DOCUMENT RESUME
ED 074 034 SP 006 194
TITLE The Scottish Council for Researctrin Education.Forty-Fourth Annual Report, 1971-72.
INSTITUTION Scottish Council for Research in Education.pu DATE Nov 72NOTE 77p.
EDRS PRICE NF-$0.65 HC-$3.29DESCRIPTORS *Annual Reports; Budgets; *Educational Finance;
*Educational Programs; *Educational Research;*Foreign Countries; Grants; Research Projects
ABSTRACTThis booklet contains the annual report for 1971-72
of the Scottish Council for Research in Education. The first sectionlists the officers, members, principle Officials, and staffresponsible for special projects. The second section presents reportsfrom the various committees of the council, stressing thereconstruction of the council's membership. In discussing specialprojects of the council, the foCus is. on sponsored and grant-aidedresearch. The report includes budgetary considerations in the grantsand a financial account of the council. The final section of thereport presents reprints of journal articles written by a councilmember or related to a council project. The report also offers a listof research in education and educational psychology and thepublications of the Scottish Council for Research in Education from1930 to 1972. (BRE)
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH.EDUCATION & WELFAREOFFICE Op EDUCATION
THIS DOCUMENT HAS BEEN REM°,DUCED EXACTLY AS RECEIVED FROMTHE PERSON OR ORGANIZATION ORIG-INATING IT POINTS OF VIEW OR Op InIONS STATED DO NOT NECESSARILYREPRESENT OFFICIAL OFFICE OF EOU.CATION POSITION OR POLICY.
FILMED FROM BEST AVAILABLE COPY
THE
SCOTTISH COUNCILFOR RESEARCH IN
EDUCATION
FORTY-FOURTH ANNUAL REPORT
1971-72
Dr Robert R RuskDirector of the Council. 1928-1958
Died 25th May 1972
CONTENTSIntroductionList of Officers and Members until 29t11,Jtnie t972List of Officers and Members since 29th June 1972List of Principal Officials and of Stair responsible for fpeittic
Projects and ServicesReports of Council and Committees Ihr 1971-72
(a) Council(h) Executive Committee 16(c) Finance Committee. t7(d) Publications Committee rli(e) Bibliography or Scottish Education Committee ifl(I) Assessment for Higher Education Committee 19(g) Courses for Craftsmen and Technicians Committee 2o(h) Younger Sibs Follow-Up (1947 Survey) Committee 20(i) Educational Museum Committee 21(j) Organisation of Secondary Courses Commit ee 2i
Reports on other Projects22
(i) Conducted by the Council:(a) International Project for tlic Evaluation cif
Educational Achievement(b) National Certificate Courses 22
(ii) Sponsored.and Grant-Aided Research:(a) History and Influence of the Scottish Degree of
Bachelor of Education(b) Environment and Attainment in Printaip School
Children(c) Subject Choice in Secondary Schools, with special
reference to a shortage of suitably qualifiedapplicants for science places in universities
23(d) Front School to Work 24(c) Non-intellectual Factors in Secondary School
Success2 5
(f) Sociological Factors Associated with IrregularSchool Attendance among Seeondary SchoolChildren 26
(g) Arithmetic /Mathematics Sets in Primary School 26(h) Sociological Study Comparing the Educational
and Career Patterns of Scottish and EnglishGraduates 27
7
3
) The Attainments of Students following SCE andGCE Courses in Further Education Colleges 27
Individual Differences and Computer-assistedInstruction
Liaison with other Organisations and Consultative Servicesundertaken by the Council's Staff 1971-72
Summary Report on ProjectsGrants from Education AuthoritiesGrants from Local Associations of the Educational institute
of ScotlandContributions from Grant-aided Schools and from Other
Bodies
Accounts for Year ended 15th May 1972Articles Reprinted from Journals:
(i) A Defence of Educational Research by W Bryan Dockrell(ii) identifyin and Interviewitql Science Students at Risk of
Failure by D E Hoare and E J Yeaman(iii) The Absentees by Sheila Mitchell(iv) Who Cares About the Craft Apprentices? by A Douglas Weir
List of Researches in Education and Educational Psychologypresented for Degrees in Scottish Universities in 1971
List of Publications
2q .
31
39
33
34
35
38
63
71
77
INTRODUCTION
Those familiar with the annual reports issued by the Councilhitherto will notice changes in both the format and the size of thisreport for 1971-72. It is perhaps appropriate that there should besome such change at this particular time, since 1972 has markedthe biggest reconstruction of the membership of the Council sinceits institution in 1928. The nature of these changes is described inthe body of the report.
The change in the.report that has contributed principally to itsincrease in size is the inclusion in it for the first time of reprints ofa number of articles that have apreared in journals during the pastyear: all of them arc either written by a member of the Council'sstaff or related to a project conducted Or supported by the Council.The Council gratefully acknowledges permission from the Editorsof the journals concerned to reprint the articles. It is hoped thatthese reprints will serve to bring the articles to the notice of awider public.
..0
a
OFFICERS AND MEMBERS 7
(until agth June i972)PRESIDENTDouoLAs NI McIN Tosu, LLD, NIA, BSc, iMEd, PhD ERSE,
FEIS
VICE-PRESIDENTAMEs CRAIOIE, OBE, MA, PhD, FEIS
HONORARY TREASURERGILBERT S BENDEN, MBE, MA, LLB, FEIS
EXECUTIVEDouoLAs M McINTosit, CBE, LLD, MA, B
FEIS
,JAMES C1&Aton-7,, OBE, MA, PhD, FE'S
Ed, Phi), ERSE,
MEMBERS OF COUNCILAssociation of County Councils in Scotland*ALEXANDER K. DAVIDSON, CBE, JP, 76 Firs Crescent, BannockburnR H M KENNEDY, 7 Craigton Avenue, Milngavie
Rek, PETER C MAUOUOID, JP, MA, Airlie, Turra.10FIN MARstIALLJP, II Yews Crescent, HamiltonWILLIAM G RANKINE, JP, 14 Main Str-et, West CalderROBERT ROBERTSON, CBE, JP,,t Cast Court, Newton Mearns
RussL.I., OBE, MC, Hassendoan Cottage, Gattonside, Melrose
*Died 17th July 1971f Member from 3rd Augu 1971
Association of Counties of Cities in Scotland*GEORGE COWLING, 21 Cruickshank Crescent, AberdeenTHOMAS F FAULKNER, MA, PhD, 5:6 Perth Road, DundeeJOHN C. MAcFARLANE, OBE, MA, MEd, FEIS, II Crookston Court,
GlasgowMrs MARGARET B A Ross, P MA, 9 Laverockbank Terrace,
Edinburgh
*Died 2nd August 1971
Educational Institute of ScotlandGILBERT S BRYDEN, MBE, MA, LLB, FEIS, 46 Moray Place,
EdinburghJAMES CARmIcitAEL, CBE, MA, FEIS, 5 Upper Kinneddar, Saline,
FifeNICOL B CURRIE, BSc, 55 Marlborough Avenue, GlasgowMrs CATHERINE R McOuAT, 14 Kirklee Terrace, GlasgowMALcoLm D MAcSwEEN, MA, BLitt, 7A Hillside Road, Glasgow
Dr Doug la:, M McIntosh
Member of the Council since 1946Chairman of he Executive Commime, I9W-1972
President of the Council, 1960-1972
WILIJANI RitatmtosoN, CEng, PI MarE, AlMechL 3 ChurchillDrive, Bi_shOpton
ALFRED A M ROBERTSON, MA, FEIS, 7 Viewpark Gardens,Bonnyrigg
JOHN M YOUNG, JP, MA, FEIS, Greenknowe, Kirkmahoe, DumfriesMiss KATHARINE M YOUNG, MA, DipEd, FEIS, 20 Cherrybank
Grove, Perth
Association of Directors of Education in ScotlandJOHN T BAIN, MA, BSc, BEd, Education Offices, 129 Bath Street,
Glasgow, G2 I DUROBERT B FORBES, MA, MEd, Education Offices, I2 St Giles Street,
Edinburgh, EH' tYW*JOHN MEIKLEJOHN, MA, BSc, MEd, PhD, LRAM, ATCL, FEIS,
Education Offices, County Buildings, HaddingtonCHARLES
Education,{'MA, MEd, Count), Offices, Newtown St
BoswellsDAVID G ROBERTSON, MA, MEd, Education Office, Galashiels
*Died 27th October 197t
Colleges of Education*GRAHAM ALISON, BSc, MEd, ABPsS, Hamilton College of Educa-
tion, Hamilton, ML3 oBDR PETER CLARK, TD, MA, MEd, College of Education, Hilton
Place, AberdeenMiss ISABELLA C MACLEAN, MA, MEd, PhD, FBPsS, FICP,
Dunfermline College of Physical Education, EdinburghtDONALD W MACK, Hamilton College of Education, Hamilton,
ML3 oBDJAMES MAXWELL, MA, MEd, Moray House College of Education,
EdinburghRICHARD L PEDDIE, MA, MEd, ABPsS, Craigie College of Educa-
tion, AyrMrs URSULA PRESCOTT, BA, EdB, Craiglockhart College of Educa-
