743 resultados para Self-efficacy in mathematics
Resumo:
Interventions using applied behaviour analysis (ABA) are widely used with children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD). Individuals who work with this population are important to target for ABA education. This study evaluated the efficacy of a self-directed program in increasing parent and student ABA knowledge and skills, self-efficacy, and new skill development in children with ASD. Study 1 was a pilot study of the newly developed evaluation materials. Study 2 tested the self-instructional package with three parents of children with ASD, three university students, and eight children diagnosed with ASD. Parents and students were given the Simple Steps ABA training package to use independently and were measured using a multiple baseline across participants and/or skills design. After training, ABA knowledge scores and self-efficacy showed variable improvement as did children’s appropriate behaviours. These results suggest that more research is needed to determine the efficacy of a self-instructional ABA package.
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Consistently with a priori predictions, school retention (repeating a year in school) had largely positive effects for a diverse range of 10 outcomes (e.g., math self-concept, self-efficacy, anxiety, relations with teachers, parents and peers, school grades, and standardized achievement test scores). The design, based on a large, representative sample of German students (N = 1,325, M age = 11.75 years) measured each year during the first five years of secondary school, was particularly strong. It featured four independent retention groups (different groups of students, each repeating one of the four first years of secondary school, total N = 103), with multiple post-test waves to evaluate short- and long-term effects, controlling for covariates (gender, age, SES, primary school grades, IQ) and one or more sets of 10 outcomes realised prior to retention. Tests of developmental invariance demonstrated that the effects of retention (controlling for covariates and pre-retention outcomes) were highly consistent across this potentially volatile early-to-middle adolescent period; largely positive effects in the first year following retention were maintained in subsequent school years following retention. Particularly considering that these results are contrary to at least some of the accepted wisdom about school retention, the findings have important implications for educational researchers, policymakers and parents.
Resumo:
Therapeutic vaccination for chronic hepatitis B in the Trimera mouse modelrnRaja Vuyyuru and Wulf O. BöcherrnHepatitis B is a liver disease caused by Hepatitis B virus (HBV). It ranges in severity from a mild illness, lasting a few weeks (acute), to a serious long-term (chronic) illness that can lead either to liver disease or liver cancer. Acute infection is self limiting in most adults, resulting in clearance of virus from blood and liver and the development of lasting immunity. However 5% of acutely infected patients do not resolve primary HBV infection, leading to chronic infection with persistent viral replication in the liver. The strength of the initial antiviral immune response elicited to Hepatitis B determines the subsequent clinical outcome. A strong and broad T cell response leads to spontaneous resolution. Conversely, a weak T cell response favours viral persistence and establishment of chronic disease. While treatments using interferon-alpha or nucleos(t)ide analogues can reduce disease progression, they rarely lead to complete recovery. The lack of a suitable small animal model hampered efforts to understand the mechanisms responsible for immune failure in these chronic patients.rnIn current study we used Trimera mice to study the efficacy of potential vaccine candidates using HBV loaded dendritic cells in HBV chronic infection in vivo. The Trimera mouse model is based on Balb/c mice implanted with SCID mouse bone marrow and human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from HBV patients, and thus contains the immune system of the donor including their HBV associated T cell defect.rnIn our present study, strong HBV specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cell responses were enhanced by therapeutic vaccination in chronic HBV patients. These T cell responses occurred independently of either the course of the disease or the strength of their underlying HBV specific T cell failure. These findings indicate that the Trimera mouse model represents a novel experimental tool for evaluating potential anti-HBV immunotherapeutic agents. This in vivo data indicated that both the HBV specific CD4+ cell and CD8+ responses were elicited in the periphery. These HBV specific T cells proliferated and secreted cytokines upon restimulation in Trimera mice. The observation that these HBV specific T cells are not detectable directly ex vivo indicates that they must be immune tolerant or present at a very low frequency in situ. HBV specific T cell responses were suppressed in Trimera mice under viremic conditions, suggesting that viral factors might be directly involved in tolerizing or silencing antiviral T cell responses. Thus, combination of an effective vaccine with antiviral treatment to reduce viremia might be a more effective therapeutic strategy for the future. Such approaches should be tested in Trimera mice generated in HBV or HBs expressing transgenic mice before conducting clinical trials.rn
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Using path analysis, the present investigation was done to clarify possible causal linkages among general scholastic aptitude, academic achievement in mathematics, self-concept of ability, and performance on a mathematics examination. Subjects were 122 eighth-grade students who completed a mathematics examination as well as a measure of self-concept of ability. Aptitude and achievement measures were obtained from school records. Analysis showed sex differences in prediction of performance on the mathematics examination. For boys, this performance could be predicted from scholastic aptitude and previous achievement in mathematics. For girls, performance only could be predicted from previous achievement in mathematics. These results indicate that the direction, strength, and magnitude of relations among these variables differed for boys and girls, while mean levels of performance did not.
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This article asks if voters' participation in federal elections is lower in the new Länder (East Germany) than in the old Länder (West Germany). It is assumed that voters in the new Länder are less convinced they can influence politics by voting. Using the perspective of cognitive psychology the article stresses differences in individual interpretations of the election context among citizens of both the new and old Länder. Furthermore, it is argued that the strength of the expected influence by voting depends on the structure and direction of individuals' beliefs in their competence and control as well as their belief in causality and self-efficacy. These beliefs may differ among voters in the new and old Länder. For empirical analysis, the article uses data from the German General Social Survey 1998.
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The present study focused on the relations between the self-efficacy, social self-concept, time perspectives, school investment and academic achievement of students in four different European countries and in different adolescence periods. A total of 1623 students completed questionnaires. The relations between the concepts proved not to be specific to the Western or to the former Communist bloc countries studied. The expected general decline in investment and academic achievement over the adolescence period showed up in all four countries studied. Contrary to our hypothesis, however, this decline could not be explained by growing influences of either social self-concept or time perspectives regarding personal development on their investment. In fact, the effects of social self-concept were strongest for the youngest adolescence group. Students’ social self-concept was the best predictor for their investment, while self-efficacy proved to predict academic achievement best in all adolescence periods.
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In the present study, associations between executive functioning, metacognition, and self-perceived competence in the context of early academic outcomes were examined. A total of 209 children attending first grade were initially assessed in terms of their executive functioning and academic self-concept. One year later, children’s executive functioning, academic self-concept, metacognitive monitoring and control, as well as their achievement in mathematics and literacy were evaluated. Structural equation modeling revealed that executive functioning was significantly related to metacognitive control, both cross-sectionally and longitudinally, and that self-concept was substantially associated with metacognitive monitoring, both cross-sectionally and longitudinally. Individual differences in executive functioning and metacognitive control were significantly related to academic outcomes, with metacognitive control appearing to yield a more circumscribed influence on academic outcomes (only literacy) compared to executive functioning (literacy and mathematics).
Resumo:
Following the recent trend in psychology towards a more integrative view of personality, the study attempted to establish the connections and underlying complexes of fundamental personality dispositions within two cohorts of Swiss adolescents in eighth and eleventh grade (N = 492, ages 13 to 19): Big-Five basic traits, big six vocational interests, work values, and generalized self-efficacy and externality of control beliefs. Five factors were identified which accounted for 60% of variance among the relations of the variables: (1) enterprisingconventional interests, (2) favorable personality dispositions, (3) social-artistic personality characteristics, (4) investigative-realistic interests, and (5) work value endorsement. Crosssectional findings indicate that particularly agreeableness and conscientiousness become closer related to interests and work values with increasing grade-level.