PREDICTORS OF SCHOLASTIC ACHIEVEMENT OF SECONDARY SCHOOL STUDENTS

被引:0
|
作者
Sharma, Princy [1 ]
Sharma, Darshana [2 ]
机构
[1] Govt Coll Women, Udhampur, Jammu & Kashmir, India
[2] Univ Jammu, Directorate Distance Educ, Educ, Jammu, India
来源
MIER-JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL STUDIES TRENDS AND PRACTICES | 2021年 / 11卷 / 01期
关键词
Stress; Educational Aspirations; Parental Involvement; Self Concept; Guidance Needs; Scholastic Achievement; ACADEMIC-PERFORMANCE; INVOLVEMENT;
D O I
10.52634/mier/2021/v11/i1/1779
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
The present study aims to find the contribution of self-concept, stress, educational aspirations, parental involvement and guidance needs in predicting the scholastic achievement of secondary school students. The sample for the study comprised 205 students studying in 8th, 9th and 10th classes, selected through random sampling technique. The researchers used Children's Self Concept Scale (Ahluwalia & Singh, 1986), Student Stress Scale (Akhtar, 2011), Educational Aspiration Test (Khan, 2009), Parental Involvement Scale (Chouhan & Arora, 2009), and a self-constructed Guidance Needs Scale in the study. Findings reveal that self-concept, educational aspirations, and parental involvement have a positive relationship with the scholastic achievement of students and stress and guidance needs have a negative relationship. Multiple linear regression analysis was found significant at 0.01 level of significance. Self-concept, stress, educational aspirations, parental involvement and guidance needs contribute significantly to the variance in the scholastic achievement of the students. Implications of these results for parents, teachers, counsellors and school administrators have been reported in the study.
引用
收藏
页码:67 / 84
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Cultural capital and intellectual ability as predictors of scholastic achievement: a study of Slovenian secondary school students
    Flere, Sergej
    Krajnc, Marina Tavcar
    Klanjsek, Rudi
    Musil, Bojan
    Kirbis, Andrej
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY OF EDUCATION, 2010, 31 (01) : 47 - 58
  • [2] Decreased scholastic achievement in overweight middle school students
    Shore, Stuart M.
    Sachs, Michael L.
    Lidicker, Jeffrey R.
    Brett, Stephanie N.
    Wright, Adam R.
    Libonati, Joseph R.
    OBESITY, 2008, 16 (07) : 1535 - 1538
  • [3] Excellent Scholastic Achievement with Average Intelligence - Overachievement in Secondary School
    Sparfeldt, Joern R.
    Buch, Susanne R.
    Rost, Detlef H.
    ZEITSCHRIFT FUR PADAGOGISCHE PSYCHOLOGIE, 2010, 24 (02): : 147 - 155
  • [4] Achievement predictors in a secondary students’ sample
    África Borges del Rosal
    Carmen M. Hernández-Jorge
    Miguel Angel González Sierra
    Quality & Quantity, 2012, 46 : 1687 - 1697
  • [5] Achievement predictors in a secondary students' sample
    Borges del Rosal, Africa
    Hernandez-Jorge, Carmen M.
    Gonzalez Sierra, Miguel Angel
    QUALITY & QUANTITY, 2012, 46 (06) : 1687 - 1697
  • [6] The Effect of Work Experience on High School Students' Scholastic Achievement
    Bateman, Richard M.
    OCCUPATIONS-THE VOCATIONAL GUIDANCE JOURNAL, 1950, 28 (06): : 353 - 356
  • [7] A multilevel study on trends in Malaysian secondary school students' science achievement and associated school and student predictors
    Mohammadpour, Ebrahim
    SCIENCE EDUCATION, 2012, 96 (06) : 1013 - 1046
  • [8] Attitudes to school and reading achievement among secondary school students
    Cain, Thomas
    Hattie, John
    AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF EDUCATION, 2020, 64 (01) : 5 - 24
  • [9] Different predictors of high school students' mathematics achievement
    Turgut, Ilknur Gulsen
    Bakir, Nur Sebnem
    PSYCHOLOGY IN THE SCHOOLS, 2025, 62 (02) : 457 - 474
  • [10] SHORT SCHOOL YEAR AND SCHOLASTIC ACHIEVEMENT IN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
    KORNADT, HJ
    MEISTER, H
    BILDUNG UND ERZIEHUNG, 1970, 23 (05) : 321 - 333