tion, EdinburghRONALD H RtcnARosoN, BSc, College of Education, Park Place,
DundeeSister MARTHA SKINNIDER, MA, MEd, Notre Dante College of
Education, Bearsden, GlasgowJOHN A &dun, MA, MEd, Jordanhill College of Education,
Southbrae Drive, Glasgow
'Member until October 1971f Member from October 1971
UniversitiesBRIAN G GOWENLOCK, MSc, PhD, DSc, FRIG, PRSE processor of
Chemistry, Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh
I Dr Jam.Member of the Council
Chairman of the Finance Committee-Vice-Chairman of the Council
irmismakisza&*-6.11.-- -
" 4
i
11
LIAM HUDSON MA, PhD, Profssor of Education, The UniversityEdinburgh
Gus-rAv jAtionA, MSc, PhD, FBPsS, Professor of Psychology,University of Strathclyde, Glasgow
MAEEOLM A NEVES, MA, PhD, FBPsS, PAPS, Professor of Psycho-logy, Univet'sity of St Andreys, College Gate, St Andrews
ARNOLD MoiusoN, BA, MEd, Department of Education, TheUniversity, Dundee
Jonn 1) NninET, MA, MEd, PhD, Professor of Education, King'sCollege, Aberdeen
STANLRY I) NISBET, MA, MEd, FRSE, Professor of Education, TheUniversity, GlasgowiAnErn PErmorr, BSc, MSc,, PhD, Professor of Education, TheUniversity, Stirling
British Psychological Society (Scottish Branch)PETER MOEWEN, BSc, PhD, Professor of Psychology, The University,
Stirling
Society of Medical Officers of Health (Scottish Branch)Miss HELEN W GREENEEEN, MB, ChB, DPH, '2 Marc field Road,
Dundee
General Teaching Council for ScotlandCHARLES BLACRLAW, MA, FEIS, Peebles Primary School, Rosetta
Road, PeeblesGEonov. D GRAY, MA, tei.o Princes Street, Edinburgh
British Sociological Society (Scottish Branch)ANDREW MCPHERSON, BA, Department of Educational Sciences,
The University, Edinburgh
Scottish Certificate of Education Examination BoardjoliN M URQUHART, MA, MEd, 140 Causewayside, Edinburgh
Teacher Organisations other than the InstituteMiss MARGARET M GRANT, MA, Campic School, Musselburgh
(Scottish Infants' Mistresses' Association)Miss MARY G Mcivr.R, MA, James Gillespie's High School for Girls,
Edinburgh (Association of Headmistresses Scottish Branch)ROBERT G McLEoo, MA, FEIS, Telford college of Further Educa-
tion, Edinburgh (Association of Principals of Technical Institu-tiOnS)
JOHN THOMPSON, MA, PhD, Madras College, St Andrews (Head.masters' Association of Scotland)
j LOCKHART WHITEFORD, MA, Dinas-bran, 6 n5 Inveraan Drive,Bridge of Allan Scottish Secondary Teachers' Association)
12 TuE se:0-mm' COUNCIL POR
Co-opted Membersj W LEITCII ADAMS, MA, .Professor of Education, The University,Dundee
Tom BURNS, BA, Professor of Sociology, The University, Edinburgh.JAMES CRAIGIE, OBE, MA, PhD, FEIS, 4 isifoun- tioy Terrace,
MusselburghDAVID LEES, CBE, MA, BA, LLD, FEIS, 16 Larch Road, GlasgowDoumm M McINTosu CBE, LLD, MA, BSc, MEd, PhD, ERSE,
FEIS, Moray House College of Education, Edinburgh
Assessors from Scottish Education DepartmentJOHN BENNETT, MBE, MA, HMSCIS, St Andrew's House, Edin-
burghjonN j FARRELL, 13 George Street, EdinburghJonr G MORRIS, MA, MEd, HMI, 6/7 Coates Place, Edinburgh
(from 29th June 1972)
CHAIRMANRonEaT B FORBES, MA, MEd
CHAIRMAN OF FINANCE COMMITTEEWILLIAM S CHARLES, CA
CHAIRMAN OF COMMUNICATIONS COMMITTEEJOSEPH DUNNING, BSc, MEd, AIM, AMCT
MEMBERS OF COUNCILNominated by Secretary of State for ScotlandlAriLLIAnt S CHARLES, CA, 6 St Coline Street, EdinburghJOSEPH DUNNING, BSc, MEd, AIM, AMCT, Napier College of
Science and Technology, Edinburgh.ROBERT B Foams, MA, MEd, Education Offices, 12 St Giles S
EdinburghDOUGLAS M MeINTosn, CBE, LLD, MA, BSc, MEd, PhD, FRU,
FEIS, Moray House College of Education, Edinburgh,JOHN D NisnET, MA, MEd, PhD, Professor of Edtic ttion, King's
College, Aberdeen
Nominated by Association of County Councils in ScotlandROBERT H M KENNEDY, 7 Craigton Avenue, Milngavie
Nominated by Association of Counties of Cities in ScotlandGEORGE FouutEs, BSc, 15 Meadow Place, Edinburgh, EHq IjR
Nominated by Educational Institute of ScotlandNICOL B CuitatE, BSc, 5 5 Marlborough Avenue, Glasgow
RESEARCH IN EDUCATION
THOMAS SNEDDON, MBE, MA, 12 Knowhead Road, Crossford,Dunfermline
THOMAS L STEWART, 13 Southe ton Crescent, Kirkcaldy
Nominated by Association of Directors of Education inScotlandJOHN T FAIN, MA, BSc, BEd, Education Offices, 129 Bath Street,
GlasgowCHARLES MELVILLE, MA, MEd, County Offices, Newtown
Boswells
Nominated by Colleges of EducationGEORGE RIDDELL, Craigie College of Education, AyrRONALD H RICHARDSON, BSc, College of Education, Park Place,
DundeeJOHN A SSIITII, MA, MEd, Jordanhill College of Education, South-
(' Drive, Glasgow
Nominated by UniversitiesTliaENGE N DAVIES, MA, MEd, PhD, Department of Education,
The University, StirlingALEXANDER N MAIN, MA, Department of Psychology, University
of Strathclyde, GlasgowARNOLD 1' MottalsoN, BA, MEd, Department of Education, The
University, Dundee
Nominated by Scottish Certificate of Education ExaminationBoardJOHN M URQuilART, MA, MEd, 140 Causewayside, Edinburgh
Nominated by Teacher Organisations other than theInstituteMrs MARY C lt GALBRAITH, 9 Florence Drive, Giffnock, GlasgowMISS M M GRANT, MA, ion Dalkeith Street, Edinburgh, EHI5 2HR
Assessors from Scottish Education DepartmentJOHN BENNETT, MBE, MA, HMSCIS, St Andrew's House, Edin-
burgh.JoilN G Moan's, MA, MEd, HMI, 6/7 Coates Place, Edinburgh
PRINCIPAL OFFICIALS
DIRECTOR\V BavAN DOCKItELL, BA, MEd, PhD
DEPUTE DIRECTORQERARD J Poixock, MA, MEd, MInstP
14 rtiE sc:orrisi COUNCIL FOR
ASSISTANT DIRECTORjaw L FowEt.i, MA, MEd
ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICER*WILLIAM NOGG
Ntay
STAFF RESPONSIBLE FOR PROJECTS AND SERVICESProjects Conducted by Council StaffAssessment fur Higher EducationJ(11LN L PowELE, MA,_ MEdCourses for Crqftsmen and TechniciansA DOUGLAS WEIR, MA, MEdInternational Project Ibr the I'valuation of Educational Achievement
GERARD j PoLLocK, MA, MEd, Mink')Natiottal Certificate CoursesGERARD J PoLocK, MA, MEd, MInst!)Organisation n Secondary CoursevMALcoLm Comm, BA, MA
ServicesCannnunicatinnsjOLIN L POWELL, MA, MEdFinance and AdministratinnWILLiAm HoccResearch Service.rGE AR I) j poi.LocK, MA, MEd, M m«Technical ServicesSusAN FREsiiwATER,MA
I1 IN EIMICATIUN
THE SCOTTISH COUNCIL
FOR RESEARCH INEDUCATION
Forty-fourth Annual Report1971-72
COUNCIL
Dr Robert R Rusk, Director of The Scottish Council for Researchin Educittion from 1928-58, died_ on 25th May 1972. Dr Ruskplayed a major role in the establishment of the Council and as itsfirst Director deserves much of the credit for its achievements, DrRusk's appointment was honorary and part-time, but during theperiod of his Directorship forty or so publications came from theCouncil. These were, many of them, publications or_,,yorld-wideimportance on account or their subject matter, the technical com-petence of the research procedures involved and the clarity of thepresentation. All this was achieved on a budget which for manyyettrN averaged no more than L15oo, The Scottish Council ot,%,es adebt to many pioneers, but none so great as that owed to Dr Rusk,who shaped its beginnings and nurtured its growth.
It is Ivith regt.et that we also record the deaths of Bailie Cowling, -Mr Davidson and Dr Meiklejohn, who were members of theCouncil,
The Council adopted in June 1972 revised Articles olAssociationand amendments to the Memorandum of Association which resulted
t6 THE SCOTTISH COUNCIL R
in a major change in its size. The membership of the Council wasreduded to twenty-one. Five members are now appointed by theSecretary of State for Scotland, and other bodies represented on theCouncil appoint approximately one-third of the number of membersthat they did formerly. The new representation is as follows:
Local AuthoritiesEducational. Institute of Scotland
3Directors of EducationColleges of Education
3Scottish Universities3
Scottish Certificate of Education Ekamination Board iOther Teacher Organisations 2
This reconstruction of the Council is a culmination of efforts overthe last two years.
