748 resultados para young university students
Resumo:
Ensuring that all graduates are able to exploit new technologies is a primary goal of all UK universities and a variety of assumptions have underpinned policies designed to promote this goal, This paper explores some of these assumptions through the findings of a. longitudinal study involving a cohort of over 800 university students. The study adopted a student perspective to examine the factors affecting their use of computers over a three year period. Unsurprisingly, the results indicated that situational factors (e.g. access, training and time) influence the extent to which students use computers, but a disparity was found in the importance attributed to these factors by the academic staff, who focused on the needs of their department, and by the students, who focused on their individual needs. Results suggest that increased attention to a student perspective may lead to improved strategic planning in students' use of computers.
Resumo:
Speech recognition and language analysis of spontaneous speech arising in naturally spoken conversations are becoming the subject of much research. However, there is a shortage of spontaneous speech corpora that are freely available for academics. We therefore undertook the building of a natural conversation speech database, recording over 200 hours of conversations in English by over 600 local university students. With few exceptions, the students used their own cell phones from their own rooms or homes to speak to one another, and they were permitted to speak on any topic they chose. Although they knew that they were being recorded and that they would receive a small payment, their conversations in the corpus are probably very close to being natural and spontaneous. This paper describes a detailed case study of the problems we faced and the methods we used to make the recordings and control the collection of these social science data on a limited budget.
Resumo:
This mixed methods study investigated language learning motivation in an one-year e-learning course for technological university students to bridge the geographical divide between students on industrial placements when studying graded readers using an e-learning course to improve their English competence and to pass the General English Proficiency Test. Data was collected through questionnaires and course feedback. The results of this study extend Gardner’s socio-educational model in an e-learning environment by adding the new category, Computer Attitudes, which was proven to be highly correlated with Motivation. Although the low proficiency English students had good computer skills, their habits of using the computer for entertainment and their lack of the skill of “technological communication efficacy” caused increased anxiety when using computers and thus provided them with a lower computer confidence over time. Consequently, it is recommended that sound e-learning training should be provided to all of the students prior to embarking on an e-leaning course so that these learners can benefit from online language learning in the future.
Resumo:
Background: Emotional responding is sensitive to social context; however, little emphasis has been placed on the mechanisms by which social context effects changes in emotional responding.
Objective: We aimed to investigate the effects of social context on neural responses to emotional stimuli to inform on the mechanisms underpinning context-linked changes in emotional responding.
Design: We measured event-related potential (ERP) components known to index specific emotion processes and self-reports of explicit emotion regulation strategies and emotional arousal. Female Chinese university students observed positive, negative, and neutral photographs, whilst alone or accompanied by a culturally similar (Chinese) or dissimilar researcher (British).
Results: There was a reduction in the positive versus neutral differential N1 amplitude (indexing attentional capture by positive stimuli) in the dissimilar relative to alone context. In this context, there was also a corresponding increase in amplitude of a frontal late positive potential (LPP) component (indexing engagement of cognitive control resources). In the similar relative to alone context, these effects on differential N1 and frontal LPP amplitudes were less pronounced, but there was an additional decrease in the amplitude of a parietal LPP component (indexing motivational relevance) in response to positive stimuli. In response to negative stimuli, the differential N1 component was increased in the similar relative to dissimilar and alone (trend) context.
Conclusion: These data suggest that neural processes engaged in response to emotional stimuli are modulated by social context. Possible mechanisms for the social-context-linked changes in attentional capture by emotional stimuli include a context-directed modulation of the focus of attention, or an altered interpretation of the emotional stimuli based on additional information proportioned by the context.
