Department Erziehungswissenschaft
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Alles auf (Studien)anfang!
(2017)
Dieser Band knüpft an die repräsentative Dokumentation des Fortbildungsprojektes Belcantare Brandenburg. Jedes Kind kann singen! für musikunterrichtende Grundschullehrkräfte im Land Brandenburg und seine begleitendende Evaluationsforschung an. Inhaltlicher Schwerpunkt dieses Bandes ist die Vorstellung der explorativen Evaluationsstudie mit ihren sensiblen Konzepten, Fragenstellungen, ihrem triangulierenden Forschungsdesign und ausgewählten Forschungsergebnissen aus den Staffeln 1 und 2.
Die fachdidaktischen, musikpsychologischen und methodischen Kontexte der Evaluationsforschung werden durch Fachartikel entsprechender Autoren in diesem Band transparent und bereichern ihn im besonderen Maße. Die Mitwirkung von Studierenden am Forschungsprozess erforderte Anwendungsleitfäden zur methodischen Handhabung verschiedener Erhebungsinstrumente und Auswertungsmethoden zu entwickeln, denen hier der Raum zur Veröffentlichung gegeben wurde.
Between-School Variation in Students' Achievement, Motivation, Affect, and Learning Strategies
(2017)
To plan group-randomized trials where treatment conditions are assigned to schools, researchers need design parameters that provide information about between-school differences in outcomes as well as the amount of variance that can be explained by covariates at the student (L1) and school (L2) levels. Most previous research has offered these parameters for U.S. samples and for achievement as the outcome. This paper and the online supplementary materials provide design parameters for 81 countries in three broad outcome categories (achievement, affect and motivation, and learning strategies) for domain-general and domain-specific (mathematics, reading, and science) measures. Sociodemographic characteristics were used as covariates. Data from representative samples of 15-year-old students stemmed from five cycles of the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA; total number of students/schools: 1,905,147/70,098). Between-school differences as well as the amount of variance explained at L1 and L2 varied widely across countries and educational outcomes, demonstrating the limited generalizability of design parameters across these dimensions. The use of the design parameters to plan group-randomized trials is illustrated.
Change in test-taking motivation and its relationship to test performance in low-stakes assessments
(2017)
Since the turn of the century, an increasing number of low-stakes assessments (i.e., assessments without direct consequences for the test-takers) are being used to evaluate the quality of educational systems. Internationally, research has shown that low-stakes test results can be biased due to students’ low test-taking motivation and that students’ effort levels can vary throughout a testing session involving both cognitive and noncognitive tests. Thus, it is possible that students’ motivation varies throughout a single cognitive test and in turn affects test performance. This study examines the change in test-taking motivation within a 2-h cognitive low-stakes test and its association with test performance. Based on expectancy-value theory, we assessed three components of test-taking motivation (expectancy for success, value, and effort) and investigated its change. Using data from a large-scale student achievement study of German ninth-graders, we employed second-order latent growth modeling and structural equation modeling to predict test performance in mathematics. On average, students’ effort and perceived value of the test decreased, whereas expectancy for success remained stable. Overall, initial test-taking motivation was a better predictor of test performance than change in motivation. Only the variability of change in the expectancy component was positively related to test performance. The theoretical and practical implications for test practitioners are discussed.
Conditions
(2017)
Whenever we think, decide or act, different sorts of conditions are involved which substantially determine how we do it. We do not create the contents of our thoughts. They are given to us in experience. And the constraints and restrictions that bind our decisions and actions are imposed upon us by the environments and milieus to which we as deciding agents belong, and in which we have to decide and act. The conditions which determine us when thinking, deciding and acting are the subject matter of this essay, how they work, and what possibilities we have got of changing or transforming them.
Cybermobbing
(2017)