Council's seventh and eighth NO4'00141'5 were published inNovember 1971 and May 102. Demand for the Newsletter hasagain increased and the circulation is now 63,00o.
A conference on educational research was held at FalkirkTechnical College on 4th September 1971. This conference was forfurther education teachers. Papers were read by the DeputeDirector, Mr G J Pollock, by a Research Officer, Mr A D Weir, byMr D Dick, Principal of Stevenson College, and by Mr J Gloss ofthe Applied Psychology Unit, University of Edinburgh. The papersprovoked a lively response from the audience.
Members of staff have continued to serve on various committeesoutwith the Council. There is an increasing demand on the timeand skill of the staff of the Council in research design, particularlyin the formative and summative evaluation of curriculum develop.nient projects.
Visitors to the Council's office have included L J Ingham, NeWZealand; N J Mentz, South Africa; D Spearritt, Australia; IanWestbury, USA; Is. L Jeiming, Australia; A Leon, France; BrianMcFarlane, Australia; B Richter, Australia; John Regan, Cali-fornia; John -Reeves, Australia E F Sheffield, Canada; Tadashi
JHidano, Tokyo; A M Wilkinson, South Africa; D Vermaak,South Africa; J K Craig, South All ica; R A Banibensu, Ghana,
REPORT OF COMMITTEESExecutive (Dr D M McIntosh, Chairman)
It is with sincere regret that the Executive noted the death ofDr J Ivieiklejohn, who had served on the Executive since 1955. Hewas also Convener of the Scholastic Survey and the Liaison Com-tnittees of the Council. He had made a great and lasting contributionto the work of the Council and has been greatly missed.
The Executive pursued the preparation of amendments to theMemoranda and revised Articles of Association. Several draftswere considered and negotiations entered into with the Scottish
RESEAECU IN EDUCATION
Education Department and. the Department ofTrade and Industry.A final version of the amendments and revisions was approved atthe: meeting on 20th May for submission to the Council.
Mr W Hogg has been appointed to the newly created post ofAdministrative Officer, He took up his duties on May 1972 ontransfer from the service of Edinburgh Corporation. Mr A Ryriehas been appointed as Research Assistant on -a new project, CaseStudies in Education and Training. He gave up an appointment asindustrial chaplain to join the staff of the Council.
To enable the proposed expansion of the Council's activities totake place, new accommodation for the offices of the Council wassought and the offices of the Council arc now at 16 Moray Place.Increased grant to cover the capital costs and the cost of movinghas been made by the Scottish Education Department. The newpremises are spacious and attractive, and provide good facilities forthe work of the Council in a most pleasant setting.
A request from Professor Carter for extension of grant for theproject "From School to Work" was approved and application forgrant from Dr Howe of the Department of Machine Intelligenceand. Perception, Edinburgh, for a project entitled "ComputerisedMethods for Teaching Arithinetic and Elementary Mathematics toPrimary School Children" was approved. Extension of grant to MrL Mciver and Mr T W Eyre for "Non-Intellectual Factors inSecondary School Success" was approved.
A joint meeting of the Executive with representatives of Psycho-logy Departments of the Universities and Colleges of Education washeld in November 1971. Much of the discussion at the meeting wasabout the impact' of the reorganisation of the Council on researchto be condticted by the Universities and Colleges: Both groupsindicated the desire to work with the Council, but they did, how-ever, foresee different contribution-7s to the educational researchprogramme.
Permission was granted to Kent Education Committee to in-corporate part of the Burt (Rearranged) Word Reading Test intacit' revised form for the ascertainment of handicapped pupils.
Finance (Dr J Craigie, Chairman)The Council is greatly indebted to the Scottish Education
Department for the considerable'increase in its grant (which bringsthe total for the year 1971-72 to £40,000), and for an additionalgrant of 75% of the: approved costs of moving co the new premises.
The Council is also indebted to the County Councils and Countiesof Cities for the increase in rate of grant frorn 2d to 1.5p per pupil.The Council appreciates too the increase in rate of grant from 2dto 2p by most of the Grant-Aided Schools The continued supportof the Educational. Institute of Scotland and Local and DistrictAssociations of the Institute is gratefully acknowledged.
4
8 TitE soorrisit couNG11. FOR.
The Abstracts of _ccounts and lists of grants are shown onpages 32 to 37.
Publications (Dr J Cratgie, Convener')The School Board of Glasgow, :873- 1,.91,9 by J Roxburgh was, in
October 1971, published for the Council by the University ofLondon Press as one of the Council's regular series of publications,In the same month the Council published for itself a short paper-back publication, A Day Of Work? by A D Weir, which constituteda report on the Courses for Craftsmen project, This publicationwas issued free of charge. In addition, 25O copies of a more detailedversion of the same report were produced in duplicated form andmade available on a more restricted basis.
At the January 1972 meeting of the Council, Dr James Craigieread a paper on the history of the Council. In it he recalled manypersonalities associated with the inauguration and development ofthe Council, and described some of the Council's achievements.This paper, in an extended form, has since been published in bookletIbrin under the title The Scottish Council for Research in Education,1928-72. Copies may be obtained from the Council free of charge.
It has been decided to establish a policy of issuing three distinctseries of publications. These will be as follows:
Series I The Council's principal series of publications pub-lished as hitherto by the University of London Press.
Series II Works either insufficiently weighty, or likely to be oftoo small a circulation, to be incorporated in Series I.(These Will be published and distributed by theCouncil, and will be similar, in style to .A Day OS"Work?. The possibility of making a small charge willbe considered.)
Series III Limited editionsmade by reproducing, in anappropriate manner, manuscripts of works containingmaterial worth preserving but unlikely to achieve awide sale. (Copies will be distributed free of chargeto seledied libraries and other interested recipients.The Council will be named as publisher and copyrightwill belong to the Council.)
Bibliography of Scottish Education (Dr J Craigie, Convener)Earlier estimates of the date when the typescript of the Bibliography
of Scottish Education, 1872 1972 would be ready for the :printerprove to have been over-optimistic and it now seems unlikely thatthis Ns ill be possible before the early part of r 973. This delay is muchto be regretted but has been forced on the editor by the vast amountof material from official sources. This has turned out to be muchgreater than was originally expected and the work of examining it
IIESEARC:II IN EDUCATION 19
all, recording it, and putting it in order will still take some-consider-able time. For example, the last half century has produced aboutfive hundred Statutory Pules and Orders or Statutory Instruments,all relating to Scottish i',ducation, and the Circulars, Memorandaand Minutes issued by the Scottish Education Department in thesame period amount to more than double that number. Perhapsthe observation may be allowed here that the glossy publicationsnow increasingly favoured by the Department are much moreattractive than its earlier unimaginative productions.
The amount or material dealing with every aspect of educationhas steadily increased over the years and is likely to go on increasingas the field of what is regarded as that with which education isconcerned continues to widen as much as it has done in recentyears. Thus, secondary education was of little or no interest to theState in 1872, but has so grown in importance since the late 1800'sthat this section in the Bibliograply is likely to be the largest in thevolume and to occupy something like twenty pages. And everyother aspect of Scottish education has expanded in much the sameway. All, that is, except one, Local History, which occupies lessspace, both proportionately and absolutely, than it did in theBibliograply of Scottish Education before 1872'. There has also been, inthis section, a kind or levelling-up. In the earlier volume the materialreferring to Edinburgh occupied about ,one-third of the wholesection; now it has shrunk to one-sixth, and Glasgow, which therefell far behind Edinburgh, has now drawn level with it.
Members of Council may be interested to know that as theBibliography of Scottish Education before :1872 becomes more widelyknown there is increasing evidence that it is proving invaluable as 'aguide to the history of Scottish education in the period with whichit deals.
Assessment for Higher Education (Dr D M McIntosh,Convener)
The Committee has received and discussed a report on the presentstage of the project. This report, which shows most of the analysisof the data to have been completed, also constituted a report to theSocial Science Research Council following the completion of theperiod in which it made a grant towards the cost of conducting theanalysis. An extended version of this report will be published underthe title Selection for University in Scotland. Publication is expected atthe end o f t 972. It is also expected that a final report will be readyin 1973.
No grounds have been found for recommending the use, forselection for university entrance, of Scholastic Aptitude Tests of thetype widely used in the USA. Much attention has been given toassessing the predictive reliability of the Scottish Certificate of
COUNCIL FOR
Education and to the implications of these findings for admissionpolicies.
Courses for Craftsmen and Technicians and Pupils'Interests, Abilities and Future Progress in School and Work(Mr R B Forbes, Convener)
For convenience of identification, the work of this Committee isnow under three headings: (a) Craft and Technician Project,(b) Project on Pupils' Interests, Abilities and Future Progress inSchool and Work, and (c) Case Studies of Education and Training,
The Craft and Technician Project is nearly 'completed and adraft report, on' the overlap in ability between students on craft andtechnician courses in further education, will be available by theend of 1972.
The Project on Pupils' Interests, etc is making steady if uninspiringprogress, The information on test scores and school performanceliAs now been analysed, while work is continuing on the additionalinformation available for those sample members who enteredemployment in 1971. A most gratifying feature of this project hasbeen the enthusiastic support from the head teachers of the sampleschools.