Resumo:
The current study sought to elaborate and test a theoretical proposition that introjective personality functioning, which has been implicated in various psychological difficulties (e.g., self-critical depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder), has an emotional foundation in the self-conscious emotion of shame and is supported by dissociation. Moreover, introjective functioning was predicted to be associated with reduced interpersonal intimacy. To test the model, a Web-based survey design using path analysis was used. Three hundred and fifteen university students were assessed with measures of self-conscious emotions (i.e., shame, guilt, and embarrassment), introjective (self-definition) and anaclitic (relational) personality style, pathological dissociation, and interpersonal intimacy. Introjective personality was found to be associated with increased shame and reduced interpersonal intimacy. However, the path between pathological dissociation and introjective functioning was not significant. The results are discussed with reference to the moderating influence of introjective functioning between shame and reduced interpersonal intimacy.
Resumo:
This study examined levels of mathematics and statistics anxiety, as well as general mental health amongst undergraduate students with dyslexia (n = 28) and those without dyslexia (n = 71). Students with dyslexia had higher levels of mathematics anxiety relative to those without dyslexia, while statistics anxiety and general mental health were comparable for both reading ability groups. In terms of coping strategies, undergraduates with dyslexia tended to use planning-based strategies and seek instrumental support more frequently than those without dyslexia. Higher mathematics anxiety was associated with having a dyslexia diagnosis, as well as greater levels of worrying, denial, seeking instrumental support and less use of the positive reinterpretation coping strategy. By contrast, statistics anxiety was not predicted by dyslexia diagnosis, but was instead predicted by overall worrying and the use of denial and emotion focused coping strategies. The results suggest that disability practitioners should be aware that university students with dyslexia are at risk of high mathematics anxiety. Additionally, effective anxiety reduction strategies such as positive reframing and thought challenging would form a useful addition to the support package delivered to many students with dyslexia.
Resumo:
Background
When asked to solve mathematical problems, some people experience anxiety and threat, which can lead to impaired mathematical performance (Curr Dir Psychol Sci 11:181–185, 2002). The present studies investigated the link between mathematical anxiety and performance on the cognitive reflection test (CRT; J Econ Perspect 19:25–42, 2005). The CRT is a measure of a person’s ability to resist intuitive response tendencies, and it correlates strongly with important real-life outcomes, such as time preferences, risk-taking, and rational thinking.
Methods
In Experiments 1 and 2 the relationships between maths anxiety, mathematical knowledge/mathematical achievement, test anxiety and cognitive reflection were analysed using mediation analyses. Experiment 3 included a manipulation of working memory load. The effects of anxiety and working memory load were analysed using ANOVAs.
Results
Our experiments with university students (Experiments 1 and 3) and secondary school students (Experiment 2) demonstrated that mathematical anxiety was a significant predictor of cognitive reflection, even after controlling for the effects of general mathematical knowledge (in Experiment 1), school mathematical achievement (in Experiment 2) and test anxiety (in Experiments 1–3). Furthermore, Experiment 3 showed that mathematical anxiety and burdening working memory resources with a secondary task had similar effects on cognitive reflection.
Conclusions
Given earlier findings that showed a close link between cognitive reflection, unbiased decisions and rationality, our results suggest that mathematical anxiety might be negatively related to individuals’ ability to make advantageous choices and good decisions.
Resumo:
Higher education in the UK is in a state of flux and this is having particular impact on the humanities. On the one hand the pressure to support a STEM agenda is seen by some as forcing higher education down a narrow economic agenda, while government requirements for assessing the social and economic impact of research has raised concerns about excessive utilitarianism and a downgrading of ‘disinterested enquiry’. This paper argues that these concerns may be misplaced. The research impact agenda has the potential to promote more socially engaged research and more democratic engagement in the creation and dissemination of knowledge. In the US concerns about the democratic role of higher education more often seem to focus on the student experience. By contrast, in the UK concerns about citizenship education and democratic participation more often focus on high school students, perhaps because university students are more likely to have a formal role in institutional governance. The paper concludes that the papers in this forum have a very American feel, but the issues they address resonate on a much wider scale.
