1 / 16

School students attitudes towards higher education

The Greenwich Attitudes to University Study. Excellence in CitiesAimhigher Longitudinal 3 stage studyWhat do young people feel

tad
Télécharger la présentation

School students attitudes towards higher education

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


    1. School students attitudes towards higher education Vicki Bradshaw & Pam Maras University of Greenwich

    2. The Greenwich Attitudes to University Study Excellence in Cities Aimhigher Longitudinal 3 stage study What do young people feel & think about school, learning & post 16 opportunities? How do family, friends & school affect young peoples attitudes & expectations? What impact does aimhigher have on young peoples attitudes?

    3. Longitudinal study Total of 3,570 students in 13 schools in Greenwich (2002 - 2005) Time 1: Years 9, 10, 12 Time 2: Year 10 Time 3: Year 12 Attitudes to Higher Education Questionnaire (AHEQ) AHEQ matched to LEA data on students academic and social backgrounds

    4. Main findings from quantitative data SATs scores positively correlated with increased take-up of widening participation activities Female students more positive than males Identification with school and general academic motivation were largest predictors of attitudes toward higher education

    9. After aimhigher (Maras, 2007) Need to check these graphs! There were no year 9s at time 2 (after aimhigher so what does this all refer to)Need to check these graphs! There were no year 9s at time 2 (after aimhigher so what does this all refer to)

    10. Predicting attitudes from academic self concept and the importance of others

    11. Predicting attitudes toward going to university Social Identity accounted for significantly more of the variance than anything Social Identity with peers, family & school differentially affected self-concept of ability, competence & effort Importance of peers Perceptions of academic competence Visiting a university Family views

    12. Focus groups (Maras, Aveling, Bradshaw et al) What are young peoples motivations for choosing to go to higher education? What are the key influences on their decisions and motivations to continue into higher education? 19 students in Year 12 (all in full time education)

    13. Students motivations and disincentives for continuing on to higher education

    15. I dont want to work in Sainsburys

    16. Conclusions Mismatch of motives of academics and students Influences of peers on attitudes to HE Family influences, i.e. But no one in my family has been to University (Maras, 2007) School factors and academic self-concept Year 10 negativity, autonomy and widening participation

    17. Vicki Bradshaw Department of Psychology & Counselling University of Greenwich Email: V.Bradshaw@greenwich.ac.uk

More Related