framework for supporting teachers in bringing in culturally relevant pedagogy to their science classrooms; however, limited instructional tools exist that introduce social dimensions of science in ways teachers feel confident navigating. In this article, we add to the justice-centred science pedagogy framework by offering tools to make sense of science and social factors and introduce socioscientific modelling as an instructional strategy for attending to social dimensions of science in ways that align with justice-centred science pedagogy. Socioscientific modelling offers an inclusive, culturally responsive approach to education in science, technology, engineering, the arts and mathematics through welcoming students' diverse repertoires of personal and community knowledge and linking disciplinary knowledge with social dimensions. In this way, students can come to view content knowledge as a tool for making sense of inequitable systems and societal injustices. Using data from an exploratory study conducted in summer 2022, we present emerging evidence of how this type of modelling has shown students to demonstrate profound insight into social justice science issues, construct understandings that are personally meaningful and engage in sophisticated reasoning. We conclude with future considerations for the field.
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- 2023
28. College Planning and Student Emotions Report: Addressing Prospective Students' Emotional Needs through Enrollment Marketing and Engagement Strategies
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Ruffalo Noel Levitz (RNL)
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After years of pandemic, lockdowns, remote learning, and anxiety, it is no surprise that high school students are feeling stressed. But how does that stress affect them as they search for colleges? To answer that, RNL and ZeeMee went straight to the source and polled high school seniors about the stress, anxiety, and worry they felt. The "College Planning and Student Emotions Report" details their answers and should be enough to make us reconsider how we communicate with them and what we communicate during the college planning and enrollment process. Read our findings to learn: (1) how many high school seniors say they are dealing with stress and anxiety; (2) how student emotions change over 12th grade; (3) the top sources of stress, anxiety, and worry about college planning; (4) what students are most excited about when it comes to college; and (5) best practices you can follow to communicate with students and make them feel confident about attending college. [This report was co-sponsored by ZeeMee.]
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- 2023
29. The State of the American Student: Fall 2023. We Are Failing Older Students: Bold Ideas to Change Course
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Arizona State University (ASU), Center on Reinventing Public Education (CRPE), Lake, Robin, Pangelinan, Cara, Pillow, Travis, and Pitts, Christine
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As reported in the first State of the American Student report in 2022 (ED623504), pandemic school closures led to unprecedented academic setbacks for American students. They exacerbated preexisting inequalities and accelerated the youth mental health crisis. The second edition provides basic data on the overall system, but focuses especially on students who are nearing graduation, or have already graduated, from high school. While the traditional pathways to college and career were already not working for too many of these students, the pandemic made it worse. [The report was written with Dan Silver, Isabel Clay and Morgan Polikoff.]
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- 2023
30. Iowa Community Colleges Joint Enrollment: Academic Year 2021. Annual Report
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Iowa Department of Education, Division of Community Colleges and Workforce Preparation
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The Iowa Department of Education collects information on joint enrollment in Iowa's 15 community colleges. Jointly enrolled students are high school students enrolled in community college credit coursework. Most jointly enrolled students enroll through Senior Year Plus programs such as PSEO (Postsecondary Enrollment Options) and concurrent enrollment. Others enroll independently by paying tuition or enrolling in courses delivered through contractual agreements that do not meet the definition of concurrent enrollment. This report consists of academic year (AY) and trend data for 2021 on joint enrollment, including headcount enrollment, credit hours taken, student demographics and enrollment by program type and offering arrangement. All data included in this report is taken from the Community College Management Information System (MIS) and confirmed by each college, unless otherwise noted. [For the 2020 report, see ED617608.]
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- 2023
31. College Enrollment Patterns and Results of M-DCPS 2016-2017 Graduating Cohort. Information Capsule. Volume 2202
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Miami-Dade County Public Schools, Research Services and Tirado, Andrea
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This Information Capsule utilized National Student Clearinghouse and Senior Exit Survey data to report on postsecondary plans and college enrollment of Miami-Dade Public Schools' graduates who were part of the 2016-2017 cohort. M-DCPS' four-year graduation rate for students enrolled for the first time in the fall of 2017 was 47%. This rate was in line with the national rate in 2015, as reported in the latest publication from the National Student Clearinghouse.
