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Showing 1 to 15 of 19 results Save | Export
Elizabeth Garis – Communique, 2024
If students at your school are not attending classes or coming to school at all, they may be engaging in school refusal. Understanding what school refusal is, as well as the functions behind it, is key to evaluation and a collaborative school-home approach to intervention.
Descriptors: Attendance, Attendance Patterns, Student Behavior, School Phobia
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John W. Maag; Edward J. Daly III – Beyond Behavior, 2024
Differential negative reinforcement of alternative behavior is a technique in which students can escape a portion of a task they perceive to be unpleasant by reaching a predetermined criterion. In this article, we define the negative reinforcement trap and review research on differential negative reinforcement of alternative behavior. We then…
Descriptors: Student Motivation, Student Behavior, Productivity, Accuracy
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Stephen Bok; James Shum; Maria Lee – Journal of Marketing Education, 2024
Time management is essential for strong strategic business planning and marketing campaigns. Having sufficient time to complete essential planning is important, as is the punctuality of meeting deadlines. Temporal Motivation Theory (TMT) explains the relationship between deciding to perform a task and expected incentives, consequences, and the…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Business Administration Education, Electronic Learning, Time Management
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Iris Meinderts; Jenny Veldman; Colette Van Laar – Social Psychology of Education: An International Journal, 2024
Having a clear and stable sense of how one performs in a field is a key contributor to goal pursuit. Performance feedback is often considered a crucial resource for developing this clear and stable self-knowledge but may be less optimally integrated when feedback is considered inaccurate or dishonest. The current paper investigates how such…
Descriptors: Researchers, Student Research, College Students, Goal Orientation
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Boskovic, Irena – Educational Psychology, 2020
The educational system today often relies on incentives in order to motivate students. However, it might also encourage students to engage in deceptive behaviour (e.g. malingering) in order to reach certain benefits. Hereby, we investigated whether students would intentionally fabricate symptoms (i.e. malinger) when confronted with a…
Descriptors: Student Motivation, Student Behavior, Deception, Physical Health
Gardiner, Steve – Phi Delta Kappan, 2014
While it may seem almost intuitive that offering rewards to students will yield better results, that is not how it works; the result often is the opposite. The paradox of rewards is that their effect often has a limited impact on students, who then will lose curiosity; it also makes them feel as if they are being controlled--a negative motivating…
Descriptors: Student Motivation, Motivation Techniques, Rewards, Incentives
Leith, G. O. M.; Davis, T. N. – Educ Res, 1969
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Branching, Learning Motivation, Negative Reinforcement
Martin, Reed; Lauridsen, David – 1975
This book contains a widely used method for structuring learning in a positive environment. The material is presented in a workshop format. Each unit should be read and worked on for one week; the teachers should then meet to exchange ideas. Unit 1 discusses behavior, and informs the reader that if he/she wants to influence a change in behavior,…
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Behavior Patterns, Classroom Environment, Discipline
Goodhue, Thomas W. – Momentum, 1985
Argues that feelings of shame about reading failures may give students an aversion to reading. Suggests that teachers make first reading experiences as successful as possible to help students become confident, eager readers. Stresses ways to minimize the feelings of shame of culturally different students. (CBC)
Descriptors: Cultural Differences, Elementary School Students, Minority Groups, Negative Reinforcement
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Kim, Yanghee; Baylor, A. L.; Shen, E. – Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 2007
The potential of emotional interaction between human and computer has recently interested researchers in human-computer interaction. The instructional impact of this interaction in learning environments has not been established, however. This study examined the impact of emotion and gender of a pedagogical agent as a learning companion (PAL) on…
Descriptors: Interaction, Self Efficacy, Computer Literacy, Program Effectiveness
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Lee, Dong Yul; And Others – Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1979
Counselor-trainees received positive or negative feedback about their performance in a client interview. The trainees' internal-external locus of control orientation had no significant influence on their reaction, but the type of feedback did. "Success" feedback increased trainees' expectancy, willingness to improve, and receptivity to…
Descriptors: Counselor Training, Expectation, Feedback, Higher Education
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Boyer, Wanda – Journal of Research in Childhood Education, 2006
This research examines 480 current event-explanation units using the CAVE technique (Schulman, Castellon, & Seligman, 1989) to note the relationship between positive and negative explanatory style and achievement of prospective early childhood and upper elementary female teachers. This study found a significant positive relationship between…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Elementary School Teachers, Females, Teaching Methods
Schunk, Dale H. – 1980
In the social learning perspective the anticipation of rewarding consequences serves as one source of motivation. A second results from the perception of a negative discrepancy between present capabilities and desired performance. To foster motlvation it is necessary that persons accurately appraise their capabilities. Techniques for fostering…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Independent Study, Individual Differences, Low Achievement
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Docan, Tony N. – Journal of Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2006
This study examined how particular grading systems motivate students. Since competency-based grading and point systems are most prevalent (Hendrickson and Gable, 1999), the current study is modeled around these systems. The grading systems used for this study were divided into two categories and defined as those students who earned their grades…
Descriptors: Familiarity, Student Motivation, Grading, Rewards
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Matthews, Thomas J. – Language Learning Journal, 1996
Reviews several teaching methodologies in terms of negative affect. Findings indicate that in those situations where students have little incentive to do well or admit that they wish to do poorly, increased negative affect can motivate them to function at a level of operational tension and achieve optimum learning and performance. (36 references)…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Anxiety, Class Activities, College Students
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