Resumo:
The use of museum collections as a path to learning for university students is fast becoming a new pedagogy for higher education. Despite a strong tradition of using lectures as a way of delivering the curriculum, the positive benefits of ‘active’ and ‘experiential learning’ are being recognised in universities at both a strategic level and in daily teaching practice. As museum artefacts, specimens and art works are used to evoke, provoke, and challenge students’ engagement with their subject, so transformational learning can take place. This unique book presents the first comprehensive exploration of ‘object-based learning’ as a pedagogy for higher education in a broad context. An international group of authors offer a spectrum of approaches at work in higher education today. They explore contemporary principles and practice of object-based learning in higher education, demonstrating the value of using collections in this context and considering the relationship between academic discipline and object-based learning as a teaching strategy.
Resumo:
This paper outlines a means of improving the employability skills of first-year university students through a closely integrated model of employer engagement within computer science modules. The outlined approach illustrates how employability skills, including communication, teamwork and time management skills, can be contextualised in a manner that directly relates to student learning but can still be linked forward into employment. The paper tests the premise that developing employability skills early within the curriculum will result in improved student engagement and learning within later modules. The paper concludes that embedding employer participation within first-year models can help relate a distant notion of employability into something of more immediate relevance in terms of how students can best approach learning. Further, by enhancing employability skills early within the curriculum, it becomes possible to improve academic attainment within later modules.
Resumo:
The purpose of this research study was to investigate and identify possible patterns relating to academic performance on the effects of university students self-selecting where to sit in a lecture theatre.
The key research questions are:
1. Does seating position affect student performance?
2. Do the most academically able and engaged students regularly sit at the front of lecture theatres?
Academic achievement
Preliminary results suggest significant assessment score differences between those that sit at the front and those that sit further the back. Of those that received a grade of 75%+ (Grade A) 6.67% regularly sat at the back. With the same group 46.67% regularly sat at the front. Of the group that scored less than 50% (Grade D) 0% of students regularly sat at the front. 12.50% regularly sat in the middle zones with 37.50% sitting at the back. It was also observed that the remaining numbers did not consistently sit in the same zone.
Temporal movement
There is little evidence of movement between seating zones of the Grade A group throughout the 24 week period. However there was considerable movement with the Grade D group. Although still under analysis there appears be a pattern of students in this group graduating towards the back seating positions over the course of the programme.
Engagement
The frequency of completed entries on PinPoint was also used as an indicator of engagement. With the Grade A group 75% of them regularly completed an entry whereas in the Grade D group this drops to less than 50%.
Further analysis on the attitudinal factors in relational to seating position and performance are ongoing, but preliminary results suggest that those students that scored highly in attitude tended to sit at the front and middle sections.
It would indeed appear that the more highly engaged and academically capable students voluntarily sit at the front for most lectures. Interestingly as the course progresses those who had lesser engagement and below average midterm results tend to began to sit progressively toward the back. If this is a repeatable pattern then a linear regression analysis of the seating positions and midterm results could help predict students in danger of failing.
Resumo:
