Children’s Perceptions of Tests: A Content Analysis

Anxiety that students experience during test taking negatively influences their academic achievement. Understanding how students perceive tests and how they feel during test taking could help in taking effective preventive measures. Hence, the current study focused on assessing children’s...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gokce Bulgan*
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: RU Publications 2018-04-01
Series:European Journal of Educational Research
Subjects:
Online Access: http://eu-jer.com/EU-JER_7_2_159_Bulgan.pdf
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spelling doaj-bafbc3c5a24b4a718489b1edbcdb99c82020-11-24T21:35:57ZengRU PublicationsEuropean Journal of Educational Research 2165-87142165-87142018-04-017215916710.12973/eu-jer.7.2.15912132Children’s Perceptions of Tests: A Content AnalysisGokce Bulgan*0 MEF University Anxiety that students experience during test taking negatively influences their academic achievement. Understanding how students perceive tests and how they feel during test taking could help in taking effective preventive measures. Hence, the current study focused on assessing children’s perceptions of tests using content analysis. The sample consisted of 1143 participants (566 females and 570 males) attending 3rd (n = 320), 4th (n = 420), 5th (n = 197), and 6th (n = 206) grade classes in three public schools in Istanbul, Turkey. The findings indicated that three main domains emerged from the data. The domains and the categories under each domain were as follows: evaluation (grades, success vs. failure, learning and development, and intelligence), emotions (excitement, fear and anxiety, happiness, curiosity, mixed feelings, and disappointment), and experiential process (answering questions, studying, difficulty, thinking, having fun, cheating vs. honesty, and silence). Understanding students’ experiences with testing early on in their education will give researchers and practitioners the chance to plan effective applications for treatment and prevention, which would influence students’ future achievement and experiences. The study findings could also help teachers and school counselors plan more effective teaching and counseling programs that take into account students’ anxiety levels during tests. http://eu-jer.com/EU-JER_7_2_159_Bulgan.pdf Testing test anxiety children school educational psychology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gokce Bulgan*
spellingShingle Gokce Bulgan*
Children’s Perceptions of Tests: A Content Analysis
European Journal of Educational Research
Testing
 test anxiety
 children
 school
 educational psychology
author_facet Gokce Bulgan*
author_sort Gokce Bulgan*
title Children’s Perceptions of Tests: A Content Analysis
title_short Children’s Perceptions of Tests: A Content Analysis
title_full Children’s Perceptions of Tests: A Content Analysis
title_fullStr Children’s Perceptions of Tests: A Content Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Children’s Perceptions of Tests: A Content Analysis
title_sort children’s perceptions of tests: a content analysis
publisher RU Publications
series European Journal of Educational Research
issn 2165-8714
2165-8714
publishDate 2018-04-01
description Anxiety that students experience during test taking negatively influences their academic achievement. Understanding how students perceive tests and how they feel during test taking could help in taking effective preventive measures. Hence, the current study focused on assessing children’s perceptions of tests using content analysis. The sample consisted of 1143 participants (566 females and 570 males) attending 3rd (n = 320), 4th (n = 420), 5th (n = 197), and 6th (n = 206) grade classes in three public schools in Istanbul, Turkey. The findings indicated that three main domains emerged from the data. The domains and the categories under each domain were as follows: evaluation (grades, success vs. failure, learning and development, and intelligence), emotions (excitement, fear and anxiety, happiness, curiosity, mixed feelings, and disappointment), and experiential process (answering questions, studying, difficulty, thinking, having fun, cheating vs. honesty, and silence). Understanding students’ experiences with testing early on in their education will give researchers and practitioners the chance to plan effective applications for treatment and prevention, which would influence students’ future achievement and experiences. The study findings could also help teachers and school counselors plan more effective teaching and counseling programs that take into account students’ anxiety levels during tests.
topic Testing
 test anxiety
 children
 school
 educational psychology
url http://eu-jer.com/EU-JER_7_2_159_Bulgan.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT gokcebulgan childrensperceptionsoftestsacontentanalysis
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