Interpreting Differences of Self-Efficacy of Gifted or Talented Students with Grouping Practices in Middle School Mathematics

<p> The purpose of this study was to determine if there was a significant difference in total scores on the <i>Mathematical Self-Efficacy Scale, </i> the mathematics task self-efficacy portion of the scale, and the math-related school subjects self-efficacy portion of the scale for...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Waits, Amanda
Language:EN
Published: East Tennessee State University 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10291321
id ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-10291321
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-102913212016-12-01T15:56:53Z Interpreting Differences of Self-Efficacy of Gifted or Talented Students with Grouping Practices in Middle School Mathematics Waits, Amanda Mathematics education|Gifted education|Education <p> The purpose of this study was to determine if there was a significant difference in total scores on the <i>Mathematical Self-Efficacy Scale, </i> the mathematics task self-efficacy portion of the scale, and the math-related school subjects self-efficacy portion of the scale for middle school students between students assigned to a homogeneously grouped accelerated math class and students assigned to a heterogeneously grouped math class. </p><p> The instrument used to gather information for thus study on student self-efficacy was the <i>Mathematics Self-Efficacy Scale</i> (MSES). The MSES measures 2 domains of mathematics-related behaviors and capabilities. The <i> Mathematics Task Self-Efficacy</i> scale is designed to measure the level of confidence the student would have when successfully completing the given task. The <i>Math-Related School Subjects Self-Efficacy</i> scale is designed to measure the level of confidence the student would have when successfully completing a college level course with a final grade of an A or B. The 2 parts of the MSES may be individually scored or holistically scored to obtain a total score representing overall mathematical self-efficacy.</p><p> Descriptive and inferential statistics were used to analyze the data for the 9 research questions. Participants in the study were randomly assigned to the heterogeneous or homogeneous groups by their schools and were not controlled by the researcher. Students within the groups were chosen as participants based on their math ability and scores on the seventh grade TCAP test. At the time of the survey these students attended either a K-8 elementary school or a middle school in Northeast Tennessee. The population consisted of 357 gifted or talented eighth grade math students in 6 school districts in Northeast Tennessee.</p><p> The results of this study does not support or discourage the practice of acceleration by retaining 7 of the 9 null hypotheses that there are no significant difference in self-efficacy scores between homogeneous grouped eighth grade math students who were placed in accelerated coursework by taking Algebra I and those students who were heterogeneously grouped in a regular eighth grade math class.</p> East Tennessee State University 2016-11-30 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10291321 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Mathematics education|Gifted education|Education
spellingShingle Mathematics education|Gifted education|Education
Waits, Amanda
Interpreting Differences of Self-Efficacy of Gifted or Talented Students with Grouping Practices in Middle School Mathematics
description <p> The purpose of this study was to determine if there was a significant difference in total scores on the <i>Mathematical Self-Efficacy Scale, </i> the mathematics task self-efficacy portion of the scale, and the math-related school subjects self-efficacy portion of the scale for middle school students between students assigned to a homogeneously grouped accelerated math class and students assigned to a heterogeneously grouped math class. </p><p> The instrument used to gather information for thus study on student self-efficacy was the <i>Mathematics Self-Efficacy Scale</i> (MSES). The MSES measures 2 domains of mathematics-related behaviors and capabilities. The <i> Mathematics Task Self-Efficacy</i> scale is designed to measure the level of confidence the student would have when successfully completing the given task. The <i>Math-Related School Subjects Self-Efficacy</i> scale is designed to measure the level of confidence the student would have when successfully completing a college level course with a final grade of an A or B. The 2 parts of the MSES may be individually scored or holistically scored to obtain a total score representing overall mathematical self-efficacy.</p><p> Descriptive and inferential statistics were used to analyze the data for the 9 research questions. Participants in the study were randomly assigned to the heterogeneous or homogeneous groups by their schools and were not controlled by the researcher. Students within the groups were chosen as participants based on their math ability and scores on the seventh grade TCAP test. At the time of the survey these students attended either a K-8 elementary school or a middle school in Northeast Tennessee. The population consisted of 357 gifted or talented eighth grade math students in 6 school districts in Northeast Tennessee.</p><p> The results of this study does not support or discourage the practice of acceleration by retaining 7 of the 9 null hypotheses that there are no significant difference in self-efficacy scores between homogeneous grouped eighth grade math students who were placed in accelerated coursework by taking Algebra I and those students who were heterogeneously grouped in a regular eighth grade math class.</p>
author Waits, Amanda
author_facet Waits, Amanda
author_sort Waits, Amanda
title Interpreting Differences of Self-Efficacy of Gifted or Talented Students with Grouping Practices in Middle School Mathematics
title_short Interpreting Differences of Self-Efficacy of Gifted or Talented Students with Grouping Practices in Middle School Mathematics
title_full Interpreting Differences of Self-Efficacy of Gifted or Talented Students with Grouping Practices in Middle School Mathematics
title_fullStr Interpreting Differences of Self-Efficacy of Gifted or Talented Students with Grouping Practices in Middle School Mathematics
title_full_unstemmed Interpreting Differences of Self-Efficacy of Gifted or Talented Students with Grouping Practices in Middle School Mathematics
title_sort interpreting differences of self-efficacy of gifted or talented students with grouping practices in middle school mathematics
publisher East Tennessee State University
publishDate 2016
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10291321
work_keys_str_mv AT waitsamanda interpretingdifferencesofselfefficacyofgiftedortalentedstudentswithgroupingpracticesinmiddleschoolmathematics
_version_ 1718398266423377920