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- 2023
32. Characteristics of Effective Postsecondary Advising: How Often to Meet and What to Focus On
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Grace Pai and Melissa De Feo
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Using data from a large-scale senior exit survey administered at public high schools in New York City, this study aims to parse out what quantitative and qualitative characteristics of postsecondary advising are most influential in predicting students' likelihood to attend college. We apply a broader conceptual framework for postsecondary advisement that includes school-based college advising as well as parental advisement on college and career planning. Results from logistic regression analyses show receiving help in completing college applications, along with talking to a counselor and parents/guardians at least 3 times in their senior year, to be salient predictors of college-going.
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- 2023
33. Assessing the Impact of Integrating Information and Communication Technology on Senior High School Students' Achievement in Genetics
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Ebenezer Yeboah Owusu, Joel Azuure Adongo, Emmanuel Boateng Agyare, and Kwaku Appiah-Kubi
- Abstract
The use of digital technologies in teaching and learning has proven to be effective in aiding students' understanding of difficult concepts. Hence this study sought to find the effectiveness of ICT in teaching concepts of genetics which have been indicated as one of the biology concepts Ghanaian senior high school students find challenging. The study used two groups: the experimental group and the control group. The instrument used for data collection is an achievement test. A pre-test was administered to both groups to ascertain their level of achievement. The groups were then taught genetics, followed by the post-test. The experimental group was taught using ICT tools, while the control group was taught using the traditional teaching method. The research findings revealed that students taught using ICT performed better than those taught by the traditional teaching method. Based on the findings, it was concluded that using ICT tools in teaching genetics could serve as an appropriate means for teaching genetics since it aided in improving students' understanding of genetic concepts. Hence, it is recommended that teachers adopt ICT in their teaching methods rather than the traditional method. Also, school leaders and policymakers should also provide the needed support systems to enhance ICT integration practices.
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- 2023
34. Stakeholders' Perspective on the Quality of Virtual Learning Material in Google Classroom
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Mary Rose Briones, Maricar Prudente, and Denis Dyvee Errabo
- Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic stimulated education system worldwide to employ online learning to support learning despite difficult times. To respond to this challenge and to promote Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 4, advocating quality education, a virtual learning material (VLM) for Biology was articulated in Google Classroom. Accordingly, this study aimed to evaluate its acceptability and conformity to the international standards for online courses using the Open SUNY Course Quality Review (OSCQR) rubric as the questionnaire. Respondents (N=40) involved four stakeholders: Senior High School Students, Pre-service Science Teachers, High School Teachers, and Science Instructors/Professors, with n=10 representatives each group. Their perspectives of the VLM acceptability in terms of Overview and Information, Technology and Tool, Design and Layout, Content and Activities, Interaction, and Assessment and Feedback were obtained through a Google Form by rating the 50-item questionnaire on a 4-point Likert scale together with two open-ended questions. With a grand mean of 3.81(SD=0.40), the findings revealed highly acceptable results. The qualitative responses also substantiated this result. Significant differences in the responses are also discussed, while the Cronbach alpha reliability test is high ([alpha]=0.923). Significantly, the VLM conforms with the international standards for online course design, suggesting it can be implemented among target students.