As a result of discussions with industry the Committee hasreceived approval from the Executive Committee to embark on aseries of case studies of alternative systems of industrial training andeducation. Substantial financial support has been secured from theLanarkshire Automobile Group Training Association, and aResearch Assistant has recently been appointed to underthke thefield work in connection with these studies.,
Younger Sibs Follow -up (1947 Survey) (Mr j Maxwell,Convener)
This inquiry is now complete and a report has been submitted tothe Social Science Research Council, who, with the Scottish Councilfor Research in Education, supported the inquiry financially. Theinterval of live years between the close of the 1947 SarnplcFollow-upand the Attempt to trace the younger sibi led to failure to ascertainthe present whereabouts of many of the sibs, and not all who werewritten to responded, Ora possible 1554 younger sibs, some informa-tion was obtained about 751 of them, and from 736 possible families,some information was obtained from 29o. This rather inadequatesample is biased towards the higher IQs, but is representative forfamily size and father's occupational class.
The intention was to ascertain whether the individual's educa-tional and occupational career was determined more by his or herIQ level or by social class as indicated by father's occupation, Thedata were too complex and the number of cases in each category toofew fu' any firm conclusion to be drawn, For example, the individuals
RESEARCH IN EDUCATION 21
in the professional class were all of I Io IQ or above, all stayed atschool till age 17 or later, and, with only one exception, obtainedsome kind of occupational qualification, mostly at professionallevel. Other occupational classes presented a pattern difficult todisentangle. An analysis of marriage and family proved to beimpossible with too complex data.
What did emerge was that the current index of socio-economicstatus, namely father's occupation, appears to be inadequate;homogeneouS classes like the professionally qualified cannot bedirectly compared with heterogeneous groups like skilled manualworkers. Socio-economic status, or-social class, needs much moreprecise definition and assessment before it can be meaningfullyinterpreted in educational or occupational contexts.
It is proposed to incorporate the results of this investigation in anarticle to be submitted for publication,, probably in the ournal of
Sciences.
Educational Museum (Dr J Craigie, Convener)The policy of the committee remains unchanged in that it is not
proposed at the present time to take any further step_ s towards theestablishment of a museum, other than by storing materials thatmight be of value to such a museum when established.
Organisation of Secondary Courses (Dr D M McIntosh,Convener)
The Committee met in June 1971 and considered a draft proposalprepared by the Research Officer. The aims of the investigationwere to measure and describe the extent of variation in outcomes forpupils experiencing different patterns of secondary education. Theoutcomes selected for study were the type of educational oppor-tunities experienced by pupils and the extent of their involvementNvith school. The, proposal was approved in principle and it wasagreed that additional details concerning the sample of schools anddata collection methods should be provided.
During subsequent discussions it was suggested that gileateremphasis in the investigation might be placed on identifyingparticularly effective forms of school organisation. In view ofprevious research findings on the effectiveness of schools in relationto wider social and economic factors it appeared to be appropriateto study the organisation of schools in some detail This has enableda considerable reconceptualisation of the research programme. Thechief aim has been to develop a theoretical model by means ofwhich between-school differences in organisation may be identifiedand measured, and related to outcomes for pupils. On this basis itmay then be possible to discover schools which are relatively moreeffective than others. A number of research models have been
22 scorrisit couNcii. FOR
proposed and discussed, and it is hoped shortly to present a detailedproposal.
REPORTS ON PROJECTSInternational Project for the Evaluation of EducationalAchievement
The aim of this project is to study in a systematic way how theeducational outcomes in certain subject areas in different schoolsystems are related to features of school organisation, curriculumpractices, teacher characteristics, etc. Scotland has participated inthree subject areasReading Comprehension and Science in 1970and French in 1971.
For French two national samples, one of pupils aged fourteen,the other of pupils in secondary classes V and VI, took tests ofReading Comprehension, Listening Comprehension, Speaking, andWriting. Approximately 1 1 o schools, 2000 pupils and 700 teachersparticipated in the French phase of the project. The checking andcoding of the data obtained from the testing of French has beencompleted and the information dispatched to America.
For Reading Comprehension and Science three national samplesof pupils aged to, 14 and in sixth year of secondary school respec-tively participated in 1970. Print-outs of the initial univariateanalyses for pupils, teachers and school for these two subjects havebeen received and further analyses will be available shortly. Tapescontaining additional optional Scottish data have now been returnedto the Council and the analysis of these is under way.,
The Depute Director attended a meeting of the LEA Council inBudapest in October 1971 at which proposals for the future work ofthe Association and the progress of the present project werediscussed.
National Certificate CoursesThe field work for the ONC stage of this project was conipleted
last year with the collection of the 1969-7o examination results.The analysis of the data is being carried out using a variety of
multivariate techniques. The main results are now available for theBiology and Building samples and the results for the remainingcoursesChemistry, Electrical Engineering and MechanicalEngineeringshould he available by December 1972.
At a conference for further education teachers, which the Councilorganised in Falkirk Technical College in September 1971, theDepute Director presented some of the interim results of theinvestigation.
It is hoped to extend the investigation by following up the samplesinto the HNC stage of their courses.
ftliSEARCII IN EDUCATION
SPONSORED AND GRANT -AIDED RESEARCHHistory and Influence of the Scottish Degree of Bachelor ofEducation (Mr R E Bell)
The investigator has recently taken up a post with the OpenUniversity and, as a result, the time which he could devote to theproject has been temporarily curtailed. However, the writing-upof the report on the questionnaire is well advanced, and it is hopedthat in the autumn of 1972 the investigator will be able to takeadvantage of study leave granted by the University in order tocomplete this.
Environment and Attainment in Primary School Children(Mr S Struthers)
The general strategy of the study has been to move away fromthe large-scale survey to intensive examination of a selected group.The Primary VI children from three schools with specific controlledcharacteristics which draw children from a Wide i.ange of socialbackground were selected for study. The children were given abattery of three types of tests; intelligence tests, attainment tests,and scales assessing attitudes to various aspects of the school. Thehome environment was investigated by a combination of question-naire and semi-structured interview conducted with parents.
The major aims of the research are firstly to provide a moredetailed description of variation -in parental influences than surveystudies can present, and secondly to attempt to isolate some of themore immediately effective factors related to academic achievementat this .age, The second aspect has proved more difficult thanexpected due to the einergence of complex variations in the patternsof relationships between boys and girls and between social classgroups. Unfortunately, breaking clown the sample into groups byboth sex and class simultaneously produces groups so small as to!mike analysis difficult, However, the results should show that vari-ables which overall are found to be related to achievement need tobe interpreted in relation to specific groups of children.
Subject Choice in Secondary Schools, with Special Referenceto a Shortage of Suitably Qualified Applicants for SciencePlaces in Universities (Professor j Butcher)
After a temporary discontintiation resulting from circumstancesdescribed in the Council's report for 1969-7o, work on this projecthas been resumed and a report of the analysis of :.he Ibllow-up is inpreparation.
11-grade performance is known Ibr 897 of the 1161 pupilsoriginally tested. It is also known that 297 of these pupils went onto Edinburgh or Heriot-Watt Universities.
Analyses of two sorts have been carried out by Mr H Pont (whowas associated with the project from its inception until 1969):
Tut.: sc.o.yristi couNclu. Fog.
Using factor scores on the previously identified ScienceOrientation Factor (based entirely on data before any subjectchoice),' "at risk" groups have been identified and theirperformance at 0-grade and H-grade compared with "non-risk" subjects.
(2) Criterion groups (based on 0-grade and H-grade performanceand Faculty choice) have been compared on a number ofvariables. Regression analyses to determine the extent towhich choice and level of performance can be predicted frompre specialisation data have been carried'ot.
From School to Work (Professor M P Carter and Mrs J Hayst ad)This project investigates the process of occupational choice and
entry amongst Junior Secondary School pupils.The final stage of data collection has been completed. This con-
sisted of finding out which jobs or further education establishmentswere entered by those subjects who stayed at school until thesummer of 197. These children stayed at school for five years inorder to take either more 0-grade or a few H-grade ScottishCertificate of Education examinations. In fact, because of theshortage of employment in Aberdeen, some of this cohort went backto school.
Most of the data has now been analysed, although some of thetape-recorded interview material requires attention. Very briefly,the analysis suggests:
) Not every ,Junior Secondary School pupil makes a "choice"of school-leaving age, chiefly because many are not "en-couraged" by their teachers to stay at school beyond theminimum leaving age. However, the majority are only tooaware of the implications their lack of educational qualifica-tions will have on their future job entries.The distinction between children leaving school aged 15years and those remaining beyond the minimum leaving ageis an important variable in the kind of jobs chosen from theirsecond year to the time they actually leave school, theinformation they possess about these jobs, and their statedreasons for choosing them.
(3) The sources of most of the respondents' information aboutthe jobs they chose, throughout the period of the research,Ivas their parents. However, as one would expect, the YouthEmployment Officer and teachers assumed increasing import-ance as the respondents' leaving date approached.
(4) Many children did not engage in any concerted effort to gainoccupational information, to explore possible opportunities,or to find a vacancy in the kind of work for which they hadexpressed a preference. Statements made in interviewssuggested that they easily accepted the fact that they could
REsEAKcil IN EDUCATION
not enter their chosen job and would, in many cases, acceptthe first one offered to them.
