Student work during secondary education, educational achievement, and later employment: a dynamic approach

Author(s):  
By Stijn Baert ◽  
Brecht Neyt ◽  
Eddy Omey ◽  
Dieter Verhaest
Author(s):  
Andrey Andreev ◽  
Natalia Tikhonskaya

The article considers the problem of involving students in innovative activities in the process of teaching physics. The methodical features of conducting city competition of creative works (the author's form of extracurricular activities of students in teaching physics) on improvement of the physical demonstration experiment are presented and considered. The purpose and conditions of the competition, the directions in which the evaluation of student works is carried out, the criteria for evaluation of works are described. The principal features of this physical and technical creative competition, in contrast to others, are that all interested students of grades 7-11 can become participants, regardless of the level of academic success; Criteria for evaluating student work are, first of all, the degree of development of student creativity (from the ability to only materialize the teacher's idea to the independent formulation of the idea, determining the conditions of the problem and its solution), novelty and degree of scientificity. In addition, it is stated that a special educational competition is the educational environment, which is characterized by humanity and tolerance, while minimizing opportunities for competition between participants from the same class or school. It is due to the observance of these positions that the city competition of creative works demonstrates its high rating among such events and proves its effectiveness from the standpoint of developing students' creative ability during 2010-2020. It is substantiated that the competition proposed and introduced in the educational process of physics in Zaporizhzhia not only plays an important role in activating students’ creative activity in teaching physics, but also is an effective organizational form of professional training of students majoring in 014 Secondary education 014.08 Secondary education (Physics) at Zaporizhia National University. Students, who are future teachers of physics, take an active part in this mass event both as student leaders (consultants) and as organizers of the competition.


2013 ◽  
pp. 112-129
Author(s):  
E. Savitskaya ◽  
D. Chertykovtseva

The paper estimates the relationship between public expenditure on secondary education and its quality. The investigation is based on regression analysis of cross-nationally comparable funding data and student performance metrics — PISA and TIMSS. The authors conclude that the growth of teachers’ salaries measured in absolute terms and public education expenditure per student have positive influence on educational achievement, though it is rather small. However, regression analysis has not revealed dependence of students’ performance on other financial indicators — public expenditure on secondary education as a percentage of GDP, public expenditure on secondary education as a percentage of total government expenditure and teachers’ salaries measured relative to average wages in the country.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 181-196
Author(s):  
Sharad Chandra Simkhada

Why Brahman/Chhetri students are high achievers in secondary education in Nepal is rarely analyzed. For their educational success, people attribute to their cultural capital. A qualitative method was employed to assess whether the assumption is valid or not. In the course of assessment, researcher generated information from secondary and primary sources and analyzed them. The findings show that the Brahman/Chhetris are rich in cultural capital, which is instrumental for their better performance in formal education. However, empirical evidence has led the researcher that the argument is valid partly. Due to globalization combined with other factors such as class, education, and growing cultural exchange, the influence of cultural capital to their educational achievement has been found weak. Therefore, the stereotypical generalization is not necessarily true at present, among the research participants.


Author(s):  
Tirza F K van der Straaten ◽  
Jeroen J Briaire ◽  
Evelien Dirks ◽  
Wim Soede ◽  
Carolien Rieffe ◽  
...  

Abstract Children with hearing loss (HL) are at risk for a lower educational achievement. This longitudinal study compared the school career of a nationwide Dutch cohort with and without HL based on descriptive data of the governmental authority Statistics Netherlands. From 2008 to 2018, 3,367,129 children, of whom 1,193 used cochlear implants (CIs) and 8,874 used hearing aids (HAs), were attending primary and/or secondary education. Sixty-one percent of children with HL attended mainstream and 31% special primary education. Compared to mainstreamed pupils without HL, mainstreamed pupils with HL achieved lower levels for language and mathematics in primary education but eventually attended comparable types of secondary education. Children with HL attending special primary education attained lower types of secondary education compared to mainstreamed peers with and without HL. These findings suggest that future educational (and as a result professional) attainment of a child with HL depends on the type of primary educational setting.


1996 ◽  
Vol 82 (3) ◽  
pp. 817-818 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Oosterveld ◽  
Johan Hoogstraten

In this study was compared the relative predictive power of an achievement test and a self-report questionnaire for cognitive abilities in the context of prediction of educational achievement. With average grades, the multiple correlation of scores on both tests administered to a sample of 232 pupils in secondary education showed only marginal differences.


1972 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 79-79
Author(s):  
JAMES BIERI
Keyword(s):  

PsycCRITIQUES ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 51 (22) ◽  
Author(s):  
Francine Conway ◽  
Nina Finkel
Keyword(s):  

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