835 resultados para High school libraries
Un cuestionario de personalidad The Jr.-Sr. High School Personality Questionaire Raymond B. Cattell.
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Pretender adentrarnos en la prometedora realidad que ha supuesto en la psicología científica el método de análisis factorial. Pues, hasta ahora, el mundo psicológico español, está muy en contacto con las corrientes psicológicas comprensivas y clínica sin que tenga la conveniente abundancia de elementos psicométricos del método científico del análisis factorial. Por otro lado, la pretensión es contentarse con satisfacer una curiosidad científica por este autor y su obra, no muy conocidos en España. Seiscientos cuarenta y tres individuos estudiantes de Bachillerato; hombres y mujeres de una capital española. También, se aplicó a ciento ocho estudiantes universitarios post-graduados de diferentes carreras y edades. Test de Raymond B. Cattell, H.S.P.Q. (The Jr.-Sr. Hihg School Personality Questionaire). Cuestionario, cuadros, gráficas. Se constata a través de la elaboración de la estadística que apenas existen diferencias significativas entre la motivación francesa y la española.
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Se describe el Instituto Woodson de Estados Unidos con el propósito de transmitir la idea de lo que es un 'high school' americano. Se abarcan los siguientes aspectos: 1. Descripción de los servicios que ofrece al alumnado. 2. Plan de estudios, créditos y diplomas que posee. 3. Calendario y horario escolar que presenta a los discentes. 4. La administración que se encarga de elaborar presupuestos y contratos. 5. Las actividades que puede desarrollar el alumnado, clubs, sociedades, gobierno de estudiantes, publicaciones, oficinas de colocación y orientación escolar. 6. El equipo de profesores, títulos, departamentos, actividades en relación con los alumnos, actividades en relación con la comunidad y la profesión.
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El artículo forma parte de una sección fija de la revista dedicada a innovación educativa
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T??tulo, resumen y palabras clave tambi??n en espa??ol
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This paper examines the effects of noise on high school music teachers.
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This paper discusses the effect of noise exposure on high school aged boys' hearing levels and how to measure the effects.
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The paper considers students’ views of why reading aloud takes place and what are its effects.The results of two small focus-group discussions are presented, in which high school students were given the opportunity to express their responses to the practice of reading aloud in the classroom. Their responses are considered in the context of theoretical perspectives: pedagogical, reader-response and social/vocational. Analysis of responses reveals acknowledgement that reading aloud is not only a useful skill but also that it is a site of anxiety and even conflict.
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Previous studies have revealed that students who work and study build up sleep deficits during the workweek, which can trigger a sleep rebound during days off. The objective of this study was to investigate the impact of working/non-working on sleepiness during days off among high school students. The study population, aged 14-21 years, attended evening classes in Sao Paulo, Brazil. For the study, the students completed questionnaires on living conditions, health, and work; wore actigraphs; and completed the Karolinska Sleepiness Scale (KSS). To predict sleepiness, a logistic regression analysis was performed. Excessive sleepiness was observed on the first day off among working students. Results suggest that working is a significant predictor for sleepiness and that two shifts of daily systematic activities, study and work, might lead to excessive daytime sleepiness on the first day off. Further, this observed excessive sleepiness may reflect the sleep debt accumulated during the workweek.
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In part because of high and persistent youth unemployment, adolescent students’ transition from school to work is an important policy and research topic. Many countries have implemented public programs offering summer jobs or work while in high-school as measures to smooth the transition. While the immediate effect of the programs on school attendance, school grades, and disposable income is well documented, their effect on the transition to the labor market remains an open question. Observational studies have shown strong positive effects of summer jobs, but also that the estimated effect is highly vulnerable to selection bias. In this paper, some 3700 high-school students applying for summer jobs in the period 1995-2003,via a program, are followed to 30 years of age. A quarter of the applicants were randomly offered a summer job each year. Among the remaining students, 50% had a (non-program related) summer job while in high-school. We find the income, post high-school, for the offered and non-offered groups to be similar and conclude that the effect of summer jobs on the transition to the labor market is inconsequential.