Examining epistemological beliefs, academic self-efficacy, and calibration of comprehension

This study explored the relationship of epistemological beliefs, academic self-efficacy, and passage comprehension. Seventy-five community college students were asked to complete a series of in-class questionnaires, these students were asked to be as honest as possible to enhance future teaching sty...

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Main Author: Price, Tracy Lynn
Other Authors: Schommer-Aikins, Marlene
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10057/675
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spelling ndltd-WICHITA-oai-soar.wichita.edu-10057-6752013-04-19T20:59:48ZExamining epistemological beliefs, academic self-efficacy, and calibration of comprehensionPrice, Tracy LynnElectronic dissertationsThis study explored the relationship of epistemological beliefs, academic self-efficacy, and passage comprehension. Seventy-five community college students were asked to complete a series of in-class questionnaires, these students were asked to be as honest as possible to enhance future teaching styles. The final sample consisted of fifty three students. Nothing of statically significance was found. Student participation and cooperation are in question, as well as the psychometricity of the measures themselves. Thus, the results are inconclusive and do not give support for the hypotheses. It is advised for future research that the sample size be enlarged, a longer reading passage be selected and a other measures be utilized.Thesis (M.Ed.)--Wichita State University, College of Education, Dept. of Counseling, Educational and School Psychology."December 2006."Schommer-Aikins, Marlene2007-08-19T16:57:56Z2007-08-19T16:57:56Z2006-12Thesis233671 bytesapplication/pdft06136http://hdl.handle.net/10057/675en_USCopyright Tracy Lynn Price, 2006. All rights reserved.
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Electronic dissertations
spellingShingle Electronic dissertations
Price, Tracy Lynn
Examining epistemological beliefs, academic self-efficacy, and calibration of comprehension
description This study explored the relationship of epistemological beliefs, academic self-efficacy, and passage comprehension. Seventy-five community college students were asked to complete a series of in-class questionnaires, these students were asked to be as honest as possible to enhance future teaching styles. The final sample consisted of fifty three students. Nothing of statically significance was found. Student participation and cooperation are in question, as well as the psychometricity of the measures themselves. Thus, the results are inconclusive and do not give support for the hypotheses. It is advised for future research that the sample size be enlarged, a longer reading passage be selected and a other measures be utilized. === Thesis (M.Ed.)--Wichita State University, College of Education, Dept. of Counseling, Educational and School Psychology. === "December 2006."
author2 Schommer-Aikins, Marlene
author_facet Schommer-Aikins, Marlene
Price, Tracy Lynn
author Price, Tracy Lynn
author_sort Price, Tracy Lynn
title Examining epistemological beliefs, academic self-efficacy, and calibration of comprehension
title_short Examining epistemological beliefs, academic self-efficacy, and calibration of comprehension
title_full Examining epistemological beliefs, academic self-efficacy, and calibration of comprehension
title_fullStr Examining epistemological beliefs, academic self-efficacy, and calibration of comprehension
title_full_unstemmed Examining epistemological beliefs, academic self-efficacy, and calibration of comprehension
title_sort examining epistemological beliefs, academic self-efficacy, and calibration of comprehension
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/10057/675
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