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Pablo Chust-Hernandez; Emelina Lopez-Gonzalez; Joan Maria Senent-Sanchez – Electronic Journal of Research in Educational Psychology, 2024
Introduction: Academic stress is a major problem in higher education and can be a risk factor for future academic and mental health problems. Programs to reduce it have focused on psychological interventions (mindfulness, cognitive-behavioral therapy, etc.), ignoring interventions focused on promoting study and learning skills. High academic…
Descriptors: Stress Management, Self Efficacy, College Freshmen, Nursing Students
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Coohey, Carol; Landsman, Miriam J.; Cummings, Stephen P. – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2023
Many students report increasing test anxiety in the months before taking the national social work licensure exam. We evaluate whether adding a test-anxiety-reduction module to an online exam preparation course reduces MSW students' test anxiety. A non-equivalent pretest-posttest control-group design was used to compare 42 students who did not…
Descriptors: Test Preparation, Test Anxiety, Licensing Examinations (Professions), Social Work
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Evans-Tokaryk, Tyler; Burazin, Andie; deBraga, Michael; Goodman, Jackie; Kaler, Michael; Klubi, Thomas – Journal of The First-Year Experience & Students in Transition, 2023
First-year seminars that teach foundational academic skills are common in universities around the world, but few studies have been conducted to determine whether the specific skills students develop in these courses transfer to other academic contexts. Our research presents a case study that addresses this gap by measuring students' perceptions of…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Transfer of Training, First Year Seminars, Test Wiseness
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Rios, Joseph – Applied Measurement in Education, 2021
Four decades of research have shown that students' low test-taking effort is a serious threat to the validity of score-based inferences from low-stakes, group-based educational assessments. This meta-analysis sought to identify effective interventions for improving students' test-taking effort in such contexts. Included studies: (1) used a…
Descriptors: Test Wiseness, Student Motivation, Meta Analysis, Intervention
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Kozo Yanagawa – Language Awareness, 2024
This study examined the effects of bottom-up instruction (BI) on a high-stakes listening test for second language (L2) listeners and compared these effects with those of strategy instruction (SI) in relation to their proficiency levels. Two intact classes (48 L2 listeners) of different L2 listening proficiency levels received five weeks of BI and…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Metalinguistics, Listening Comprehension Tests
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K. Supriya; Christofer Bang; Jessica Ebie; Christopher Pagliarulo; Derek Tucker; Kaela Villegas; Christian Wright; Sara Brownell – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2024
Use of high-stakes exams in a course has been associated with gender, racial, and socioeconomic inequities. We investigated whether offering students the opportunity to retake an exam makes high-stakes exams more equitable. Following the control value theory of achievement emotions, we hypothesized that exam retakes would increase students'…
Descriptors: Test Anxiety, High Stakes Tests, Academic Achievement, Self Concept
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Buzinski, Steven G.; Clark, Jenna; Cohen, Matthew; Buck, Benjamin; Roberts, Scott P. – Teaching of Psychology, 2018
Pluralistic ignorance occurs when individuals misperceive a group norm and attempt to match the perceived--rather than actual--norm. Little is currently known about its role in the undergraduate classroom. The present research examined the pluralistic ignorance of studying behavior and its relationship with examination performance across four…
Descriptors: Knowledge Level, Study Habits, Undergraduate Students, Tests
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Brady, Shannon T.; Hard, Bridgette Martin; Gross, James J. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2018
The idea that test anxiety hurts performance is deeply ingrained in American culture and schools. However, researchers have found that it is actually worry about performance and anxiety--not bodily feelings of anxiety (emotionality)--that impairs performance. Drawing on this insight, anxiety reappraisal interventions encourage the view that…
Descriptors: Test Anxiety, Academic Achievement, College Freshmen, Intervention
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Coohey, Carol; Cummings, Stephen P. – Journal of Social Work Education, 2019
We evaluated whether a synchronous online group intervention, using the Association for Social Work Boards Group Review Practice Test© items, increased students' LMSW licensure test-taking confidence and decreased their test anxiety. A non-equivalent comparison group study was used to measure change in 59 graduate students' confidence in…
Descriptors: Social Work, Professional Education, Test Preparation, Computer Assisted Testing
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Jones, Teresa; Riggs, Amanda; Kuo, Nai-Cheng – Current Issues in Middle Level Education, 2019
Teachers and school counselors have the responsibility not only to build a positive school climate in which students want to perform and stretch themselves academically and socially, but also to create an environment in which students know that their teachers and school counselors are aware of their needs, anxiety, and other factors preventing…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Anxiety, Coping, Test Anxiety
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Russo, James A. – Networks: An Online Journal for Teacher Research, 2019
Building on the rich tradition of 'teacher as researcher' in mathematics education, I describe a study undertaken whilst working as a mathematics specialist in an Australian primary school. The focus of the study was on examining whether explicitly teaching students test-taking strategies ('test-wiseness') improved their performance on a…
Descriptors: National Competency Tests, Literacy, Numeracy, Foreign Countries
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Nusser, Lena; Weinert, Sabine – Journal of Cognitive Education and Psychology, 2017
If children fail to understand test instructions, measurements of their competence may be unfair and invalid. This is especially relevant for students with special educational needs (SEN) because they face greater challenges in comprehending instructions. Two interventions were designed to facilitate the comprehension of test requirements by…
Descriptors: Test Wiseness, Special Needs Students, At Risk Students, Intervention
Ray, Amber Beth – ProQuest LLC, 2017
High school students with high-incidence disabilities and struggling writers face considerable challenges when taking high-stakes writing assessments designed to examine their suitability for entrance to college. I examined the effectiveness of a writing intervention for improving these students' performance on a popular college entrance exam, the…
Descriptors: High School Students, Disabilities, Writing Difficulties, High Stakes Tests
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Demir, Cihat – Universal Journal of Educational Research, 2016
As the number, date and form of the written tests are structured and teacher-oriented, it is considered that it creates fear and anxiety among the students. It has been found necessary and important to form a testing model which will keep the students away from the test anxiety and allows them to learn only about the lesson. For this study,…
Descriptors: Models, Physics, Test Anxiety, Qualitative Research
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Rambiritch, Avasha – Perspectives in Education, 2015
Applied linguists should strive to ensure that the tests they design and use are not only fair and socially acceptable, but also have positive effects--this, in light of the fact that tests can sometimes have far-reaching and often detrimental effects on test-takers. What this paper will attempt to do, is highlight how this concern for responsible…
Descriptors: Accountability, Test Construction, Applied Linguistics, Test Wiseness
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