(5 ) This was supported by the finding that many respondentsentered jobs for which they had not, on questionnairesbetween the second year and the end of the terms immediatelypreceding their entering work, expressed any desire to enter.
Non4lntellectual Factors in Secondary School Success (MrL Maciver and Mr T W Fyfe)
The draft report of this research has now been completed, andedited, by a committee representing the Scottish Education Depart-ment, the Scottish Council for Research in Education, and DundeeCollege of Education.
By courtesy of the Scottish Council for Research in Education,the period of employment of our research assistant has been extendedfor a period of 6 months to enable finalisation of the project,including major revision of the draft report,
School InvolvementAs school involvement was an important dimension of our survey
design, certain features seem worthy of emphasis at this stage:(a) After an interval of two years from the completion of data-
collection from schools, some 25 schools were represented atthe final meeting of the Investigation Research committeein March.
(b) Considerable interest was expressed in the main researchfindings, while the necessity of communicating these findingsto teachers in simple language was stressed-
Cc) It was decided, with the consent of the College Principal, toplace in every participating school one copy of the mainresearch report, and 6 copies of a pamphlet-length "plain-language" report. This policy may well represent a significantmeans of disseminating research information to classroomteachers.
Research FindingsSome of the main findings of the investigation may be sum,
marised thus:(a) Placement on transfer in Certificate or Non-certificate
Courses was, not unexpectedly, a major determinant of0-grade chances.
(b) The socio-economic category of parental employment isshown to correlate significantly with 0-grade results, butnot as highly as several other more specific factors.
(c) Measures of pupil and parental educational aspiration, iewhether or not the pupils, and/or their parent wished to do0-grades, correlated significantly with 0.grade results, This
TI SCOVEISI II F
information was obtained when the pupils were in Secondary2. I t is significant that such a factor correlates more highlywith 0-grade performance than does the conventional crudemeasure of socio-economic class.
(d) The analysis of staffing conducted in some of the schoolssuggests that high qualifications of staff, and stability ofstaffing within a school (or in pupil experience, having fewerdifferent teachers for a subject) are both conducive to better0-grade performance, while length of teaching experiencedid not seem to effect performance consistently.
Publication of Research ReportPrinting facilities, now available from Dundee College or Educa-
tion Learning Resources Dep tment, will prove invaluable insupplying participating schools r ill research information. It is ourintention, also, to seek to pub'ish a report of intermediate length,and some more specialised articles for professional journals.
Sociological Factors Asso elated with Irregular SchoolAttendance among Secondary School Children (Dr S Mitchell)
In the summer of 1971 the study was completed through inter-views with two matched groups of good and bad attenders drawnfrom our original sample. The bad attenders comprised thosechildren in second and third year classes who had been absent onmore than forty occasions during the term covered by the originalsurvey. The good attenders, all of whom had less than five absencesrecorded, were individually matched to the bad attenders by age,sex, school and class within school. Two main differences werefound to exist. First the good attenders, particularly the girls, weremore likely to remain in full-time education after statutory school=leaving age. Secondly, the bad attenders seemed to have moretrouble in adjusting to work than the good attenders, This wasparticularly marked among the boys where 58% of the poorattenders were found to have changed jobs at least once sinceleaving school compared with 28% of the good children. The poorattenders also accounted for twelve out of the thirteen young peoplewho were unemployed at the time of interview. An article concern-ing the project, which appeared in Education in the North, 1972, isreprinted on pp. 52-62.
Arithmetic/Mathematics Sets in Primary School (Mr JMaxwell)
This pilot investigation is now complete and a report was pub-lished in the Scottish Education Journal on 24th December 1971. Theinquiry encountered various unforeseen difficulties. The P2, P4 andP6 classes of six schools in the Border counties participated, andthough the programme was not completed equally i all schools,
RESI {aRCII IN ,..13 :ATION
certain tentative conclusions can be drawn. A syllabus on Sets,containing twelve terms to be demonstrated and defined and sevensymbols, was drawn up and taught by the teachers of the threeclasses referred to. The children were tested after a few weeks, andteachers' opinions invited. If a standard of 80% of the pupilsanswering each test question is taken as a standard, there were fewquestions which did not reach this standard in at least one school.The concept of intersection of sets gave difficulty throughout. Apartfrom this, there seems no evidence that the mathematics of setscannot be taught to children successfully in any of the three classlevels used in the inquiry. Teachers' observations varied; therewere some indications that teachers tended to under-estimate theability of their pupils to learn the material.
Sociological Study comparing the Educational and CareerPatterns of Scottish and English Graduates (Professor R KK.elsall)
This study owes its origins to the National Survey of totioGraduates, of whom 870 men and 560 women took a first degree inScotland. At the same time some 103 men and women whosepermanent homes Were in Scotland graduated elsewhere in Britain.The present inquiry involves detailed study of this Scottish com-ponent of the national sample.
The research falls into three main sections; firstly a comparison ofthe social, educational and occupational characteristics of men andwomen who graduated from Scottish and English universities in1960; secondly an investigation of the characteristics of graduatesschool teaching in Scotland and of those doing other types of workthere; the third area of inquiry involves the preparation of datapertaining to tq6o graduates which will be used for a comparisonwith material collected during the course of the Council's "Assess-ment for Higher Education" project.
Some seven months after the inception of the inquiry the com-puter has been programmed for the extraction of the necessary datawhich were stored on magnetic tape during the course of the largerinvestigation, tables have been requested and, for the most part,have been analysed. Consultations are now going ahead regardingco-operation with those concerned with the Council's "Assessmentfor Higher Education" project.
The next few months will be devoted to the writing up of the .
results of the investigation and to the preparation of a final ireport.
The Attainments of Students following SCE and GCE Coursesin Further Education Colleges (Mr A j Hastie)
This project involves the investigation of students in Colleges ofFurther Education in Glasgow, with a view to establishing theimportance of personality characteristics, personal circumstances,
'1`111;. tit:tT1 "I`rtitt 1..(RINCII. I tilt
nature of previous education and age in their success in SCE andGCE examinations and in their subsequent and career achievements.
During October of last year 151 day and 144 evening students,drawn from three FE Colleges in GlasgoW, and 15 other examina-tion candidates were studied. All in filled in a 23-item questionnairewhich requested information about their personal and educationalbackground and. motivation. Nearly all of these also completed theEysenck Personality Inventory (13) and AH4 test of general in-telligence. 145 of the day students also completed the APUVocabulary Test.
A parallel sample of 228 school pupils drawn from S4 and S5years of six comprehensive schools in Glasgow completed the sametests and answered a modified form of the questionnaire.
The scoring of the tests and processing of the other informationhas been completed and it is now possible to identi:'y and describea number of groups within the sample in terms of age, sex, maritalstatus, social class as defined by (a) father's and (b) own or husband'soccupation, and educational background. Work is proceedingrelating the students' scores in the three tests to these groups andcomparing them with norms for other groups.
When SCE and GCE results become available during thesummer, correlations will be sought between examination successesand the sociological, psychological and educational factors alreadystudied. Ultimately, however, the object of the research is theestablishment of the relationship between these factors and the longrange of achievements of the students in institutions of higher educa-tion or in their career advancement.
Individual Differences and Computer-assisted Instruction(Dr ,J A M Howe)
During the school year 197o-71, boys from two Edinburghschools took part in a computer-assisted instruction experiment inGerman and Latin. A study of the boys' expectations about CAI,and the changes in their attitudes towards it during the experi-mental period, was an integral part of the experiment. The mainresearch tool used for the investigation of attitudes was a ratingscale, based on the Semantic Differential technique. This consistedof nine pairs of objectives, related to teaching, on which the boysrated four learning situations: doing homework, lessons with theircurrent teacher, lessons with their ideal teacher, and computer-assisted instruction.
All the boys taking part in the CAI experiment completed theserating scales before the experiment began, half-way through it, andwhen it was completed. Their form-mates completed the samerating scales before and after the experiment, and thus acted as acontrol group for the participants. During the experiment, the boyswere also given questionnaires covering aspects of their more general
ESEAIICII IN E.I.KICATIC)N 29
attitudes to academic work, their individual work- style, and somepersonality measures.
The main conclusions were:t. Pupils prefer CAI in a school subject they enjoy, and when he
teacher of the subject is liked.2. Overall attitudes to CAI declined slightly relative to human
teaching over the two terms, from a very positive expectationto a more neutral position.
3. The pupils' main reservations were that they could not con-tribute their own ideas, or argue with the system. This suggeststhat dialogue systems will be more popular with some.
4, Girls appeared to be more apprehensive about CAI, but wehave not been able to study this in detail so far.
5. The majority of participants felt that CAI had helped them toimprove their performance in the language taught, and abouthalf the sample said that taking part in the experiment hadincreased their liking of the subject in class.
LIAISON WITH OTHER ORGANISATIONS AND CONSUL-TATIVE SERVICES UNDERTAKEN BY THE COUNCIL'SSTAFF 197i-72The DirectorPapers "Special Education in Canada"Conference for
Teachers of Handicapped Children, Jordanhill Collegeof Education (t ith March 1972).
Corr crew Council of EuropeColloquium of Directors ofParticipation Educational Research Organisations (toth-12th Nov-
ember 1971).Council of Europe Ad Hoc Committee for EducationalResearch Annual Meeting (2oth-21st June 1972).
