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Showing 1 to 15 of 24 results Save | Export
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Laura Phillips; Jennifer Shewmaker – Christian Higher Education, 2025
Perceived failure in academic performance can lead to differing outcomes for students. Depending on the coping strategies that they choose, students may improve or worsen their performance. This study examined the relationship between affective components and coping strategies in college students' responses to perceived academic failure and their…
Descriptors: Coping, Academic Failure, Christianity, Religious Colleges
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Stichter, Matt – Journal of Moral Education, 2022
Psychological research has revealed that there is a strong tendency for people to believe that they have a 'true self', and to believe that this true self is inherently morally good. This would seemingly be very good news for virtue theorists, since this may help to promote virtue development. While there are some obvious benefits to people having…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Moral Values, Moral Development, Ethics
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Anikó Fehérvári; Krisztián Széll – Intercultural Education, 2024
The present paper explores approaches to the classification of ethnic identity. In the framework of research on comparative classifications, we analyse the contextual factors that influence classification in Hungarian education. We compared the number of students who self-reported as Roma with the respective number reported by the school heads (as…
Descriptors: Minority Groups, Minority Group Students, Classification, Self Concept
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Gál, Éva; Tóth-Király, István; Szamosközi, István; Orosz, Gábor – Journal of College Student Retention: Research, Theory & Practice, 2023
The present research, by using cross-sectional (Study 1, N = 413) and daily diary methods (Study 2, N = 95) aimed to investigate the way intelligence mindset influences students' self-esteem and emotional experiences when they are confronting academic adversities (i.e., failures and difficulties). Although fixed intelligence mindset showed no…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Self Esteem, Correlation, Emotional Response
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Sarah I. Hofer; Jörg-Henrik Heine; Sahba Besharati; Jason C. Yip; Frank Reinhold; Eddie Brummelman – npj Science of Learning, 2024
Children from lower socioeconomic status (SES) backgrounds tend to have more negative self-perceptions. More negative self-perceptions are often related to lower academic achievement. Linking these findings, we asked: Do children's self-perceptions help explain socioeconomic disparities in academic achievement around the world? We addressed this…
Descriptors: Socioeconomic Status, Self Concept, Academic Achievement, Student Attitudes
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David González-Cutre; Miguel Brugarolas-Navarro; Vicente J. Beltrán-Carrillo; Alejandro Jiménez-Loaisa – Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy, 2025
Background: The need for novelty has been recently proposed as a candidate need within basic psychological needs theory (BPNT). In physical education (PE), research has shown that meeting students' need for novelty is often positively associated with enhanced (and negatively associated with impaired) pupils' well-being. Frustrating students'…
Descriptors: Psychological Needs, Outcomes of Education, Physical Education, Student Needs
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Kingsford, Jess M.; Hawes, David J.; de Rosnay, Marc – Journal of Moral Education, 2022
The question of when moral identity first develops in childhood deserves more considered investigation. In this article, we examine the claim that moral identity first emerges in middle-childhood (8-12 years). An approach is taken here whereby a tendency to attribute moral shame under conditions entailing moral identity failure is considered as…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Self Concept, Age Groups, Moral Development
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Alodat, Ali M.; Abu Ghazal, Moawyah M.; Al-Hamouri, Firas A. – International Journal of Educational Psychology, 2020
This study aimed to examine the relationship between perfectionism and academic self-handicapping strategies among gifted students in Jordan. This study used a mixed-method approach to explore the relationship as well as exploring any other factors associated with using such strategies. The Revised Almost Perfect Scale (APSR) and the Academic…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Personality Traits, Academic Achievement, Foreign Countries
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Leo, Aaron – American Educational Research Journal, 2020
Despite the wide-ranging scholarship on the educational attitudes held by native-born members of the middle and working class, few researchers have examined the impact of class on the attitudes of new arrivals. This article addresses this gap using data gathered through an ethnographic study conducted among 30 newly arrived refugee and immigrant…
Descriptors: Social Class, Immigrants, Refugees, Educational Attitudes
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Shields, David Light; Funk, Christopher D. – Journal of Character Education, 2019
The concept of life purpose has emerged as an important aspect of character with implications for a range of character-related dispositions and behaviors. In this study of intercollegiate athletes from diverse sports (N = 2,374), we examined purpose in relation to 2 aspects of identity (moral and athletic), 2 contesting orientations, empathic…
Descriptors: College Athletics, Athletics, Empathy, Fear
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Putwain, David W. – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2019
According to the self-referent executive processing (S-REF) model, test anxiety develops from interactions between three systems: executive self-regulation processes, self-beliefs, and maladaptive situational interactions. Studies have tended to examine one system at a time, often in conjunction with how test anxiety relates to achievement…
Descriptors: Test Anxiety, High Stakes Tests, Executive Function, Self Control
Kuhn, Lisa; Bradshaw, Sally; Donkin, Angela; Fletcher, Lydia; Liht, Jose; Wheater, Rebecca – National Foundation for Educational Research, 2021
Recent national and international evidence suggests that the wellbeing of young people in the UK has decreased. In 2018, the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) asked participating pupils a number of questions about their wellbeing, and some of the measures can be tracked over time. Based on PISA 2015 and 2018, this report…
Descriptors: Well Being, Correlation, Teacher Student Relationship, Parent Child Relationship
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Ariani, Dorothea Wahyu – Cogent Education, 2022
During this COVID-19 pandemic, the community, especially students, experienced anxiety due to the uncertainty that occurred. To cover it up, self-handicapping is the most common option. People in the eastern culture, such as Indonesia, prefer to achieve social achievement (SAch) goals than academic achievement (AAch) goals in motivation. This…
Descriptors: Goal Orientation, COVID-19, Pandemics, Anxiety
Kuhn, Lisa; Bradshaw, Sally; Donkin, Angela; Fletcher, Lydia; Liht, Jose; Wheater, Rebecca – UK Department for Education, 2021
Recent national and international evidence suggests that the wellbeing of young people in the UK has decreased. The Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) 2018 national reports for England, Wales and Northern Ireland (Sizmur et al., 2019a; Sizmur et al., 2019b; Sizmur et al., 2019c) identified cause for concern for 15-year-old…
Descriptors: Well Being, Achievement Tests, Foreign Countries, International Assessment
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Lohbeck, Annette; Grube, Dietmar; Moschner, Barbara – International Journal of Early Years Education, 2017
A great deal of research shows that the way in which children attribute causes to their successes and failures in school has implications for the development of their academic self-concept (ASC). The most common attributions are ability, effort, task difficulty, and luck. The present study asked 68 elementary school children aged seven to eight…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Self Concept, Academic Achievement, Academic Failure
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