O presente estudo investigou a temática da escrita colaborativa a distância, no Ensino Superior, em Inglês Língua Estrangeira. A escrita foi estudada de uma perspectiva processual, valorizando, portanto, o caminho que os alunos percorrem até ao produto final. O ambiente colaborativo reforçou este processo, na medida em que proporcionou, aos alunos, um espaço de discussão e melhoramento das diversas versões do texto. Por outro lado, a componente de ensino a distância de blended learning contribuiu, também, para um processo mais interactivo, mais colaborativo e, ao mesmo tempo, mais distanciado, o que beneficiaria o desenvolvimento da competência de escrita dos alunos e, simultaneamente, dos próprios alunos enquanto indivíduos. A investigação procurou averiguar diversos aspectos relacionados com o tipo de ensino já referido: aspectos evolutivos do processo de escrita na colaboração a distância – nomeadamente, as alterações efectuadas aos textos e seu impacto –; estratégias postas em prática pelos participantes em trabalho de escrita colaborativa a distância em Inglês Língua Estrangeira (ILE); formas de colaboração presentes no trabalho e a influência do ensino a distância no trabalho de escrita colaborativa. Para atingir as metas enumeradas, foi seleccionada uma turma de Língua e Cultura Inglesa II, 2º ano, da licenciatura em Ensino de Português/Inglês, da Universidade de Aveiro, que levou a cabo as diversas tarefas de escrita processual colaborativa, tarefas essas determinadas e realizadas através do webCT da Universidade de Aveiro (com uma página adaptada especialmente para a turma em questão). Todo o trabalho realizado pelos alunos foi ali registado para posterior análise. Tornou-se claro, ao longo da análise dos dados, que o ambiente a distância criou várias dificuldades aos alunos, implicando a criação de estratégias para as resolver. Por outro lado, a colaboração dentro dos grupos revelou-se um evidente benefício quer em termos de tarefas, quer em termos do desenvolvimento, motivação e envolvimento pessoais dos alunos. Também a abordagem processual à escrita trouxe resultados díspares: um dos grupos escrevia habitualmente segundo este modelo, não notando diferenças significativas, enquanto que o outro grupo valorizou o processo como um benefício para a escrita, sobretudo pelas fases de revisão que incluía. Pretendeu-se, com a análise referida e sumariada, conseguir não só investigar a escrita colaborativa a distância mas, também, identificar estratégias válidas para o ensino desta competência, estratégias essas que possam ajudar ao desenvolvimento de um ensino de escrita com mais sucesso e melhores resultados, sobretudo do ponto de vista dos alunos. É urgente um aprofundamento desta área ainda pouco desenvolvida, uma vez que as práticas de escrita se afastam cada vez mais da realidade actual, uma realidade construída em conjunto, por indivíduos que trabalham em ambientes virtuais e reais, sendo, portanto, relevante integrar os alunos nestes contextos, para melhor os preparar para o mundo de hoje. ABSTRACT: The study presented here has investigated collaborative writing at a distance in English as a Foreign Language (EFL), with University students. Students were encouraged to write according to a process model, which valued the stages of writing rather than the final product resulting from it. The collaborative environment strengthened the process, in the sense that it gave students room for discussion and improvement of the different versions of the text. On the other hand, distance learning contributed to a more collaborative and interactive process and, at the same time, more distanced, which benefited the development of the students’ writing skills and of the students as individuals. The investigation aimed to study several aspects of collaborative writing at a distance: the evolution of the writing process in distance collaboration, strategies used by the participants when writing collaboratively at a distance, initial writing competences of the participants and eventual advantages of distance learning for the collaborative revision phase of the writing process. In order to accomplish the proposed goals, we selected a class from those in the second year taking English Language and Culture II, of the English/ Portuguese Teaching “Licenciatura” degree at the University of Aveiro, and a web page was created for them. This page registered all the work done by the students along the project, establishing the data for future analysis. From this class, two groups were selected as case studies, in order to carry out a deeper and more comprehensive study of the process. We intended not only to investigate collaborative writing at a distance but also to identify valid strategies for the teaching of writing. Such strategies might aid the development of a more successful teaching of this competence, with better and more lasting results in students. Further research in this poorly developed area is urgent, as the practices of writing get further apart from the current reality. Nowadays, it is becoming growingly common to work both in real and virtual environments. It is thus relevant to integrate students in both, in order to prepare them for today’s world – our mission as teachers and educators.