C'onno es The Educational Research Board of the Social ScienceResearch Council.Standardisation and the Presentation of EducationalResearch Projects and Results (9th March 1972).The Open University Advisory Committee on Studiesin Education Research Sub-Committee.
Corm alto The Craigie College Language PrOject.The Edinburgh Reading Test.
Visits German Research Centres (loth -15th April 1972).
The Depute DirectorPapers SORE Research Conference for further Education
Teachers (4th September 1971).
Meeting of Council of International Association forthe Evaluation of Educational Achievement (Buda-pest, 4th-9th October 1971).Meeting of Heads of Curriculum Development Centres(Aberdeen, 12th June 1972).
Committees SCCAPE Research and Development Sub-Committee.Steering Committee on Dundee College of EducationProject, "Non-Intellectual Factors in SecrindarySchool Success".Open University Advisory Committee on Studies inEducation.Advisory Committee on Proposed Science Project atDundee College of Education.
ConferencePartici on
The Assistant DirectorCoVerence Annual Conference of Society for Research in HigherParticipation Education (London, 16th December 1971).
Committees Scottish Certificate of Education Examination Board:English Language and Interpretation Study Group.Scottish Certificate of Education Examination Board:Ad Hoc Committee on an Experimental Examinationin 0-grade English.SED Steering Committee on Reading ResearchProject now being conducted at Olken MargaretCollege, Edinburgh.
Visits Meeting with the Librarian of the University. ofLondon Institute of Education (London, 12th April1972).
SUM
MA
RY
RE
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Bib
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(..r
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Cra
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tere
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Sch
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Men
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Stag
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Inte
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for
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of E
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Nat
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Cou
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His
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Inf
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Bac
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nvir
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Prim
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univ
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Com
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and
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Cos
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971
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.1:
Dr
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1970
.440
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trut
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1969
I 97
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7
1969 966
1965
1967
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2 ye
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2 ye
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4 ye
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4 ye
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6 ye
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year
s
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Prof
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Hay
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and
1967
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Prof
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Has
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2993 15
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THE SCOTTISH Goos:cn, port
G 'TS FROM EDUC:t TIUNAL AUTHORITIES FOR YEAR TO 1 5TH MA1972
Aberdeen£243'48Dundee
527'00Edinburgh roi6.88Glasgow
1404.00Aberdeenshire2o7.25
Angus .132.5o
Argyll .71-o0Ayrshire
579'45I3antTshire67-2o
Berwickshire_ .3o.00Bute .1667Caithness47'15Clackmannan 67.77
Dumfriesshire127.25
Dunbartonshirc414-00East Lothian . 8038Fife492.22
Inverness -shire142.80Kincardineshire36.00
Kirkcudbrightshire 48-00Lanarkshire .1o6200
Midlothian41599Moray and Nairn . 9o-ooOrkney
24.00Peeblesshire .
17'54Perth and Kinross . 173.80Renfewshire558'74Ross and Cromarty 89ao
Roxburghshire5478Selkirkshire 3045Stirlingshire
321-00Sutherland 20.50West Lothian
i 88.93Wigtownshirc
44'85Zetland24m00
Total '8868-59
RESEARCH IN EDUCATION 3-
GRANTS FROM LOCAL AND DISTRLCT ASSOCIATIONS OF THE EDCL
TIONAL INSTITUTE OF SCOTLAND FOR YEAR TO 5TH MAY 1972
AberdeenBanffshireBerwickshire ,
CaithnessClackmannanCowal .
Deer .
DunbartonshireDumfriesDundeeEast Lothian .
East SutherlandEdinburghGariochKincardineshireKintyreKirkcudbrightshireLewis .
LochrynesideLoin and MorvernMidlothian .
Moray and Nairn ,
OrkneyRoxburghshireSelkirkshire .
ShetlandShetland North IslesStirlingshire .
West LothianWigtownshire
/:moo5.005-ao
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I 'oo5-oo5-ao6.005-ao
too3'150-50600
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Total L'14.7 o(3
34
CoyritinuTioNs FROM GRANT-Amu) S000oLS FOR .YEAR TO 1519MAY 1972
Dundee High School- . - .4.:24.84
George Heriot's Trust . . . 1250Hutehesons' Grammar School : . . 5-00Marr College. . . . . i8mooMerchant Company Schools . . . 90 00Robert Gordon's College
- - '2458St Aloysius' College . . . 85oSt Joseph's College, Dumfries . . . 500John Watson's . . . 15-oo
Total L203 '42
CONTRIDU HONS FROM OTHER SOURCES
Scottish Infant Mistresses' Association LtomooAssociation of Teachers in Religious Education , 5.00
Total ,
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A DEFENCE OF EDUCATIONIth RE' I I
PREVIOUSLY PUBLISHEDARTICLES RELATING TOCOUNCIL PROJECTS ORWRITTEN BY COUNCIL STAFF
IN DEFENCE OF EDUCATIONAL RESEARCHbyW BRYAN Doc:KRELL
Director, Scottish Council for Research in Education
Lord James was reported recently as advocating more thought andless research in the Humanities and Social Sciences. In a period ofrapid educational change the teacher might well echo Lord James'concern about the contribution made to practic, i)y "research". Isthe growing list of books, journals and reports of educationalresearch really contributing to an understanding of educationalissues or should these resources he diverted to other activities?
Attractive as Lord _lames' dichotomy is at first, it seems a strangeantithesis on second reading. Thought and research are surely notalternatives. All research requires the classical educational virtuesof imagination, reflection, and verification. Research has rightlyemphasised the importance of verification often to the neglect of theother two cdmponents. There is sometimes ,a tendency to confusethe mere accumulation of data, an undigested mass of facts, withknowledge. Complications of statistics, the prep_ aradon of tables ofenrolment or costs, arc not research, but may well provide the in-dispensable basis for research. Research cannot contribute to the
A OFFFNCF OF Ent ATI AL RLSEARGII 39
current discussions about comprehension and selection or thedesinibility of educational priority areas without the facts. Not can itcontribute without the imagination to ask the right questions andthe appropriate reflection on the answers provided.
The stress on the rigorous statistical verification of hypotheses isan essential aspect of research. At the recent leaving certificateexamination in Paris, the "bachot", the secondary school students ofParis were offered as a subject for disc -fission "tout raisormenentvigourettx est-il de nature mathamatique?" While that may beputting it rather strongly the educational researcher will rightlyinsist that, until it has been verified, an opinion is an opinion andshould not he confused with a fact. He may continue to believe thatthis or that way of teaching is the most effective, but until he hasdemonstrated that it is, he must distinguish between his own con-victions and incontestible evidence.
If there is a tendency to confuse research with "data-mongering"there is equally a tendency to confuse speculation, particularlyspeculation related to experience, with research. The case study of aparticular school which combines information about that schoolwith speculation about the effects of, for example, the groupingprocedures practised in it can be enlightening. However, until thespeculation is turned into precise statements which can be shown tohave a general validity, it is not research. Teachers need not bedeterred from publishing their impressions. They should be careful,though, not to mislead their readers into thinking that their guessesare facts. This danger is particularly marked in "action research"which is often more action than research. A few statistical tables donot transform opinion into evidence. One of the earliest andpossibly most influential books on the organisation of secondaryeducation pointed out that the "evidence" in its figureS and tableswas not statistically significant and therefore was not a basis forgeneralisation. Unfortunately, this caution was left to a note at theback of the book which many readers seem to have missed.
This confusion about the research status of much educationalwork would not matter if it were not the purpose of virtually alleducational study to affect practice, either immediately or in thelong run. It is hard to imagine any study in education, certainly anysociological or psychological study, which would not have implica-tions for practice. In the less practical discipEnes the educationalhistorian records the past and helps us thereby to understand howour present institutions arose. and the purposes they were meant toserve; and the philosopher helps to define concepts not as part of anarid word game, but to clarify thought about important educationalissues.
S TUDENTS AT RISK OF FAILURE
The contribution that research can make to important educationalissues is always limited. There may not be time to conduct anadequate study on some important issue. There arc restrictions onthe experiments that we can make with children. Researchers inthe United States were recently reprimanded for trying to hold upthe implementation of education reform in the interest of research.Schools must adopt the procedures which seem likely to be besteven though they will disrupt the researcher's carefully controlleddesign. We cannot hold back from children the programme whichseems likely to be best for them.
In any case, the educational researcher often has to bring in theScottish verdict, "not proven". The contribution of any specificvariable to the long-term outcomes of education is marginal. Forexample, if the question for research is the desirability of beginninginstruction in a second language at 8 or i i and the criterion ismastery of that language at 16, the contribution of a relatively shortperiod of weekly instruction for the years between 8 and it is likelyin the long run to be slight. The advantages of early instruction arelikely to be most noticeable in the early years and fade as factorslike the attitude of the pupil and his family, the competence of theteachers, and opportunities for language instruction and practice ofthe language have opportunity to assert themselves. This com-plexity of the processes resulting in any important educational
outcome has been one of the factors leading to the lack of crucialand definitive studies.
