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Kathryn Jameson; Nicholas Salsman; Samuel R. Eshleman Latimer – Journal of College Student Mental Health, 2025
Data testing the effectiveness of third-wave interventions to decrease college students' test anxiety is sparse. We conducted a randomized controlled trial with college students to examine whether an intervention using several DBT skills (DBT; Linehan, 2015a, 2015b) would decrease test anxiety. Participants (N = 48) were randomly assigned to one…
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, Test Anxiety, College Students, Program Effectiveness
Jvan Abdulbaqi; Gizem Oneri Uzun – SAGE Open, 2024
This study aims to introduce the Students' Test Anxiety Prevention Program (STAPP), an intervention for test anxiety for university students in Iraq. We also evaluated its effectiveness against test and state anxiety. The STAPP is a short three-session intervention program comprising expressive emotional dialog, psychoeducation, and educational…
Descriptors: Test Anxiety, Prevention, Foreign Countries, Program Effectiveness
Soares, David; Woods, Kevin – Pastoral Care in Education, 2022
The general issue of children's mental health has become a growing concern in the UK in recent decades. There has been a specific concern about the increased stringency and pressure of formal educational assessments with some students reported as, experiencing high levels of test anxiety. This paper investigated a school-based test anxiety…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Test Anxiety, Intervention, School Activities
Türk, Fulya; Katmer, Ayse Nur – International Journal of Evaluation and Research in Education, 2019
The purpose of this study is to examine the impact of the program for coping with test anxiety based on the cognitive-behavioral approach on the levels of test anxiety, irrational thoughts, coping levels and academic self-efficacy perceptions of adolescents in the 8th grade. The study was performed as a semi-experimental study based on pre-test…
Descriptors: Stress Management, Coping, Test Anxiety, Cognitive Restructuring
Yeo, Lay See; Goh, Valerie Grace; Liem, Gregory Arief D. – Child & Youth Care Forum, 2016
Background: With children today being tested at younger ages, test anxiety has an earlier onset age. There is relatively limited research on test anxiety management programs with elementary school children. The theoretical basis for this nonrandomized pre-post intervention study is grounded in cognitive and behavioral interventions for test…
Descriptors: Intervention, Test Anxiety, Elementary School Students, Academic Achievement
von der Embse, Nathaniel; Barterian, Justin; Segool, Natasha – Psychology in the Schools, 2013
High-stakes tests have played an increasingly important role in how student achievement and school effectiveness are measured. Test anxiety has risen with the use of tests in educational decision making. Students with high test anxiety perform poorly on tests when compared to students with low test anxiety. School psychologists can play an…
Descriptors: High Stakes Tests, School Effectiveness, Intervention, Behavior Modification
Brown, Lily A.; Forman, Evan M.; Herbert, James D.; Hoffman, Kimberly L.; Yuen, Erica K.; Goetter, Elizabeth M. – Behavior Modification, 2011
Many university students suffer from test anxiety that is severe enough to impair performance. Given mixed efficacy results of previous cognitive-behavior therapy (CBT) trials and a theoretically driven rationale, an acceptance-based behavior therapy (ABBT) approach was compared to traditional CBT (i.e., Beckian cognitive therapy; CT) for the…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Behavior Modification, Cognitive Restructuring, Therapy
Evans, Ginger; Ramsey, Gary; Driscoll, Richard – Online Submission, 2010
Nursing programs can be highly stressful, and nursing students have been found to be more test-anxious than other students. The present investigation examines a practical program to reduce test-anxiety impairment and improve academic performance for a significant number of highly anxious nursing students. Incoming nursing students were screened…
Descriptors: Nursing Students, Nursing Education, Exit Examinations, Program Effectiveness
Use of Electromyographic Biofeedback and Cue-Controlled Relaxation in the Treatment of Test Anxiety.
Peer reviewedCounts, D. Kenneth; And Others – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1978
Studied use of electromyographic (CMG) biofeedback to increase efficacy of cue-controlled relaxation training in treatment of test anxiety. Results indicated cue-controlled relaxation was effective in increasing test performance for test-anxious subjects. EMG biofeedback did not contribute to effectiveness. Self-report measures of anxiety are…
Descriptors: Adults, Behavior Modification, Cues, Desensitization
Peer reviewedDeffenbacher, Jerry L.; Parks, Donald H. – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1979
Compared effectiveness of counterconditioning and self-control models of systematic desensitization in reducing targeted and nontargeted anxieties. Treatments were equally effective in reducing and maintaining reduction of targeted anxiety, debilitating test anxiety. (Author)
Descriptors: Adults, Anxiety, Behavior Modification, Coping
Peer reviewedMcCordick, Sharon M.; And Others – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1979
Test-anxious students were assigned to a core treatment (Meichenbaum's cognitive behavior modification and study skills training) alone, with videotaped modeling, with rehearsal modeling, or under control conditions. No treatment led to significant academic performance improvement, a finding consistent with many test-anxiety studies using grades…
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, Cognitive Processes, Modeling (Psychology), Study Skills
Peer reviewedCrowley, Cheryl; And Others – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1986
Examined the effects of self-coping cognitive treatment for test anxiety delivered in a massed format and a spaced format. Ninety-three test-anxiety subjects were randomly assigned to one of three conditions: (a) workshop, (b) six-session treatment, or (c) control. Results suggest that this treatment is effective in treating test anxiety.…
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, Cognitive Restructuring, Coping, Counseling Techniques
Peer reviewedBarrow, John C. – Journal of American College Health, 1982
A rationale is presented for using a coping-skills training approach with college students who face important environmental demands. Two case examples of college students suffering from test anxiety illustrate the effectiveness of brief therapy approaches in teaching coping skills. (Author/CJ)
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, College Students, Coping, Higher Education
Peer reviewedDeffenbacher, Jerry L.; And Others – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1980
For test anxious subjects, both forms of anxiety management training (AMT) significantly reduced test anxiety compared with controls. For speech anxious subjects, both forms of AMT reduced speech anxiety; however, heterogeneous AMT lowered it more than homogeneous AMT. (Author/BEF)
Descriptors: Anxiety, Behavior Modification, Comparative Analysis, Counseling Techniques
Peer reviewedKipper, David A.; Giladi, Daniel – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1978
Students with examination anxiety took part in study of effectiveness of two kinds of treatment, structured psychodrama and systematic desensitization, in reducing test anxiety. Results showed that subjects in both treatment groups significantly reduced test-anxiety scores. Structured psychodrama is as effective as systematic desensitization in…
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, College Students, Counseling Techniques, Desensitization
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