Resumo:
A saúde dos estudantes do ensino superior é uma importante questão de saúde pública, com impacto não só a nível pessoal e social, como também institucional. Nesse sentido, a presente investigação teve como objectivos: 1) caracterizar a saúde mental dos estudantes universitários, ao nível de sintomas depressivos, stress e bem-estar; 2) identificar os seus padrões de consumo de álcool, em termos de quantidade e frequência de consumo, ingestão esporádica excessiva e tipos de bebidas mais ingeridas; 3) conhecer a prevalência de dois comportamentos de risco ligados ao álcool, os comportamentos sexuais de risco e a condução sob o efeito de álcool; 4) analisar a relação entre saúde mental e consumo de álcool no ensino superior. Para esse efeito, realizou-se um estudo transversal com 666 alunos do 1º ciclo da Universidade de Aveiro. Os instrumentos utilizados foram: Ficha de Caracterização Sociodemográfica e Académica; Medida de Saúde Comportamental-20; Inventário da Depressão em Estudantes Universitários; Inventário de Stress em Estudantes Universitários; Questionário de Comportamentos de Risco em Estudantes Universitários. Os resultados mostraram que 32% dos estudantes se encontravam num patamar disfuncional quanto à sua saúde mental, 15% apresentavam sintomatologia depressiva e 26% sofriam de níveis elevados de stress, mas que apenas uma minoria destes alunos estava a receber apoio psicológico profissional. Os níveis de saúde mental foram inferiores nas mulheres, nos alunos do 1º e do 3º ano, da área de Saúde e de estatuto socioeconómico baixo. Para além disso, a maioria dos estudantes consumia álcool e 41% tiveram episódios de ingestão excessiva no último mês. Durante as festas académicas, um quarto dos estudantes ingeriu cinco ou mais bebidas por noite. O consumo de álcool foi superior nos homens, nos estudantes da área de Engenharias, de estatuto socioeconómico elevado e nos deslocados. Quanto a problemas ligados ao álcool, 13% dos estudantes sexualmente activos admitiram ter tido relações sexuais decorrentes do consumo de álcool, no último ano, e 29% praticaram condução sob o efeito de álcool no último mês. Estes comportamentos foram mais frequentes em estudantes do sexo masculino e naqueles que tiveram episódios de ingestão excessiva. Não se encontrou, de um modo geral, uma relação entre saúde mental e consumo de álcool, tendo sido detectadas apenas correlações, fracas, do stress e do bem-estar com o consumo de álcool. Ao contrário do que era esperado, verificou-se que à medida que o consumo de álcool aumentava, o stress diminuía e o bem-estar aumentava ligeiramente. Estes dados salientam a necessidade de as instituições do ensino superior reforçarem a identificação e o tratamento de problemas existentes e apostarem na prevenção, tanto através de estratégias dirigidas a toda a comunidade, no âmbito da educação para a saúde e da literacia em saúde mental, como através de iniciativas destinadas aos grupos de risco aqui identificados.
Resumo:
As explicações são uma actividade a que os alunos recorrem em diferentes países do mundo. Esta prática parece também ter uma longa história. Para além disto, esta é uma actividade que implica o investimento de tempo e dinheiro por parte dos alunos e suas famílias. Estas foram algumas das questões que motivaram o estudo do fenómeno das explicações em Portugal. O foco deste estudo é o Ensino Secundário e Superior. Para estudar esta temática foi decidido inquirir estudantes do Ensino Superior sobre as suas experiências com explicações no Ensino Secundário e Superior, directores de centros de explicações e explicadores com o objectivo de explorar as razões que levam ao recurso a este serviço, conhecer os impactos desta utilização e fazer uma pesquisa sobre a utilização de explicações ao longo dos tempos. O trabalho de campo realizado consistiu na aplicação de um inquérito por questionário online divulgado em diferentes instituições do Ensino Superior, um inquérito por questionário em papel distribuído em duas Universidades públicas, entrevistas a alunos, directores de centros de explicações e explicadores e a análise de diferentes jornais que continham temáticas educativas, tentando-se contribuir para a história da oferta de explicações nos séculos XIX e XX em Portugal. Os resultados obtidos permitiram verificar que é no Ensino Secundário que se encontra a maior percentagem de frequência de explicações; que as disciplinas da área da Matemática são as mais procuradas em explicações; que a principal razão para o recurso a esta actividade no Ensino Secundário se prende com os exames de acesso à Universidade, e no Ensino Superior com a necessidade de um apoio extra; que o recurso a esta actividade acarreta diversos impactos para os alunos de ambos os níveis; e que parece haver uma relação entre nível educacional dos pais e recurso a explicações, particularmente no Ensino Secundário.