In any case, educational policy is dependent on factors other thanthe findings of the researcher. Values play a major role in alleducational decision-making. While values are rightly a necessarybasis for educational decision-making, the danger is that educationalresearch will be misinterpreted to fit these values. An example isthe generalisations about streaming. Streaming is disliked by manypeople of liberal, progressive inclinations and so there is muchcriticism of this form of school organisation no matter what itsadvantages. There is a great deal of evidence that children in thelower streams, particularly of secondary schools, become disaffectedand antagonistic, It is by no means clear, however, that thisantagonism is a function of the school organisation and that merelychanging the organisation would contribute to the solution of thesepupils' problems.
Since educational research, good educational research, is in-evitably limited and as far as the major issues are concerned itsimplications are tentative, would the harassed teacher be well-advised to follow Lord James' advice and pay less attention toresearch? Clearly not. In education more than in most fields we arecommitted to the belief that knowledge is preferable to ignorance.
ST 15K e;rt rAit,uutE
While in education we might want to avoid phrases like "researchshows" for research rarely shows anything definitive, research canmake an essential contribution. The map that the educationalresearcher can provide is incomplete. There are many unexploredregions and many mistaken guesses, but, given adequate support,the researchers can reduce those areas of ignorance and provideinformation which cannot usurp the role of thought but can providea sounder basis for educational decision.
(This article first appeated in the ,Times L:ducational Supplement Scotland on3otli,jtme Inm Permission to reprint the article is gi atelidly acknowledged.)
IDENTIFYING AND INTERVIEWING SCIENCE STUDENTSAT RISK OF FAILUREby1) E HonatE and E EAmANChemistry Department, University of DundeeIntroductionRecently Heywood (1971) has written a very full account of studentwastage. The present study was designed to identify students at riskof failure and to evaluate remedial action.
Nisbet and Welsh (1966) have pointed out that an early warningsystem based on the December class examination results can he ofhelp in identifying potential failures, and it has long been thepractice in Dundee for the Faculty of Sciencelo arrange for Advisersof Studies to interview such students. Recently, the conducting ofthese interviews has been taken over by a sub-committee of theFaculty Board, and the research reported here was performed inconjunction with this sub-committee.
The Robbins report on Higher Education (1963) has pointed outthat 82% of students drop out for academic reasons, but this doesnot mean merely lack of ability. 'There are many factors whichcontribute to lack of academic success.
The purpose of this research was to identify factors which maycontribute _to the failure of students, concentrating on those factorswhich might be changed ds a result of interviewing students whowere it risk". Some months after the interviews the students wereagain questioned to see if there had been any long-lasting changein these factors. In the meantime efforts were made at the departsmental level to remedy deficiencies which had been revealed byexaminations and by interviews,
MethodsIn November 1969, first year students in the Faculty of Science
at Dundee were given a class test in each of their (three) subjects.For most of the subjects, this test consisted of a number of multiple
STUDENTS Al' RISK or FAILURE
choice or short answer items. This new test was in addition to thecustomary Deceinber and March class examinations, and its purposewas to pick out as early as possible those students who were at risk01 failing at the end of the session.
Since students have their studies discontinued if they pass infewer than tWO SIII*Citi out of throe, the policy in general WaS ininterview students WhO had leSS than 40% for two subjects in theNovember tests. Similar criteria were used for the December andMarch examinations, the students being inteVieWed by two senior(not professional) members of stall' in November, January andApril. Twenty - three SWCICI1ES WCIT interviewed in November, afurther 28 (as Wdl as the previous 23) in January, and to more inApril (together with a re-interviewing of the 28 first seen inDecember),
In the interviews, it was hoped to discover any factors relevantto the poor performance of the student. 'F he general theme was thatthe Faculty was anxious about students vlio were "failure risks".The students were accordingly encouraged to work hard andeffctively, and to seek help at once if they were itt difficulties.' Wherestudents seemed to be ruining their own chances by insufficient work(and they were often unaware of this), then it was deliberatelypointed out that students with similar terminal examination resultshad open failed to pass the degree examinations (where 5o% is thepass mark). Apart from this, the atmosphere of the interview wasintended to be encouraging, 'and complaints and difficulties weresympathetically dealt with. In about go% olcases, at least one causeof weakness was discovered, and suggestions were made as to how adifficulty might he overcome. Most students appeared to accept theinterview as helpful and appreciated that someone was willing todiscuss their difficulties:-
The information on the student's background, study, motivation,etc, was derived from two questionnaires given to first year studentsin the Faculty. The first was completed by 165 students in Nov-ember 1g69 within a week of the November tests. T %here was tooreturn of questionnaires completed -under supervision at practicalclasses. The second questionnaire was completed in ,May 1970 by132 of the group '(8 had witlidiawn), mostly belblv a lecture and, forothers, by appointment with one of the mvestigatm.s at the Uvcrsity Department or Education.
The first questionnaire began with a number of backgroundquestions, essentially limited to factors which might be relevantacademically and to facts concerning study conditions and hoursof work.
STUDENTS AT RISK OF I ii i!RI'
Following this were sixty statements with which the students were,"tisked to `mice or disagree. These sixty statements could be dividedinto Ibur Sets From which scales could be derived for work habits,motivation, adequacy and personality. Forty - flan' of the sixty hadbeen used in a previous questionnaire given to nearly loon firstyear chemistry students at Scottish universities (Hoare and Yeoman,.1971a, I)) and these statements were chosen for the present question-naire because answers to them had been shown to correlate with thepass/fail chalices or the students in the First I3Sc chemistry degreeexaminations.
The "work habits" statements were mostly concerned with organ-isation and aptitude for informal study. "Motivation" statementsranged from expression of ambitions to opinions about oniversitystudies. "Adequacy" was regarded as competence to cope satis-factorily with university life and the new teaching and learningenvironment. Its items included criticisms of the courses and expres-sions of peisonal difficulties. The "personality" statements weremostly chosen from those used by Professor Entwistle and includedroughly equal numbers used for extraversion/introversion andneuroticism scales. Essentially this scale could be defined as thecombination of those personality attitudes which correlated withpass /1.311 chances.
The second (May) questionnaire was different horn the first inthat there seemed no necessity to repeat the background information
.ept hours and evenings wot'ked), Since no great change wouldbe expected in personality, the relevant statements were also omittedin the questionnaire, together with a few othet.s. 'Fhe remainingforty statements were supplemented by a further thirty-five, theopportunity being taken to test fOrther statements with a view tosubdividing the scales of work habits, motivation and adequacy.
The questionnaires were intended to be independent of the inter-views, although a few of the statements used in May were derivedfrom opinions expressed by students at interviews. Although, ingeneral, there was an apparent. agreement between the results of thefirst questionnaire and the student weaknesses 'Intuited in theNovember and January interviews, no proper correlation was pos-sible because, in order to maintain the most favourable atmosphereand be of most constructive help to the students, no attempt wasmade to standardise or structure the interviews.
ResultsOf the 165 students, 75' were men, Twenty-eight per cent were
born in 1950, 5o% in 1 151 and 4t,'",/, in 1952 (the rest being older),Thirty-eight per cent were domiciled in Scotland and most of therest in England, Twenty per cent completed university entrancequalifications in the fifth year at a Scottish school, and 18% neededall extra year to complete their qualifications, Eighty per cent of
44 DENTS AT RISK OF !LURE
students with SCE qualifications had followed the modern "alterna-tive" syllabus, but only one or two from England had followed a
. Nuffield course. The English students commonly had A-level passesin Chemistry, Physics and Biology whereas Scottish students hadHigher passes in English, Pure Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry.Previous qualifications were too varied and did not correlatesufficiently well to be used as a predictive device for universityperformance although students with 2 E-grade passes at A-levelhad less than a.50% chance of success.
Most students spent between and 3 hours per week writing uppractical work, and an average of 6 hours on problems and pre-paring for tutorials. On average, students spent a further 6 how s perweek on non-set work, though some, as shown in Table Ia, spentvery little time on this. The changes in these indicated times betweenNovember and May 'for four important groups are shown in Tablelb.
TAIL Rs I. INFOUNIAL WORKING HOURSTABLE Ia. NovasuwR t rit sTIONNAIR17.
% of stadonsors per week Ivenings per week)
0-1 39 o to 6 0-2i,1 -3 45 5 IJ a2 331 -6 12 37 26 4
44 25 afi 5> Itt rr I I t 7 7 6
TAnut lb. Costmalsosi or MAY ANO NOV1114111iR ONIVAIRES
No.% of StudentsP
Increased lime Interviewed and passed 15 26 n 93 46spent Interviewed and failed 20 27 27 36 27by students Not interviewed and passed 90 14 t7 44 27
Not interviewed and failed 5 20 0 20 0
Decreased lime Interviewed and passed 15 46 33 6 6spent Interviewed and failed 22 I3 50 31 4by students Not interviewed and passed 91) 27 33 30 all
Not interviewed and failed 5 tlo Go 0 I on
Time si on P:
0:prat:dealsset problems and tutorialsother (i.e. non-set) worknumber of evenings per week spent mostly working.
TA
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1.1
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sTuDENTs ,vr RISK or :An..tnip:
In grouping the items from the second part of the questionnairesinto scales, it must be ascertained that the scales so produced arefairly homogeneous and each item is making a contribution to thescale to which it is assigned. For the November questionnaire, thiswas shown by correlating each statement with the scale to whichit was assigned, making allowance for its own contribution to thatscale. This indicated that all the items were satisfactory.