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- 2023
35. Supports Key to the College Preparation of Students from the Covid Cohort. ACT Research
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ACT, Inc., Joyce Z. Schnieders, and Becky L. Bobek
- Abstract
A successful transition from high school to college requires that students have the necessary knowledge, skills, and mindsets in both academic and nonacademic areas. College preparation is a long process. Students complete a series of tasks including taking academic courses, searching for potential colleges, taking standardized tests, choosing a program of study, writing a college application essay, submitting applications to colleges, and applying for financial aid. High schools and colleges offer a wide range of programs and services to support and guide students in this process. However, the COVID-19 pandemic caused unexpected changes in students' high school experiences, including their college preparation experiences. To learn how students from the high school class of 2023 prepared for college, the authors reached out to a random sample of high school seniors in September 2022. Students were asked to report on their preparedness for college, the college preparation activities in which they participated, the college preparation supports they received, and the supports they wished they had received. In this brief, is shared what was learned from 1,485 students who reported that they planned to attend a postsecondary institution the fall after graduating high school.
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- 2023
36. Intra and Inter-Local Item Dependence of Mathematics Items
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Oluwaseyi Aina Gbolade Opesemowo
- Abstract
Local Item Dependence (LID) is a desecration of Local Item Independence (LII) which can lead to overestimating or underestimating a candidate's ability in mathematics items and create validity problems. The study investigated the intra and inter-LID of mathematics items. The study made use of ex-post facto research. The population encompassed all 26,086 Senior Secondary School Students three (SSS 3) in Osun State, Nigeria, and 14,936 SSS 3 students were randomly picked as the sample. National Examinations Council (NECO) mathematics items from June/July 2017 served as the research instrument. The calibrated data were subjected to Yen Q3 statistic. Using a multidimensional three-parameter logistic model, the Yen Q3 statistic is the residual correlation of the items calibrated by Jmetrik software. Results revealed that intra-LID was spotted between Item 8 and Item 7, Item 47 and Item 18, Item 28 and Item 21, Item 47 and Item 29, Item 39 and Item 38, Item 60 and Item 47, Item 52 and Item 51, Item 59 and Item 58 with a Q3 index greater than 0.2 rule of thumb. Similarly, inter-LID revealed bundles 3, 6, 7, 13, and 15 with a Yen Q3 index greater than 0.2. The study concluded that intra and inter-LID was discovered in the NECO mathematics item. It was recommended that NECO should consider intra and inter-LID to ensure more credible questions.
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- 2023
37. Coloniality, Resistance, and Reimagining the Future: Exploring the Influence of Language Policies on Learner Identities in Pakistani Schools
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Shizza Fatima
- Abstract
This paper explores student experiences of language-in-education policies through the lens of colonial processes and traces such logic as they operate through educational institutions. Drawing on semi-structured interviews of high school seniors and recent graduates, I investigate how students in Pakistani secondary schools interact with intersecting modern/colonial structures that rationalize existing hierarchies of power along colonial, racial/ethnic, and gendered lines. The findings suggest that students have internalized dominant colonial ideologies and they also constitute key sites for decolonial resistance at the same time. Student experiences of colonial hierarchies in the school were mediated by their socioeconomic class, gender, ethnic and linguistic background. However, despite internalizing dominant hierarchies, many students understood their experiences through the framing of colonial power structures, which simultaneously positioned them as potential actors for decolonial resistance. In this paper, I analyze their experiences in detail, and in doing so, this study adds to the growing voices in the field of international and comparative education that critically examine the role of modern/colonial formations in the structuring of education globally.
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- 2023
38. Participation or Eschewal? Final-Year Secondary School Students' Attitudes towards Participation in Higher Education in Cameroon
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Zhao, Tongtong and Xu, Yuwei
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In this article we examine students' attitudes towards participation in higher education in Cameroon and consider the role of personal and socioeconomic factors in their post-school educational trajectories. The data were drawn from a questionnaire survey of 1,860 final-year secondary school students from Yaoundé, Cameroon, as well as supplementary interviews with 16 students. The findings show that the majority of respondents indicated a preference to continue their education after the end of secondary school and participate in some form of higher education. However, contrary to previous studies that identify gender or SES segregation in higher education participation, the findings in this study suggest that the influence of SES and gender on students' attitudes was minimised in the later stage of secondary schooling. Among the relatively minor external influences, institutional factors surpass family influence, and fathers' influence is stronger than that of mothers, echoing the patriarchal cultural background in Cameroon. Considering the positive attitudes revealed in this study, it is suggested that more external efforts could be made to respond to students' optimistic attitudes and smooth their transition processes. Higher education institutions should improve their capability to enrol and accommodate more students and patriarchal culture should also be challenged to boost women's educational opportunities.
