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Student engagement

About: Student engagement is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 22581 publications have been published within this topic receiving 501273 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Experimental evidence that Twitter can be used as an educational tool to help engage students and to mobilize faculty into a more active and participatory role is provided.
Abstract: Despite the widespread use of social media by students and its increased use by instructors, very little empirical evidence is available concerning the impact of social media use on student learning and engagement. This paper describes our semester-long experimental study to determine if using Twitter – the microblogging and social networking platform most amenable to ongoing, public dialogue – for educationally relevant purposes can impact college student engagement and grades. A total of 125 students taking a first year seminar course for pre-health professional majors participated in this study (70 in the experimental group and 55 in the control group). With the experimental group, Twitter was used for various types of academic and co-curricular discussions. Engagement was quantified by using a 19-item scale based on the National Survey of Student Engagement. To assess differences in engagement and grades, we used mixed effects analysis of variance (ANOVA) models, with class sections nested within treatment groups. We also conducted content analyses of samples of Twitter exchanges. The ANOVA results showed that the experimental group had a significantly greater increase in engagement than the control group, as well as higher semester grade point averages. Analyses of Twitter communications showed that students and faculty were both highly engaged in the learning process in ways that transcended traditional classroom activities. This study provides experimental evidence that Twitter can be used as an educational tool to help engage students and to mobilize faculty into a more active and participatory role.

1,425 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, what we are learning about student engagement from NSSE: Benchmarks for Effective Educational Practices is discussed, with a focus on student engagement in the context of higher education.
Abstract: (2003). What We're Learning About Student Engagement From NSSE: Benchmarks for Effective Educational Practices. Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning: Vol. 35, No. 2, pp. 24-32.

