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Peer reviewedSmith, Sheila M. – Information Technology, Learning, and Performance Journal, 2002
Path analysis of the results of an information technology proficiency exam, computer self-efficacy score, and technology outcome expectation scale for 193 students suggested that academic performance is influenced by computer self-efficacy via the establishment of an academic grade goal. The past performance variable failed to predict academic…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Expectation, Higher Education, Information Technology
Peer reviewedKim, Dongbin – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2002
Analyzed the benefits that high school students and their parents expect from higher education in Korea. The majority of students expected a "diverse college experience," while the majority of parents expected "protection from socioeconomic disadvantages from not having higher education." Students' academic ability was an…
Descriptors: College Attendance, Educational Benefits, Expectation, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedGoodwin, John; O'Connor, Henrietta – Education + Training, 2003
Data from 1960s British research on school-to-work transition (n=882) revealed young people's reflections on education, their expectations of employment, and perceptions of a good job. Data show some similarities with the concerns of today's youth. Using historical data such as these allows retesting or reexamination of debates. (Contains 32…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Education Work Relationship, Employment Experience, Expectation
Peer reviewedSoffian, Judy – Perspectives: The New York Journal of Adult Learning, 2003
Examines the process of teaching critical thinking in an adult basic education classroom. Introduces an alternative learning process that challenges the traditional model of unquestioning, uncritical acceptance of teacher and text and enables students to become more active and equal participants in learning. (Author/JOW)
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Cognitive Processes, Critical Thinking, Teacher Expectations of Students
Peer reviewedChambers, Brad A.; Schmitt, Neal – Journal of Personnel Evaluation in Education, 2002
Studied issues of leniency in ratings of teachers provided by their students. Data from 224 classes suggest that individuals may form a mental comparison between how they expect to be graded in a given class with how they have been rated, or expected to be rated, in other classes. This comparison then leaves the individual satisfied or…
Descriptors: College Faculty, College Students, Expectation, Higher Education
Peer reviewedSchoenfelder, Thomas E.; Hantula, Donald A. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2003
Seniors (n=20) assessed two job offers with differences in domain (salary/tasks), delay (career-long earnings), and magnitude (initial salary offer). Contrary to discounted utility theory, choices reflected nonconstant discount rates for future salary/tasks (delay effect), lower discount rates for salary/preferred tasks (magnitude effect), and a…
Descriptors: Career Choice, College Students, Decision Making, Delay of Gratification
Peer reviewedHarris, Pauline; Trezise, Jillian; Winser, W. N. – Research in the Teaching of English, 2002
Reports on a three-year inquiry into intertextuality in early grade classrooms. Identifies intertextual conflicts during teacher-class interactions where teachers are reading texts and guiding children to read. Concludes the greater power of mandated syllabi over teachers and the greater power of teachers over children make intertextuality a…
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Elementary Education, Reading Instruction, Teacher Expectations of Students
Wallace, Richard C. – School Administrator, 1990
Although no school leader likes media coverage of sensitive issues, handling them forthrightly and candidly benefits everyone. The three major facets of an effective media campaign include realistic expectations of the media, personalizing media relations, and controlling both access and message. (MLH)
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Elementary Secondary Education, Expectation, Journalism
Peer reviewedSternberg, Robert J.; And Others – Educational Leadership, 1990
Teachers have many expectations for students that are never explicitly verbalized. The Yale Practical Intelligence for School curriculum is based on three kinds of tacit knowledge necessary for adapting to any environment: managing oneself, managing tasks, and working with others. Includes 16 references. (MLH)
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Elementary Secondary Education, Models, Self Help Programs
Peer reviewedMenaghan, Elizabeth G. – Journal of Family Issues, 1989
Used data from 945 adults to distinguish 6 categories of parental status. Examined extent to which variations in normative expectedness of parental experiences explained differences in well-being. Findings suggest that parental situation effects vary by gender and economic pressures. Childlessness past age 30 had greater negative impact for women;…
Descriptors: Childlessness, Comparative Analysis, Economic Status, Expectation
Peer reviewedProteau, Luc; And Others – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 1989
When the stimulus to be intercepted traveled at slow or moderate speeds, subjects' (N=18) expectancies did not modify choice reaction time (CRT) and movement time. However, when the stimulus traveled at fast speed, CRT was reduced as a function of event probability, at the cost of more response initiation errors. (IAH)
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Athletics, Decision Making, Expectation
Peer reviewedLiptak, John J. – Journal of Employment Counseling, 1989
Discusses expectations held by client beginning a job search. Describes Ellis's Rational-Emotive Therapy, designed to teach clients to think rationally prior to the job search. Assesses various irrational beliefs surrounding the job search. Concludes that clients can be taught to combat irrational expectations. (Author/BHK)
Descriptors: Adults, Career Counseling, Employment, Expectation
Peer reviewedYoung, I. Phillip; And Others – Educational Administration Quarterly, 1990
Student recruitment for doctoral programs in educational administration is an important topic that has escaped experimental study. In a recent study, reactions of female and male teachers, as potential administrator candidates, were more positive when recruitment brochures stressed program requirements and expectations, rather than the…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Educational Administration, Expectation, Higher Education
Peer reviewedCooper, Harris – Educational Leadership, 1989
Homework probably involves the complex interaction of more influences than any other instructional device. Because of differing home environments, homework fails as the great equalizer. Homework's value is also influenced by student characteristics, subject matter, and especially grade level. Guidelines and recommendations are provided. Includes…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Family Environment, Guidelines, Homework
Peer reviewedPerry, David G.; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1989
Boys expected less guilt and less parental disapproval for aggression than did girls. When provoked, children expected more tangible rewards, less guilt, and less parental disapproval than when not provoked. (RH)
Descriptors: Aggression, Elementary School Students, Emotional Response, Expectation


