scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Topic

Academic achievement

About: Academic achievement is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 69460 publications have been published within this topic receiving 2227289 citations. The topic is also known as: academic performance & educational achievement.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A randomized trial evaluated the Incredible Years Teacher Classroom Management and Child Social and Emotion curriculum and found support for the efficacy of this universal preventive curriculum for enhancing school protective factors and reducing child and classroom risk factors faced by socio-economically disadvantaged children.
Abstract: Background: School readiness, conceptualized as three components including emotional self-regulation, social competence, and family/school involvement, as well as absence of conduct problems play a key role in young children's future interpersonal adjustment and academic success. Unfortunately, exposure to multiple poverty-related risks increases the odds that children will demonstrate increased emotional dysregulation, fewer social skills, less teacher/parent involvement and more conduct problems. Consequently intervention offered to socio-economically disadvantaged populations that includes a social and emotional school curriculum and trains teachers in effective classroom management skills and in promotion of parent–school involvement would seem to be a strategic strategy for improving young children's school readiness, leading to later academic success and prevention of the development of conduct disorders. Methods: This randomized trial evaluated the Incredible Years (IY) Teacher Classroom Management and Child Social and Emotion curriculum (Dinosaur School) as a universal prevention program for children enrolled in Head Start, kindergarten, or first grade classrooms in schools selected because of high rates of poverty. Trained teachers offered the Dinosaur School curriculum to all their students in bi-weekly lessons throughout the year. They sent home weekly dinosaur homework to encourage parents’ involvement. Part of the curriculum involved promotion of lesson objectives through the teachers’ continual use of positive classroom management skills focused on building social competence and emotional self-regulation skills as well as decreasing conduct problems. Matched pairs of schools were randomly assigned to intervention or control conditions. Results: Results from multi-level models on a total of 153 teachers and 1,768 students are presented. Children and teachers were observed in the classrooms by blinded observers at the beginning and the end of the school year. Results indicated that intervention teachers used more positive classroom management strategies and their students showed more social competence and emotional self-regulation and fewer conduct problems than control teachers and students. Intervention teachers reported more involvement with parents than control teachers. Satisfaction with the program was very high regardless of grade levels. Conclusions: These findings provide support for the efficacy of this universal preventive curriculum for enhancing school protective factors and reducing child and classroom risk factors faced by socio-economically disadvantaged children.

827 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results of this study support the conclusion that a technology enhanced flipped classroom was both effective and scalable; it better facilitated learning than the simulation-based training and students found this approach to be more motivating in that it allowed for greater differentiation of instruction.
Abstract: The purpose of this research was to explore how technology can be used to teach technological skills and to determine what benefit flipping the classroom might have for students taking an introductory-level college course on spreadsheets in terms of student achievement and satisfaction with the class. A pretest posttest quasi-experimental mixed methods design was utilized to determine any differences in student achievement that might be associated with the instructional approach being used. In addition, the scalability of each approach was evaluated along with students’ perceptions of these approaches to determine the affect each intervention might have on a student’s motivation to learn. The simulation-based instruction tested in this study was found to be an extremely scalable solution but less effective than the regular classroom and flipped classroom approaches in terms of student learning. While students did demonstrate learning gains, the process focus of the simulation’s instruction and assessments frustrated students and decreased their motivation to learn. Students’ attitudes towards the topic, their willingness to refer the course to others, and the likelihood that they would take another course like this were considerably lower than those of students in the flipped or regular classroom situations. The results of this study support the conclusion that a technology enhanced flipped classroom was both effective and scalable; it better facilitated learning than the simulation-based training and students found this approach to be more motivating in that it allowed for greater differentiation of instruction.

826 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper used path analysis to test predictions of a model explaining the impact of students' perceptions of classroom structures (tasks, autonomy support and mastery and evaluation) on their selfefficacy, perceptions of the instrumentality of class work, and their achievement goals in a particular classroom setting.

826 citations

Book
11 Oct 1998
TL;DR: The authors developed a theoretical model to explain the cognitive process by which students learn about politics and suggest changes in the style of civics teaching, and found that high school seniors learn about government and politics and how they learn it.
Abstract: This study takes a look at what America's high school seniors know about government and politics and how they learn it. The authors develop a theoretical model to explain the cognitive process by which students learn about politics, and suggest changes in the style of civics teaching.

824 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: For young elementary school children, academic intrinsic motivation is a reliable, valid, and significant construct as discussed by the authors, and two studies, 1 longitudinal and 1 cross-sectional, demonstrate that it is reliable and valid for children.
Abstract: Two studies, 1 longitudinal and 1 cross-sectional, demonstrate that for young elementary school children, academic intrinsic motivation is a reliable, valid, and significant construct. Findings are discussed with regard to developmental theories of intrinsic motivation and the significance of academic intrinsic motivation for children's education

822 citations


Network Information
Related Topics (5)
Educational research
38.5K papers, 1.3M citations
84% related
Higher education
244.3K papers, 3.5M citations
82% related
Teacher education
70.5K papers, 1.2M citations
79% related
Test validity
16.7K papers, 1.5M citations
78% related
Educational technology
72.4K papers, 1.7M citations
77% related
Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20241
2023760
20221,530
20211,695
20202,633
20192,737