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Ilker Cingillioglu; Uri Gal; Artem Prokhorov – Education and Information Technologies, 2024
This study presents a novel approach contributing to our understanding of the design, development, and implementation AI-based systems for conducting double-blind online randomized controlled trials (RCTs) for higher education research. The process of the entire interaction with the participants (n = 1193) and their allocation to test and control…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Higher Education, Comparative Analysis, College Choice
Kinash, Shelley; Wood, Kayleen – International Journal for Academic Development, 2013
This paper explores academic developer identity by applying self-concept theory and appreciative inquiry to the personal journeys of two academic developers. Self-attribution, social comparison and reflected appraisals are presented and applied to explain how academic developers form their identities. Sociological principles are incorporated to…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Faculty Development, Self Concept, Attribution Theory
Meeuwisse, Marieke; Severiens, Sabine E.; Born, Marise Ph. – Studies in Higher Education, 2010
The present study explored possible differences in reasons for withdrawing from higher vocational education between ethnic minority and majority non-completers in the Netherlands. Tinto's model on the departure process was used as a theoretical framework. A total of 1017 non-completers filled in a questionnaire regarding their reasons for…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Factor Analysis, Foreign Countries, Vocational Education
Peterson, J. J.; Kelly, A.; Stockton, M. B. – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 2011
The purpose of the authors' study was to understand the reasons why students comply with requests instructors make and compare these reasons with instructors' perceptions of why students comply. Students and faculty at two universities completed the Interpersonal Power Inventory to assess reasons for compliance. Students were more likely to comply…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Compliance (Psychology), Teacher Attitudes, Maximum Likelihood Statistics
Cortes-Suarez, Gina; Sandiford, Janice R. – Community College Journal of Research and Practice, 2008
Research in the field of attribution theory and academic achievement suggests a relationship between a student's attributional style and achievement. Theorists and researchers contend that attributions influence individual reactions to success and failure. They also report that individuals use attributions to explain and justify their performance.…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Mathematics Education, Academic Achievement, Statistical Significance
Strohkirch, Carolyn Sue; Hargett, Jennifer G. – 1998
A study examined whether there were differences in the ways that undergraduate college students viewed their academic performance. Relationships between sex of student, motivation, self esteem, achievement, and attributional pattern utilized were examined. Subjects (132 female, 104 male) were chosen on a voluntary basis; most were enrolled in a…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attribution Theory, Communication Research, Comparative Analysis
Peer reviewedBernstein, William M.; And Others – Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1979
A group of 469 undergraduate students enrolled in an introductory psychology class completed questionnaires before and after each of three examinations given over the course of a semester. The purpose of the study was to analyze students' attributions for their own performance on academic examinations. (MP)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attribution Theory, College Students, Comparative Analysis
Madigan, Robert; Bollenbach, Amy – 1982
The cognitive theory of depression advanced by Beck proposes that a negative view of the self, the world and the future is a condition that is responsible for depression. Recent data, however, have suggested that the relationship between cognition and affect is a reciprocal one in which each influences the other. Temporary mood states were induced…
Descriptors: Affective Objectives, Attribution Theory, Cognitive Processes, College Students
Peer reviewedTeglasi, Hedwig; Hoffman, Mary Ann – Journal of Research in Personality, 1982
Causal attributions of shy students (N=36) were compared with those of a comparison group of students (N=36) in ten situations. Significant differences between the two groups emerged when explaining outcomes of situations considered to be problematic for shy individuals. Causal attributions may reflect realistic and situation-specific…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Attribution Theory, Cognitive Style, College Students
Peer reviewedGoethals, George R.; Zanna, Mark P. – Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1979
One initial and two follow-up experiments were conducted to test social comparison predictions regarding influence processes related to risk taking in groups. Subjects were 137 male and female college students. (MP)
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, College Students, Comparative Analysis, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedJesse, Daniel M.; Gregory, W. Larry – Educational Research Quarterly, 1987
First semester college students (n=92), during their second week of classes, participated in a two (received grade point average information vs. no information) by two (imagined academic achievement scenarios vs. no scenarios) by two (received reattribution information vs. no information) intervention program designed to enhance their academic…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attribution Theory, College Freshmen, Comparative Analysis
DeVito, Anthony J.; And Others – 1982
The decade of the 1970's saw an alarming decline in the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) scores of entering college freshmen, and it was theorized that this might be attributed to a corresponding decline in study attitudes. To test this hypothesis, math and verbal SAT scores, study habits, and attitudes of college freshmen in the classes of 1973 and…
Descriptors: Academic Aptitude, Attitude Change, Attribution Theory, College Freshmen
Peer reviewedMetz, Kathleen E. – Cognition and Instruction, 1998
Compared kindergartners', third graders', and undergraduates' understanding and attribution of randomness. Found that kindergartners' interpretations were deterministic or outside the determinancy-indeterminancy frame. Most third graders had some grasp of randomness; their interpretations were less dominated by false attribution of determinism…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attribution Theory, Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis
Wise, Steven L.; And Others – 1994
This study investigated the relationship between examinee achievement-specific locus of control and the differences between self-adapted testing (SAT) and computerized adaptive testing (CAT) in terms of mean estimated proficiency and posttest state anxiety. Subjects were 379 college students. A disordinal interaction was found between test type…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Adaptive Testing, Anxiety, Attribution Theory
Murphy, Carolyn Colvin; Shell, Duane F. – 1989
A study examined how self-efficacy, causal attribution, and outcome expectancy beliefs are related to reading and writing for ethnically diverse college freshmen and whether the patterns of belief-performance relationships for ethnically diverse students are similar to those found for white, middle class populations. Subjects in the ethnic sample…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Blacks, College Freshmen, Comparative Analysis
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