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Farida Agus Setiawati; Tria Widyastuti; Kartika Nur Fathiyah; Tiara Shafa Nabila – European Journal of Psychology and Educational Research, 2024
Data obtained through questionnaires sometimes respond to the items presented by social norms, so sometimes they do not suit themselves. High social desirability (SD) in non-cognitive measurements will cause item bias. Several ways are used to reduce item bias, including freeing respondents from not writing their names or being anonymous,…
Descriptors: Social Desirability, Test Bias, Self Concept, Undergraduate Students
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Piotr Jabkowski; Aneta Piekut – Field Methods, 2024
This study analyzes the consequences of item nonresponse to the question about a household's total net income in the European Social Survey (2008-2018). We recognize two mechanisms in avoiding answering the income question: task complexity and question sensitivity, and apply multilevel logistic regressions to predict the probability of refusals or…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Family Income, Surveys, Social Characteristics
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S. Wessels; E. Swart – International Journal of School & Educational Psychology, 2024
School psychologists often face complex ethical and legal issues in their work, which become more challenging as the needs of students and school systems evolve. When faced with ethical dilemmas, it can be difficult for school psychologists to determine the best course of action, particularly when there is no clear solution. This study explored…
Descriptors: School Psychologists, Ethics, Foreign Countries, Decision Making
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Godfrey-Faussett, Thomas – Education Sciences, 2022
Research in the UK is increasingly regulated by ethics review committees (RECs) which require researchers to seek ethics approval before commencing research. These RECs routinely expect researchers to anonymise data as part of standard ethical research practice. However, the anonymisation of data may sit in tension with participatory approaches to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Participatory Research, Ethics, Decision Making
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Ramlah Mailok; Haslina Hassan; Che Soh Said; Mashitoh Hashim – International Journal on Social and Education Sciences, 2023
Over recent years, the sharing of personal data among students is uncontrolled, especially on the social media networks, resulting in widespread data intrusions that compromise their privacy and confidentiality. Against this backdrop, this study was conducted to identify the level of knowledge of personal data protection among students. This…
Descriptors: Information Security, Knowledge Level, Foreign Countries, Privacy
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Frank Stinar; Zihan Xiong; Nigel Bosch – Journal of Educational Data Mining, 2024
Educational data mining has allowed for large improvements in educational outcomes and understanding of educational processes. However, there remains a constant tension between educational data mining advances and protecting student privacy while using educational datasets. Publicly available datasets have facilitated numerous research projects…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Secondary School Students, Data Collection
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Su, Wei – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2023
Anonymous peer feedback has long been used as a common activity in higher education, yet few studies have systematically tracked students' perceived comfort levels over time, and even fewer have compared givers' and receivers' comfort under this intervention. To address this gap, the present study tracked 40 Chinese university students over eight…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Peer Relationship, Feedback (Response)
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Mark G. Harrison; Jacky King-Fai Cheung; Chloe Ka Yi Tam; Anna Susanne Cheng; Susanna Siu-Sze Yeung – Pastoral Care in Education, 2024
School counselling is a well-established means of supporting the mental health of children. Counsellors are most effective when they collaborate with parents, so it is important that parents have a good understanding of and access to school counselling services. Despite this, little is known about parents' perceptions of counselling in Hong Kong…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Parents, School Counseling, Parent Attitudes
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Ellersgaard, Christoph Houman; Ditlevsen, Kia; Larsen, Anton Grau – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2022
This article discusses anonymizing elite interviewees. Based on our experiences with interviewing professional elites and ultra-elites in different research projects, we describe how the types of conflicts involving analysis and publication change when interviewees are not promised anonymity. We discuss how contextualizing the elite positions of…
Descriptors: Interviews, Confidentiality, Social Status, Advantaged
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Sensoy, Gözde; Ikiz, Fatma Ebru – Journal of Psychologists and Counsellors in Schools, 2023
School counsellors often encounter ethically challenging situations due to contradictory values and roles. This qualitative research aimed to define school counsellors' ethical dilemmas and their responses to such situations. Twenty-seven school counsellors in Turkey were asked to respond to 13 vignettes with ethical dilemmas. The most frequent…
Descriptors: School Counselors, Ethics, Foreign Countries, Confidentiality
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Akuffo, Aboabea Gertrude – Journal of Academic Ethics, 2023
Meeting appropriate ethical standards for research involving human participants, mean ensuring confidentiality. It is assumed that the research participant will accept the safeguarding protocols necessary to ensure confidentiality. This assumption however oversimplifies the variation of motivations that goes into participants' decisions to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Research, Confidentiality, Field Experience Programs
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Abukari Kwame; Pammla M. Petrucka – Journal of Academic Ethics, 2024
Gaining ethical approval for qualitative health research and implementing all the planned research processes in a proposed study are not straightforward endeavours. The situation becomes more complex when qualitative research is conducted in a cross-national healthcare and academic context. Also, it is even exhausting when the study is…
Descriptors: Ethics, Doctoral Students, Student Research, Informed Consent
Valdes, Edgar – ProQuest LLC, 2022
The aim of this study is to understand the Tor browser and its multiple applications as related to cybersecurity. The study also argues that most internet users are not aware of the danger they face when navigating the dark web. This research explores top executives' and specialized employees' awareness and understating of the hidden areas of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Computer Security, Internet, Crime
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Camadan, Fatih; Topsakal, Cem; Sadikoglu, Inci – Journal of Psychologists and Counsellors in Schools, 2021
Ethical dilemmas are concerning for school counsellors in Turkey. This article presents findings of a qualitative study exploring the views and suggestions of 16 school counsellors in Rize, Turkey. Content analysis was performed on the data obtained from interviews with the participants. The results of the study showed that the school counsellors…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ethics, School Counseling, School Counselors
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Elif Çimsir; Ramazan Akdogan; Alper Akbayrak – Psychology in the Schools, 2024
Despite the surging anonymous social media use among adolescents living in non-Western countries, such as Turkey, existing studies have been conducted in a Western context and do not provide a holistic understanding of adolescents' lived experiences of anonymous social networking site (SNS) interactions. As a result, Turkish adolescents aged 12-15…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Adolescents, Social Media, Internet
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