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Drawing on the role of teachers for peer ecologies, we investigated whether students favored ethnically homogenous over ethnically diverse relationships, depending on classroom diversity and perceived teacher care. We specifically studied students’ intra- and interethnic relationships in classrooms with different ethnic compositions, accounting for homogeneous subgroups forming on the basis of ethnicity and gender diversity (i.e., ethnic-demographic faultlines). Based on multilevel social network analyses of dyadic networks between 1299 early adolescents in 70 German fourth grade classrooms, the results indicated strong ethnic homophily, particularly driven by German students who favored ethnically homogenous dyads over mixed dyads. As anticipated, the results showed that there was more in-group bias if perceived teacher care was low rather than high. Moreover, stronger faultlines were associated with stronger in-group bias; however, this relation was moderated by teacher care: If students perceived high teacher care, they showed a higher preference for mixed-ethnic dyads, even in classrooms with strong faultlines. These findings highlight the central role of teachers as agents of positive diversity management and the need to consider contextual classroom factors other than ethnic diversity when investigating intergroup relations in schools.
Repeated search studies are a hallmark in the investigation of the interplay between memory and attention. Due to a usually employed averaging, a substantial decrease in response times occurring between the first and second search through the same search environment is rarely discussed. This search initiation effect is often the most dramatic decrease in search times in a series of sequential searches. The nature of this initial lack of search efficiency has thus far remained unexplored. We tested the hypothesis that the activation of spatial priors leads to this search efficiency profile. Before searching repeatedly through scenes in VR, participants either (1) previewed the scene, (2) saw an interrupted preview, or (3) started searching immediately. The search initiation effect was present in the latter condition but in neither of the preview conditions. Eye movement metrics revealed that the locus of this effect lies in search guidance instead of search initiation or decision time, and was beyond effects of object learning or incidental memory. Our study suggests that upon visual processing of an environment, a process of activating spatial priors to enable orientation is initiated, which takes a toll on search time at first, but once activated it can be used to guide subsequent searches.
The ability to learn sequential contingencies of actions for predicting future outcomes is indispensable for flexible behavior in many daily decision-making contexts. It remains open whether such ability may be enhanced by transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS). The present study combined tDCS with functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) to investigate potential tDCS-induced effects on sequential decision-making and the neural mechanisms underlying such modulations. Offline tDCS and sham stimulation were applied over the left and right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) in young male adults (N = 29, mean age = 23.4 years, SD = 3.2) in a double-blind between-subject design using a three-state Markov decision task. The results showed (i) an enhanced dlPFC hemodynamic response during the acquisition of sequential state transitions that is consistent with the findings from a previous functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study; (ii) a tDCS-induced increase of the hemodynamic response in the dlPFC, but without accompanying performance-enhancing effects at the behavioral level; and (iii) a greater tDCS-induced upregulation of hemodynamic responses in the delayed reward condition that seems to be associated with faster decision speed. Taken together, these findings provide empirical evidence for fNIRS as a suitable method for investigating hemodynamic correlates of sequential decision-making as well as functional brain correlates underlying tDCS-induced modulation. Future research with larger sample sizes for carrying out subgroup analysis is necessary in order to decipher interindividual differences in tDCS-induced effects on sequential decision-making process at the behavioral and brain levels.
Vom Boulevard bis zur seriösen Wochenzeitung, vom Lokalsender bis zu den öffentlich-rechtlichen – Mitte Juni ging eine Wissenschaftsnachricht aus der Goethe-Universität »viral«, die ein ernüchterndes Bild vom Distanzlernen in Pandemiezeiten zeichnete. Ein systematisches Review, das die Ergebnisse einzelner anderer Studien auswertete, hat ergeben, dass Kinder und Jugendliche im ersten Lockdown 2020 im Durchschnitt nicht nur weniger gelernt haben als im Präsenzunterricht, sondern dass ihre Leistungen teilweise auch zurückgegangen sind – »wie nach den Sommerferien«, beschrieb es Studienleiter Prof. Dr. Andreas Frey. Ein Interview mit dem Pädagogischen Psychologen über seine Untersuchungsergebnisse – und die Reaktionen darauf.
Diese Dissertation befasst sich mit Validierungsstrategien von Tests zur Erfassung studentischer Kompetenzen. Kompetenzen von Studierenden werden zu verschiedenen Zwecken erhoben. Dies beginnt beim Eintritt in das Studium durch Zulassungstests und wird im Studium fortgesetzt z.B. durch Tests zur Zertifizierung von Kompetenz (Benotung von Leistung) oder zur Zuteilung auf bestimmte Kurse (Einteilung in Sprachniveaus). Neben diesen internen Tests zur Erfassung studentischer Kompetenzen werden auch externe Tests genutzt um etwa die Lehre zu verbessern (Evaluation von Veranstaltungen). Die mit dem Einsatz von Tests verbundenen Konsequenzen können sowohl für Studierende als auch Lehrpersonen und Entscheidungsträger*innen schwerwiegend sein. Daher sollten Tests wissenschaftlichen Gütekriterien genügen.
Das wichtigste Kriterium für die Beurteilung von wissenschaftlichen Tests ist Validität. In dieser Dissertation wird ein argumentationsbasiertes Validierungsansatz verfolgt. In diesem wird nicht die Validität eines Tests untersucht, sondern die Plausibilität der Interpretation beurteilt, die mit den Testwerten verbunden ist. Bislang fehlt jedoch für viele der wissenschaftlichen Tests für den deutschen Hochschulbereich ein auf die Testwertinterpretation abgestimmtes Validitätskonzept.
