Learning disabled and normal achieving students’ causal attributes for their performance outcomes

 

Table Of Contents


Chapter ONE

INTRODUCTION

  • 1.1Introduction
  • 1.2Background of Study
  • 1.3Problem Statement
  • 1.4Objective of Study
  • 1.5Limitation of Study
  • 1.6Scope of Study
  • 1.7Significance of Study
  • 1.8Structure of the Research
  • 1.9Definition of Terms

Chapter TWO

LITERATURE REVIEW

  • 2.1Overview of Causal Attribution Theory
  • 2.2Historical Development of Causal Attribution Theory
  • 2.3Attribution Theory in Education
  • 2.4Learning Disabled Students and Causal Attribution
  • 2.5Normal Achieving Students and Causal Attribution
  • 2.6Factors Influencing Causal Attribution
  • 2.7Attribution Retraining Interventions
  • 2.8Critiques of Causal Attribution Theory
  • 2.9Application of Attribution Theory in Educational Settings
  • 2.10Current Trends in Causal Attribution Research

Chapter THREE

RESEARCH METHODOLOGY

  • 3.1Research Design and Approach
  • 3.2Sampling Techniques and Procedures
  • 3.3Data Collection Methods
  • 3.4Data Analysis Techniques
  • 3.5Research Ethics and Compliance
  • 3.6Validity and Reliability Measures
  • 3.7Limitations of the Research Methodology
  • 3.8Research Assumptions and Rationale

Chapter FOUR

DATA PRESENTATION AND ANALYSIS

  • 4.1Analysis of Learning Disabled Students' Causal Attributes
  • 4.2Analysis of Normal Achieving Students' Causal Attributes
  • 4.3Comparison of Causal Attributes between the Two Groups
  • 4.4Impact of Attribution Retraining on Learning Disabled Students
  • 4.5Implications for Educational Practice
  • 4.6Recommendations for Future Research
  • 4.7Discussion of Findings in Relation to Existing Literature
  • 4.8Theoretical Contributions and Practical Applications

Chapter FIVE

SUMMARY, CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS

  • 5.1Summary of Findings
  • 5.2Conclusions Drawn from the Research
  • 5.3Implications for Educational Policy and Practice
  • 5.4Recommendations for Stakeholders
  • 5.5Reflections on the Research Process

Project Abstract

<p> </p><p>Students with learning disabilities (LD), or learning difficulties, form a large significant group in China. Research has shown that the prevalence rate in young people up to the age of 18 ranges from a low of 4.86% to a high of 31.62% (He, 2005; Liu, 2000; Wang, 2003; Yao, 2009). A major reason for such a wide discrepancy is the plethora of definitions and diagnostic criterion, none of which have been widely adopted across China. Learning Disabled</p><p>The more simplified the criterion used, the higher the rate of identified students. However, no matter which rate is referred, given such a large country, the population of students with LD will always be large. For the purpose of this paper, LD will be used referring to the World Health Organization (WHO) definition that there is a significant disability of learning that cannot be solely accounted for by mental retardation, visual acuity problems, or inadequate schooling (2010, p196). In China over the past two decades, LD has increasingly received attention from many research fields such as education, psychology and medicine. Learning Disabled</p><p>The current research LD follows two basic tracks one is to explore the cognitive development, and the mechanisms of information processing of students with LD, as well as to design effective interventions to solve problems and disabilities that occurred during their cognitive development; the other is to explore their social development, including mind and behaviour, emotional development, social competence, and social cognition, and so on (Yu, 2005). The latter is more recent, but has become a hot topic, in which the research on attribution and motivation of students with LD is a new focus (Chen, 2007; Li, Liu &amp; Dong, 2006; Zhao, 2010).Learning Disabled</p><p>Among the various theories of attribution, Weiner’s (1979, 1985, 1986) Attribution Theory is one of the most popular and has been commonly applied by Chinese researchers on LD among fifferent populations (e.g., Luo, 2000; Zhao, Zhang, Geng &amp; Shen, 2005) and in different subjects (e.g., Chang, 2010; Hu, 2009). Weiner’s Attribution Theory Attribution theorists assume that individuals seek to understand why events have occurred (Schuster, Forsterlung, &amp; Weiner, 1989, p. 192).Learning Disabled</p><p>Weiner and his colleagues originally developed the research on the causes of success and failure. Guided by Heider’s causal structure (1958), they initially assumed that ability, effort, task difficulty, and luck were perceived as the most responsible causes for success and failure in achievement-related contexts, among which ability and effort were the most dominant determiners (Weiner, 1985). Later, they put forward that factors such as mood, fatigue, illness, biases of others, and unique factors to specific situations were necessary causes (Weiner, Russell,&amp; Lerman, 1978). In the centre of Weiner’s Attribution Theory, are two related models. First, the theory categorized the perceived causes into three dimensions locus of causality, stability, and controllability (Weiner, 1979, 1986). Locus of causality is concerned as a backward-looking belief, thus, it focuses on whether the cause is internal or external to the individual (Linnenbrink &amp; Pintrich, 2002).Learning Disabled.</p> <br><p></p>

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