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- 2022
39. Student Post-Secondary Plans and College Enrollment, Class of 2022, SCOIR Data. Information Capsule. Volume 2201
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Miami-Dade County Public Schools, Research Services and Tirado, Andrea
- Abstract
This Information Capsule utilized data from the Scoir platform to report on post-secondary plans and enrollment for the M-DCPS class of 2022. Approximately 95% of the high school seniors enrolled in traditional high schools had available data on the platform and of those, 90% indicated they had plans to attend college after graduating from high school. Students submitted applications to over 1,000 institutions and a total of 13,678 students indicated they were enrolling in an institution they had been accepted to. Most of the students enrolled in institutions in the state of Florida, with over 50% of them enrolling in Miami Dade College.
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- 2022
40. The Influence of School Ecological Factors on the Persistence of Secondary Students with High Incidence Disabilities
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Tami Turner
- Abstract
Students with high incidence disabilities are dropping out of high school at alarming rates. Compared with other demographic groups, students with disabilities have the lowest graduation rates of any group in the nation. The substandard graduation rates have remained stagnant for two decades, indicating that programmatic attempts to address the issue have not been effective. Alternative schools are a popular intervention for students with high incidence disabilities and many have shown success with this population. This case study explored the influence of two school related ecological factors on student decision-making, from the perspectives of high school seniors identified as having a high incidence disability, who were on track to graduate in the 2022-2023 school year. Utilizing ecological systems theory as the theoretical construct, the following research questions were addressed in the study: What is the influence of school climate on the persistence of students with high incidence disabilities? What role does a sense of self-efficacy in the school environment play in the persistence of students with high incidence disabilities? It was concluded that a positive school climate was essential to the persistence of students with high incidence disabilities. It was also determined that not only does a sense of self-efficacy contribute positively to the persistence of students with high incidence disabilities: a lack of self-efficacy in the school environment contributes to a lack of persistence of students with high incidence disabilities. [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
41. Tribal Culture Endurance and Post-Secondary Aspirations: Insights from Rural California Native American High School Students
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Juliet McKinnon Maestas
- Abstract
The low number of California Native American students, both rural and urban, graduating A through G ready prompted this study. Using a qualitative and Indigenous research approach, the research questions that guided this study were: (1) What are the perspectives and beliefs about postsecondary education among a group of Native American students at Hoopa Valley High School? (2) How, if at all, do a select group of Native students at Hoopa High discuss their community's cultural wealth? (3) What are the college readiness courses and activities provided by Hoopa Valley High School and how do students access them? (4) What activities does Hoopa Valley High School facilitate (generally) for students to understand college access and what activities do counselors do (specifically) to prepare Native American students for college? Nine Native American Hoopa Valley High School students and the high school counselor were interviewed. A grounded theory approach was chosen due to the lack of research regarding California Native American High School reservation students and their post-secondary aspirations and readiness. Data was analyzed through the lens of Community Cultural Wealth. The findings indicated (1) Native students at Hoopa Valley High School have post-secondary aspirations, with six enrolled in college courses (2) Native students possess aspirational, navigational, resistant, familial and tribal culture capital; as a result tribal culture capital was added to the Community Culture Wealth model (Yosso, 2005), (3) the Hoopa Valley High School lacks college readiness resources (4) the findings led to the emergent grounded theory of "Tribal Culture Endurance and Post-Secondary Aspirations." [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
42. Necessary Conditions: Understanding Patterns and Variations in Math Course-Taking among High School Seniors to Increase Completion of Four Years of Math
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Allison R. Krasnow
- Abstract
This mixed methods study explores high school seniors' math course-taking decisions and what changes school leaders can take to increase the percentages of students taking four years of math in high school. Through an analysis of district-level administrative data and a survey completed by seniors at a high performing, diverse high school in Northern California, this study illuminates many reasons for why these patterns and inequalities occur. Findings reveal institutional, classroom and individual factors that impact students' decision-making around taking math senior year. [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
43. The Legacies of Community in Building a Future: Rural Young People Envisioning 'Possible Selves'
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Janine Delahunty and Anne F. J. Hellwig
- Abstract