1,380 citations

BookDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the relationship between student engagement and dropout in high school, and propose a framework to measure and measure student engagement in the context of a teacher-student relationship.
Abstract: Preface S. L. Christenson, A. L. Reschly, and C. Wylie.- SECTION I: WHAT IS STUDENT ENGAGEMENT?.- Jingle, Jangle, and Conceptual Haziness: Evolution and Future Directions of the Engagement Construct A. L. Reschly and S. L. Christenson.- Developmental Dynamics of Student Engagement, Coping, and Everyday Resilience E. A. Skinner and J. R. Pitzer.- Engagement across Developmental Periods D. Mahatmya, B. J. Lohman, J. L. Matjasko, and A. Feldman Farb.- Ethnicity and Student Engagement G. E. Bingham and L. Okagaki.- Student Engagement: What is it? Why does it matter? J. D. Finn and K. Zimmer.- Section I Commentary: So What is Student Engagement Anyway: Commentary on Section I J. Eccles and M. Wang.- SECTION II: ENGAGEMENT AS LINKED TO MOTIVATIONAL VARIABLES.- A Self-Determination Theory Perspective on Student Engagement J. Reeve.- Achievement Goal Theory, Conceptualization of ability/Intelligence, and Classroom Climate E. M. Anderman and H. Patrick.- School Identification K. E. Voelkl.- Self-Efficacy as an Engaged Learner D. H. Schunk and C. A. Mullen.- A Cyclical Self-Regulatory Account of Student Engagement: Theoretical Foundations and Applications T. J. Cleary and B. J. Zimmerman.- Academic Emotions and Student Engagement R. Pekrun and L. Linnenbrink-Garcia.- Students' Interest and Engagement in Classroom Activities M. Ainley.- Section II Commentary: Motivation and Engagement: Conceptual, Operational, and Empirical Clarity A. Martin.- SECTION III: ENGAGEMENT AND CONTEXTUAL INFLUENCES.- Parental Influences on Achievement Motivation and Student Engagement J. Bempechat and D. J. Shernoff.- Families as Facilitators of Student Engagement: Toward a Home-School Partnership Model J. N. Raftery, W. S. Grolnick, and E. S. Flamm.- Teacher-Student Relationships and Engagement: Conceptualizing, Measuring, and Improving the Capacity of Classroom Interactions R. C. Pianta, B. K. Hamre, and J. P. Allen.- The Role of Peer Relationships in Student Academic and Extracurricular Engagement J. Juvonen, G. Espinoza, and C. Knifsend.- Understanding Student Engagement with a Contextual Model S. Lam, B. P. H. Wong, H. Yang, Y. Liu.- Allowing Choice and Nurturing an Inner Compass: Educational Practices Supporting Students' Need for Autonomy A. Assor.- The Engaging Nature of Teaching for Competency Development R. Hipkins.- Assessment as a Context for Student Engagement S. Nichols and H. Dawson.- Section III Commentary: Socio-Cultural Contexts, Social Competence, and Engagement at School K. Wentzel.- SECTION IV: ENGAGEMENT AND STUDENT OUTCOMES.- The Relationship between Engagement and High School Dropout R. W. Rumberger and S. Rotermund.- High School Reform and Student Engagement M. H. Davis and J. M. McPartland.- The Power of Mindsets: Nurturing Engagement, Motivation, and Resilience in Students R. Brooks, S. Brooks, and S. Goldstein.- The Relations of Adolescent Student Engagement with Troubling and High-Risk Behaviors A. Griffiths, E. Lilles, M. Furlong, and J. Sidwha.- Trajectories and Patterns of Student Engagement: Evidence from a Longitudinal Study C. Wylie and E. Hodgen.- Instructional Contexts for Engagement and Achievement in Reading J. T. Guthrie, A. Wigfield, and W. You.- A Self-regulated Learning Perspective on Student Engagement C. A. Wolters and D. J. Taylor.- Classroom Strategies to Enhance Academic Engaged Time M. Gettinger and M. J. Walter.- Deep Engagement as a Complex System: Identity, Learning Power and Authentic Enquiry R. Deakin Crick.- Section IV Commentary: Outcomes of Engagement and Engagement as an Outcome: Some consensus, divergences and unanswered questions M. Janosz.- SECTION V: MEASUREMENT ISSUES, INSTRUMENTS, AND APPROACHES.- Measuring Student Engagement: The Development of a Scale for Formative Use C. W. Darr.- Systems Consultation: Developing the Assessment-to-Intervention Link with the Student Engagement Instrument J. J. Appleton.- Finding the Humanity in the Data: Understanding, Measuring & Strengthening Student Engagement E. Yazzie-Mintz and K. McCormick.- The Measurement of Student Engagement: A Comparative Analysis of Various Methods and Student Self-Report Instruments J. A. Fredricks and W. McColskey.- Issues and Methods in the Measurement of Student Engagement: Advancing the Construct through Statistical Modeling J. Betts.- Section V Commentary: Possible New Directions in the Measurement of Student Engagement K. Samuelsen.- Epilogue S. L. Christenson, A. L. Reschly and C. Wylie.

1,360 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a self-report instrument designed to measure two subtypes of student engagement with school, cognitive and psychological engagement, was proposed, based on responses of an ethnically and economically diverse urban sample of 1931 ninth grade students.

1,359 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Large, significant differences were found among groups on engagement behaviors, even after background and psychological characteristics were controlled statistically, and support the hypothesis that student engagement is an important component of academic resilience.
Abstract: A sample of 1,803 minority students from low-income homes was classified into 3 groups on the basis of grades, test scores, and persistence from grade 8 through Grade 12; the classifications were academically successfully school completers ("resilient" students), school completers with poorer academic performance (nonresilient completers), and noncompleters (dropouts). Groups were compared in terms of psychological characteristics and measures of "school engagement." Large, significant differences were found among groups on engagement behaviors, even after background and psychological characteristics were controlled statistically. The findings support the hypothesis that student engagement is an important component of academic resilience. Furthermore, they provide information for designing interventions to improve the educational prognoses of students at risk.

1,358 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20241
2023556
20221,108
20211,387
20201,286
20191,276