Showing 2 results for Secondary School
Moslem Ghobadian,
Volume 4, Issue 35 (9-2017)
Abstract
The purpose of this practical descriptive study was to explore the professional ethics of secondary school teachers in Khorramabad. The participants were 1089 secondary school teachers (756 women and 333 men). Based on the sampling table of Krejcie and Morgan (1970), the recommended sample was 285. Stratified random sampling technique was engaged. The required data were collected using standard questionnaire of professional ethics of employees. To analyze the data, descriptive statistics (frequency, cumulative frequency, columnar graphs) and inferential statistics (Kolmogorff-Smirnov test and non-parametric-human-Whitney test) were used. The results of the Yumann- Whitney test showed that between professional ethics and its dimensions (accountability, honesty, justice and fairness, loyalty, supremacy and competition, respect for others social values and norms) there is no significant difference between male and female teachers in secondary school in Khorramabad. In other words, it can be said that the male and female teachers of secondary school in Khoramabad have the same attitude toward professional ethics and its components.
Mis Magdieh Estabraghi, Mis Samaneh Sadat , Dr Ahmad Zandvaian,
Volume 16, Issue 50 (3-2025)
Abstract
The present study was conducted with the aim of investigating the pattern of structural relationships of academic engagement in students based on resilience and implicit beliefs of intelligence with the mediating role of self- handicapping in students of high school in Yazd city in the academic year of 2022-2023. From the statistical population, 375 people were selected by multi-stage cluster sampling method. The data were collected using Schwinger and et al academic engagement, Abdul Fattah and Yates implicit theory of intelligence, and Connor and Davidson resilience questionnaires. The collected data were analyzed with AMOS 24 software. The results of structural equation modeling showed that resilience, inherent intelligence beliefs and intelligence enhancement beliefs, had a direct, positive and significant effect on academic involvement. Also, the results showed that self-handicapping played a mediating role in the relationship between resilience and academic engagement, as well as in the relationship between the beliefs inherent in intelligence and academic engagement. According to the results, in general, psychologists and counselors can take a step towards increasing students' academic engagement by teaching resilience to students and changing their implicit beliefs about intelligence.