This article considers how the experience of community for young people from rural places (inclusive of regional and remote) can be influential in building a legacy of strengths and qualities, much like an inheritance. While there are many studies of rural youth, few consider rurality through complex social-relational dimensions; fewer still include both school and university students. We contend that legacies borne from collective hardship, pulling together and a sense of belonging can set rural young people in good stead for life beyond their smaller communities, playing a significant, yet under-explored, role in preparing them for the very personal repercussions of movement into and through university. This study explored the influence of communities on young people's hoped-for futures through qualitative interview and survey data drawn from two groups: university students (aged 18-20) and secondary school students (aged 16-18). The theoretical concept of "possible selves" enabled a nuanced insight into motivation to achieve future goals, in which rural biographies valorised the significance of relational connectedness and socioemotional attachment to communities. Legacies of community for these young people were embodied in their capacity for complex decision-making, motivations and altruism, driven by a strong desire to give back. Universities have much to learn from the rich insights of rural youth, particularly in the post-COVID recovery, through more committed understandings of how relational aspects across policy and practice could be prioritised and implemented for the benefit of all.
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- 2024
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44. School Closures and Their Implications for Student Outcomes: Evidence from Lithuania
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Egle Jakucionyte, Indre Pusevaite, and Swapnil Singh
- Abstract
This paper studies the effect of school closures on student outcomes in the Lithuanian context. Using administrative student-level data from 2013-2017 and propensity score matching, we create a balanced sample of control and treatment groups. In contrast to other studies, we focus on students in the final years of high school, possibly eliciting the upper bar of the disruption effect. We also follow students after high school graduation, providing evidence on labour market outcomes. We find that school closure has a small, negative effect on only some exam outcomes and the probability of enrolling at a university, suggesting that the disruption effect is small even for students in the final years of high school.
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- 2024
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45. Shared Shrinkage Horseshoe Priors for Dirichlet-Tree Multinomial Regression
- Author
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Erin W. Post
- Abstract
Multivariate count data is ubiquitous in many areas of research including the physical, biological, and social sciences. These data are traditionally modeled with the Dirichlet Multinomial distribution (DM). A new, more flexible Dirichlet-Tree Multinomial (DTM) model is gaining in popularity. Here, we consider Bayesian DTM regression models. Our contribution is to introduce a novel shared shrinkage prior for use on the regression coefficients. The proposed prior enables branches in the Dirichlet trees to borrow information from one another, which encourages similar levels of shrinkage on covariates throughout the model. We focus on modeling multivariate count data in social and community settings like educational outcomes, crime rates, and voting data. In these setting, the interpretation of the regression coefficients is of particular interest. With that in mind, we pay special attention to both the interpretation of model parameters and the process of selecting a tree structure. A simulation study demonstrates the benefits of our proposed shared shrinkage prior against existing alternatives. We show the usefulness of the proposed prior in the analyses of two real datasets. The first dataset examines connections between household conditions and post-graduation intentions for high school seniors in Iowa's public school districts. The second dataset looks at the relationship between community characteristics and instances of different categories of crimes as reported by the FBI. [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
46. Underrepresented High School Students' Perceptions of Academic Engagement during Online Learning: A Qualitative Case Study
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Brenda Ann Albright Barnhart
- Abstract
Underrepresented students struggle with academic and engagement behaviors in online learning. This study aimed to explore the perceived educational needs of underrepresented high school students during online learning. The conceptual framework created for this study utilized two different frameworks, combining the students' perceived educational needs with their suggestions for educators to support their perceived needs, allowing the findings to be based solely on the student's perspective. A qualitative single case study methodology and design were used to explore this problem in online education for underrepresented students, which aligned with the research questions. The population represented all underrepresented high school students from a Title I public high school with no special learning needs, making a bounded population. Data were collected from the sample population consisting of 15 students from the senior class who were at least 18 years old in a single round of structured in-depth interviews and five (chosen from the interview set by convenience sampling) for a single round semi-structured focus group. Integrative thematic data analysis was inductively conducted to identify emerging trends and patterns representing the main themes. Stage 1 was value coding. Stage 2 was descriptive coding. Stage 3 was in vivo coding. The coding was related to this study's research questions to make connections that led to discoveries and findings. These findings build on existing evidence by combining their perspectives of physical, social, and emotional needs to create their ideas of academic engagement and success. Four main themes emerged: technology needs, learning environment, social and emotional learning, and academic content. The findings expand the existing body of knowledge by reporting the student's perspective and yielding documentation that can be utilized when funding programs for marginalized students, developing online curricula, or creating effective lessons for underrepresented students' educational needs. [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
