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- Title
- A PARENT INVOLVEMENT PROGRAM INCLUDING COMMUNICATION TO PARENTS INTEGRATED WITH A PARENT EDUCATION PROGRAM AND ITS EFFECT ON ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT, CLASSROOM CONDUCT, STUDY HABITS AND ATTITUDES.
- Creator
- TENNIES, ROBERT HUNTER, Florida Atlantic University
- Abstract/Description
-
The purpose of this study was to determine if a parent involvement program entitled Parent Communication Plus Program (PCPP) would significantly influence student academic achievement (GPA and achievement scores), conduct, and study habits and attitudes. The design of the fourteen week study was a Randomized Control Group Pretest Posttest Design. The experiment site was Boca Raton Christian School, a college preparatory private school with an enrollment of 475 students in grades K-12. Ninety...
Show moreThe purpose of this study was to determine if a parent involvement program entitled Parent Communication Plus Program (PCPP) would significantly influence student academic achievement (GPA and achievement scores), conduct, and study habits and attitudes. The design of the fourteen week study was a Randomized Control Group Pretest Posttest Design. The experiment site was Boca Raton Christian School, a college preparatory private school with an enrollment of 475 students in grades K-12. Ninety students, selected from the population in grades 6-12 who fell in the lower fortieth percentile based on grade point average (GPA), were randomly assigned to three groups of thirty each. Each study group consisted of students and their parents. Two of the three study groups received the PCPP treatment with the third group serving as the control. The unique feature of the PCPP treatment was that in addition to reporting the students' recent progress, the treatment included a parent education component. Group A received communication twice a week in the form of a phone call and a mailed progress report. Group B received a call one week and a mailed report the next. Each phone call was structured to cover four essential points: parent curriculum designed to help parents be more effective in helping their youngster in school, rapport building, progress reporting, and task assignment. Pretest and posttest data were collected on the four major dependent variables. Study instruments included the California Achievement Test, the Survey of Study Habits and Attitudes, and the students' report cards for conduct and GPA values. Analysis of the data included a one-way analysis of variance, a posteriori contrasts, and analysis of covariance with a multiple classification analysis. At the end of the study, completion of a feedback questionnaire was requested from parents who received a PCPP treatment. The conclusion supported the hypothesis that the PCPP variable had a significant effect on GPA. Conduct, achievement scores, and study habits and attitudes were not significantly affected.
Show less - Date Issued
- 1982
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/11818
- Subject Headings
- Home and school--Florida, Parent-teacher relationships, Students--Rating of
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- The relationship of grade-level, socioeconomic status and gender to selected student variables.
- Creator
- Miller, Judith Christy., Florida Atlantic University, Weppner, Daniel B.
- Abstract/Description
-
Students from Indian River Academy and Palm Vista Christian Schools were compared to determine what relationships and interactions existed among attitudes, values, personality traits, critical thinking skills, interests, and demographic characteristics such as grade level, socioeconomic status, and gender. Results of Study of Values, Junior/Senior High School Personality Questionnaire, Kuder General Interest Survey-E, Survey of Study Habits and Attitudes, and the Critical Thinking Appraisal...
Show moreStudents from Indian River Academy and Palm Vista Christian Schools were compared to determine what relationships and interactions existed among attitudes, values, personality traits, critical thinking skills, interests, and demographic characteristics such as grade level, socioeconomic status, and gender. Results of Study of Values, Junior/Senior High School Personality Questionnaire, Kuder General Interest Survey-E, Survey of Study Habits and Attitudes, and the Critical Thinking Appraisal were utilized to assess a sample of two hundred fourteen (214) pupils attending seventh through twelfth grades at Indian River Academy along with a sample of the one hundred twenty-five (125) students enrolled in seventh through twelfth grades at Palm Vista Christian School. A 2 x 2 x 2 ANOVA was employed to examine the differences between groups by age, socioeconomic status, and gender on attitudes, values, personality traits, interests, and critical thinking skills. No significant interaction occurred among socioeconomic status, grade level, and gender in values, attitudes, personality traits, interests, or critical thinking skills. None of the dependent variables proved to be significant when socioeconomic status was considered to be the main effect. Only the Critical Thinking Appraisal and selected subtests from the Survey of Study Habits and Attitudes revealed scores that were significantly different based upon grade level. Differences in study skills and attitudes were clearly evident between middle school and senior high school students with female middle school students dramatically outscoring the male middle school students and middle school students, in general scoring significantly higher than senior high students. Differences in critical thinking skills were also evident between middle school and senior high school students with senior high males and females outscoring those students in middle school classes. Univariate F tests indicated a highly significant difference exists between male and female responses with respect to affective characteristics. Further research should be performed to assess behavioral character and other affective characteristics to identify instructional implications of learner differences.
Show less - Date Issued
- 1990
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/12265
- Subject Headings
- Academic achievement, Prediction of scholastic success, Students--Rating of, Youth--United States--Social conditions
- Format
- Document (PDF)