In dieser Arbeit wird ein Validierungsschema vorgestellt, in das übliche Testnutzen der Erfassung studentischer Kompetenzen an deutschen Hochschulen eingeordnet werden können. Die Einordnung von Testnutzen in das Schema erlaubt die Ableitung von passenden Validitätsevidenzen. Im Fokus stehen das Verhältnis von Test zu 1) Konstrukt, 2) Lehre und 3) beruflichen Anforderungen.
Das Validierungsschema wird angewandt, um Testwertinterpretationen eines empirischen Forschungsprojektes zur Erfassung von Kompetenz in Nachhaltigkeitsmanagement bei Studierenden zu validieren. Der Schwerpunkt dieser Arbeit liegt auf der Validierung der Interpretation, dass die Testwerte von drei nachhaltigkeitsbezogenen Tests Indikatoren für hochschulisch vermittelte Kompetenz in Nachhaltigkeitsmanagement sind. Die Analysen zur Gewinnung von Validitätsevidenzen konzentrieren sich auf die Grundannahme, dass Lernfortschritte in den nachhaltigkeitsbezogenen Tests vorwiegend hochschulisch vermittelt werden. Dafür wurde ein Messwiederholungsdesign mit zwei Gruppen von Studierenden realisiert. Studierende in der Schwerpunktgruppe besuchten ein Semester lang eine reguläre Lehrveranstaltungen mit Bezug zu Nachhaltigkeitsthemen und Nachhaltigkeitsmanagement, Studierende der Kontrollgruppe besuchten keine solchen Lehrveranstaltung. Die Einteilung in Schwerpunkgruppe und Kontrollgruppe erfolgte über Analyse von Modulhandbüchern und verwendeten Lehrmaterialien. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass Studierende aus der Schwerpunktgruppe in zwei der drei Tests höhere Lernfortschritte zeigen als Studierende der Kontrollgruppe. Selbstberichte der Studierenden zu hochschulischen und außerhochschulischen Lerngelegenheiten lassen darauf schließen, dass Studierende der Schwerpunkgruppe auch außerhochschulisch ein höheres Interesse an Nachhaltigkeitsthemen zeigen, dies schlägt sich jedoch nicht in höherem Vorwissen in den verwendeten Tests nieder. Insgesamt wird daher für die zwei Tests mit höheren Lernfortschritten in der Schwerpunktgruppe die Interpretation als plausibel bewertet, dass die Testwerte hochschulisch vermittelte Kompetenz in Nachhaltigkeitsmanagement abbilden.
Aims: The purpose of this paper was to investigate the relationship between high-involvement human resource management, autonomy, affective organisational commitment and innovative behaviours of nursing staff who care for elderly clients.
Background: Nursing teams are increasingly required to demonstrate innovative behaviours that enhance care quality. Nursing leaders need to create environments where nursing staff have sufficient autonomy and feel a sense of commitment to support these behaviours. The appropriate implementation of these processes and practices may lead to greater involvement.
Methods: A cross-sectional survey-based research design was employed to explore the experiences of involvement practices, autonomy, affective organisational commitment and innovative behaviours of 567 nursing staff workers from four elderly care organisations in the Netherlands.
Results: The results demonstrate that a bundle of high-involvement practices positively influences innovative behaviour and that affective commitment and autonomy fully mediate this relationship.
Conclusions: The study highlights the role of autonomy and commitment as routes towards translating involvement practices into nurses’ innovativeness.
Implications for Nursing Management: To create an innovative environment, leaders need to create a positive climate by providing nurses with opportunities to enhance their competence, relatedness and autonomy through active involvement. Leaders should, therefore, encourage involvement as a mechanism to promote innovation.
This paper addresses the development of performance-based assessment items for ICT skills, skills in dealing with information and communication technologies, a construct which is rather broadly and only operationally defined. Item development followed a construct-driven approach to ensure that test scores could be interpreted as intended. Specifically, ICT-specific knowledge as well as problem-solving and the comprehension of text and graphics were defined as components of ICT skills and cognitive ICT tasks (i.e., accessing, managing, integrating, evaluating, creating). In order to capture the construct in a valid way, design principles for constructing the simulation environment and response format were formulated. To empirically evaluate the very heterogeneous items and detect malfunctioning items, item difficulties were analyzed and behavior-related indicators with item-specific thresholds were developed and applied. The 69 item’s difficulty scores from the Rasch model fell within a comparable range for each cognitive task. Process indicators addressing time use and test-taker interactions were used to analyze whether most test-takers executed the intended processes, exhibited disengagement, or got lost among the items. Most items were capable of eliciting the intended behavior; for the few exceptions, conclusions for item revisions were drawn. The results affirm the utility of the proposed framework for developing and implementing performance-based items to assess ICT skills.
Several psychotherapy treatments exist for posttraumatic stress disorder. This study examines the treatment preferences of treatment-seeking traumatized adults in Germany and investigates the reasons for their treatment choices. Preferences for prolonged exposure, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR), psychodynamic psychotherapy and stabilization were assessed via an online survey. Reasons for preferences were analyzed by means of thematic coding by two independent rates. 104 traumatized adults completed the survey. Prolonged exposure and CBT were each preferred by nearly 30%, and EMDR and psychodynamic psychotherapy were preferred by nearly 20%. Stabilization was significantly less preferred than all other options, by only 4%. Significantly higher proportions of patients were disinclined to choose EMDR and stabilization. Patients who preferred psychodynamic psychotherapy were significantly older than those who preferred CBT. Reasons underlying preferences included the perceived treatment mechanisms and treatment efficacy. Traumatized patients vary in their treatment preferences. Preference assessments may help clinicians comprehensively address patients' individual needs and thus improve therapy outcomes.