47. Exploring the Role of Tuition-Free Community College for Rural Communities: A Mixed Methods Approach
- Author
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Kristen Marie Cummings
- Abstract
Nationwide, rural students enroll in and graduate from college at lower rates than their non-rural peers. Closing this gap in rural college access matters because individuals with a college education experience higher average earnings and lower rates of unemployment relative to their peers without a college credential. State financial aid programs can be a powerful tool to encourage rural postsecondary enrollment. However, in order for aid programs to affect enrollment behavior, students must be aware of these programs and see the opportunities as aligning with their context and goals. Guided by Perna's model of student college choice, this dissertation employed a mixed methods design to explore how to best design and communicate financial aid opportunities to rural students. The first phase of the study used a randomized controlled trial to test whether an informational campaign about Iowa's statewide tuition-free college program affected rural seniors' college-going behavior (i.e., whether they filed their FAFSA). I randomly assigned the 279 public rural high schools in Iowa, enrolling approximately 22,000 seniors, to one of three groups: (1) posters, (2) posters + handouts, or (3) control. The poster and handout materials contained information about the scholarship and encouraged interested students to file their FAFSA. Using linear probability modelling and student-level state administrative data, I found no evidence that either treatment arm affected FAFSA filing behavior relative to the control condition. There was also no statistically significant difference in FAFSA filing between the two treatment arms. In the second phase of the study, I facilitated seven focus groups with rural Iowa high school counselors. I utilized the focus group data to contextualize the experimental findings and to shed light on the ideal design of tuition-free programs for rural students and effective methods of communicating these opportunities. Counselors shared their perspective that the campaign materials were insufficient on their own to influence students' college-going behavior, though they can serve as useful complementary tools. Rather, providing real-time guidance, such as through one-on-one meetings, is key to providing students with the support needed to navigate the college-going process. Counselors discussed various aspects of the Future Ready Iowa Last-Dollar Scholarship that present barriers for students and can prevent take-up. Based on these findings, I conclude that the intricacies of the Last-Dollar Scholarship discourage some prospective recipients from using the program and that providing information through a low-touch informational campaign is an insufficient approach to overcome these structural barriers. Iowa limits eligibility for its tuition-free program to specific credentials and low-income students in order to limit state spending and more narrowly align the program with state needs. However, these restrictions run counter to the straightforward guarantee thought to be a key mechanism of the success of tuition-free programs in other states. The uncertainty of whether the Last-Dollar Scholarship will be approved by the legislature each year and whether changes or restrictions will be added to the program makes it difficult for students to rely on the scholarship and incorporate it into their plans. If states and other organizations want to use financial aid programs to increase college access, then they must structure and promote these programs in ways that align with students' planning and decision-making processes. If states are committed to increasing rural college access, then they must critically evaluate how this population is being served by and experiencing state programs. [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
48. 'Empathy Is a Better Emotion': The Trouble with Empathy in High Stakes English Classrooms
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Allayne Horton
- Abstract
Although interdisciplinary scholars have long debated the ethics of empathy, it continues to be widely seen as universal, prosocial, and reparative in education. Subject English, long associated with the work of producing civilised, moral and cultured students, is a critical locus for the activation of empathy. But what becomes of empathy in the high stakes senior secondary English classroom? Drawing on an in-school ethnography, the paper begins to map the ways in which empathy is activated through and around set literary texts in Victorian Certificate of Education (VCE) English classrooms in Australia. In so doing, it highlights the unpredictable nature of empathy as a relation exceeding pedagogical mediation, as well as the troublesome aspects of empathy entangled with neoliberal imperatives and the interpellation of the civilised English student. Finally, it turns to the generative possibilities of an empathy unsettled -- an unruly empathy.
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- 2024
- Full Text
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49. Negotiating 'What Counts' in Multimodal Writing in the Classroom: A High School English Teacher's Perspective
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Olivia G. Stewart
- Abstract
As students and teachers embrace more forms of multimodal composing, classroom power structures move from the more linear, hierarchical structures typically seen in education to more open, student-centered forms. However, these transitions are not always seamless. Using a multiliteracies framework, this article focuses on how a classroom teacher framed what counted as writing in a senior English class where students created a digital writing portfolio across three platforms. Findings explore what counted as writing from the perspective of the teacher before, during, and after the portfolio unit as well as the struggles that she faced in understanding how to assess the myriad of possible authoring paths multimodal projects offer. Implications extend to how teachers may be influenced by and continue to push back on established institutional power structures to open spaces for reshaping what counts as writing in the classroom.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Career Technical Education: Perceptions of Medical Career Pathway Students Regarding Preparation for Post Secondary Goals
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Charles Russel Dalusong
- Abstract
Career technical education (CTE) has evolved markedly over the past century to provide a viable avenue for high school students who may seek an alternative and successful academic path that leads to a well-paid future career in the workforce. Recent studies have found that Career and Technology Education can lower dropout rates among high school students (Stone and Lewis, 2012). Students that are enrolled in Career and Technical Education are exposed to a plethora of career opportunities that they may not be cognizant of. . . . (Smith, 2015, p. ii)If high-quality career and technical education (CTE) makes it possible for students to stay in school and graduate from high school, the natural next step is to examine what CTE high school senior students perceive that their CTE programs and experiences give them to achieve their post-secondary goals. A top-notch CTE program connects secondary and postsecondary education through a logical progression of courses, aligns curriculum with standards validated by the industry, and offers practical, work-based learning opportunities that let students put their knowledge to use. The present qualitative research study acknowledges the necessity for further investigation to ascertain the perceptions of students regarding the significance of their CTE experiences in accomplishing their post-secondary objectives. Students in CTE are given a vital and important voice, in sharing their experiences through qualitative research studies versus quantitative research studies. The participant selection and process of this study was to interview five and survey sixteen Grand Forks Area Career and Technology Center (GFACTC) medical career pathway students who were selected by the CTE medical career pathway teacher and were enrolled in the Grand Forks Area Career and Technology Center (GFACTC) in Grand Forks, North Dakota. This research study's aim was to investigate high school senior students' perceptions about their high school career and technical education experiences and how those experiences influenced and helped them attain their post-secondary goals. School district board members, CTE administrators, CTE teachers, and CTE counselors could all benefit greatly from a deeper understanding of student perceptions and experiences that were most influential factors to these high school seniors in the medical career pathway in their CTE program in terms of preparing for their post-secondary goals. [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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