For the flirty statements which were common to both quest on-naires and !Orin the basis of the investigation, it was also thoughtuseful to have a cross-comparison: for this, the average score on thescale in the May questionnaire for those students who gave theundesired response to the itern in November was subtracted fromthe average score of those who gave the desired response. In allcases, the items wete clearly contributing to the scale to which theyhad been assigned (in excess of that due to their own inclusion).
In the May questionnaire, the scales were subdivided. The cor-relations between these subscalcs are shown in 'Fable II in the 'bratof product-moment coefficients. The correlations between theNovember scales are also shown.
I will be noted that the correlations between explicit and implicitildequacy and between the subscales of work habits are mostly,highly significant, but the correlations between the motivation sub-scales are poorer and less uniform, though usually neverthelesssignificant. The application subscale is particularly interesting,having the only negative correlations (of border line significance)and seeming to correlate equally with work habits. However, con-sideration of the statementssuch as "It's worthwhile giving upsome leisure time now, Wit helps you to do better in the universityexams" shows that the correlations are not unexpected.
Entwistle and Wilson (197o) have pointed ota that correlations -
between scales or 'study methods' and 'motivation' are to beexpected. The results in Table II shim similar correlations between'work habits' and both 'adequacy' and 'motivation'. There is con-siderable homogeneity in the scales of 'work habits' and 'adequacy',but the 'motivation' scale is clearly less homogeneous.
Essentially, this project was 'applied education' in that thequestionnaires had to be prepared to help solve a poblcim Never-theless, the above analysis shows that the statements included wereall usefill in establishing scales of 'work habits ,.'inotivation' and'adequacy'. Twenty-fonr of the forty statements had already beenshown, itt a previous investigation, to correlate with pass/tailachievements in chemistry at the first year university level. It nowremained to find how good their predictive powers were for thewhole Faculty of Science.
STUD ISK )1? VAI LURK 47
Comparisons'r able III illustrates the predictive powers of the November and
December examinations and the various measures and scales derivedfrom the November questionnaire, The values have been interpolatedgraphically for comparisons of the accuracy of predictions.
The November tests were a success in that, of the 23 studentsinterviewed on the basis of their results, 6 tailed, of the additional28 interviewed in January (as a result of poor performance in theDecember examination), 16 failed or withdrew. Thus the total of51 students identified included 32 of the 42 ultimate finiures orwithdrawals. judging by December marks alone, t I students scoredless than 20% in each of two subjects, and Io of these had theirstudies discontinued. Fifteen out of 18 scoring less than 3o% in eachof two subjects (but not in the previous group) also had their'studicsdiscontinued. However, only of the 18 students scoring less than40% on each of two subjects (and not in the previous groups) wereunsuccessful in obtaining the requisite two passes in June orSeptember.
Tun -filitut,us" were not "predicted" by the November orDecember examinations, but ' of these were identified in March,two more withdrew,- and one was absent from the December andMarch examinations. Thus only IWO thilures were completely tin -predicted, In addition, only one of the ten would have been missed(though a further 15 interviewed) if the qualifying standard hadbeen raised font 40% to 45% for interviews in November orJanuary. Thus it is clear that examinations in November andDecember were adequate to reveal almost all students "at risk" forJune and September degree examinations with an accuracy of 70%for tvo-thirds of the Failures and tio% ror all except one or two.
In most eases, the questionnaire l'evealed at least one weaknesswhich (night have been a cause of failure, but the overall resultswere poorer than those of the examinations (hr the purposes of
't'Ant,l Ill SUCCESS OF VARIOUS NiET1101)S or PREDIOTINC; FAILUR1'. NU1111i1:its (ANDpEituENTA(;it) or, SroDEN.rs trim FAILEo oat WITUOREW IN 9I1R X STUDENTS Al'
Tint 0orro3i or -rim CLASS 1-OR
10 20 '30 4o
November test 7 (70) 12 (60) 17 (57) 22 (55) 25 (50)MUM-6)er eX1111111111d011 9 (90) 18 (90) 15 (B3) 3' (75) 33 (6(i)
Scales Motivation 3 (30) 7 (35) 10 (33) .14 (35) 17(34)Personality 5 (50) 0 (40) 1 2 (40) 15 (37) 18 (36)Volk Habits 6 (60) 10 (5o) 13 (43) 17 (41) =a (41)Adequacy 9 (90) 4 (70) NJ (Go) 21 (52) 25 (59)
TScore 7 (70) 11 (55) 15 (50) 9 (47) 23 (46)I-I.Score 7 (7o) i.2 (Go) Iii (53) 1" (50) '24 WO
48 STUDENTS AT RISK OF FAILURE
prediction Partly this was due to the effect of sonic subscales (seefable IV).
In an attempt to increase the success of the individual scales in this(Erection, the responses to the statements were weighted accordingto the pass rate of chemistry students who had given the sameresponse in the earlier research (Hoare and Ycaman, 1971b).Nominal average values were used for the items not used in theprevious questionnaire. However, this resulted in no increase in theaccuracy of prediction.
Entwistle and Wilson (1970) had achieved greater success. bycombining scales of study habits and motivation. Therefore all60 items were combined, with _weighting as above. This producedthe "H- score" but, as shown in Table III, no increase in accuracy orprediction.
TABLE I V. PREDICTIVE OWER or SOB-SCALER
A B.1Vo :lb Revised Work Habits (13) 752 ri.41 I 2 4I'16
motivation (sante) (t6) To -80 9.93 o.81.1 0 'o6Adequacy (45) 9.2o 6.74 2.46 11-16
Extravcrsion.introversion (5) 2.86 216 t'08 0'02Neuroticism (5) 1'97 1431 (16 0.03
May Adequacy Explicit 4'32 Ito maiImplicit w82 Ii .79Total (12) 71 4 8t) ii
Work Habits Organization (6) 2'95 2 .1 I 0.84 0-14Distraction (6) 2-56 1.15 0.24Study TechniqueIndustry
(6)(6)
2-7q3'41
2.632'44 1-1'97
0.o3o-16
Background (6) a'36 1.59 0.77 o-13Total (30) 14'117 9192 4'15 11'14
Motivation Ambition 3-(;5 2.96 0.69 O. t2Competitiveness 6) 2.68 I .93 0.76Application (6) 344 4.00 -- D 16 D.03Interest (6) 4'36 3'37 11'99 0.17Persistence (6) 41m 3,07 0,93 0.16Total (30) ill-53 15.33 3.21 0.11
Number in sample= 132 (i05 passes, 27 fails).A. number of items in scale orsubscale.B: average score on scale for those who passed, ic, ere allowed to continue
their studies.C: average score on scale for those who failed, le, withdrew or were required
to discontinue their studies.D: difference B-0.E: relative efficiencies of scales
STUD I RISK OF FAILURE 19
An alternative approach is to consider that a particularly weakmark on any scale is more serious than several minor weaknesses.This was taken into account in the T-score. For this, the _studentwas awarded ten points if score was in the bottom tenth of theclass scores on a scale, nine paints if in the bottom ninth (but notbottom tenth) and so on, as far as two points for being in the bottomhalf. This was done for each of the four scales and the total addedtra similar scores for working time and evenings spent working (upto five points each), thus giving a possible total of 5o points for thehighest failure risk. Three students (all of whom failed) had
points_
0-43 whereas 7 (all of whom passed) had scores of o. However, onthe whole this method was no more successful than the previousones, though it did predict some failures that were overlooked bythe other scales.
As has been suggested, the November questionnaire did agree'with the interviews in identifying the weaknesses to which the poorexamination performances might be attributed. In addition, it alsorevealed weaknesses in all ten of the failures not predicted byDecember. Howevei, it would have required interviews for a further4o students if these to were to be included by reason Of theiranswers in the questionnaires.
The questionnaires appeared to be primarily of use in assessingthe effects of the interviews. For this purpose, the December exam-ination results were taken as the best criterion of failure risk. Astudy was therefore made of the eighteen borderline students
Tatn.,4 V. Stoops or Sm.r.c-rau GROOPF or STUMM%
Borderline Borderline Exceptional PredictedAverage Passes Fails Passes Fails
Number AnsweringBoth Questionnaires 13.2 7 6 4 16Adequacy Nov. 54 5-1 33 5.5 4'0May 5.3 5'4 4'8 , 4.5 348Total May 6.7 7'1 5'7 4-8 4'9Work Habits Nov. 5-8 7'3, 4'2 7'3 4'7May
Total may
motivation Nov.
5'4i
,
13'73'27'9
8114'6
9'5
4'0to. t
twtMay 9'0 9-2 8'4 8'4fetal May 17.6 itbo 15'3 17.6 164
Scores on the group of Items continuo to both questionnaires.FTotal May : Frotal of complete scale used in May.Pass, Fail: 'Whether students are allowed to continue their studies.Borderline: Students w %with 30% to 40 in each of two subjects ill December.Exceptional, Predicted; Students with less than 3o% in each of two subjects in
December.
5o sTummrs AT RISK OF FAILURE
(scoring between 30% and 4o% on two subjects) together with thefour students with poorer results who yet passed. All except oneof these students were interviewed in November or January (he wasinterviewed in April).
-For these 22 students, eight of whom failed, the November H-scorearranged 6 failures in the bottom 7 (out of 22) and the T-score all8 failures in the bottom 12. Only 17 completed the May question-naire but as shown in Table V, the adequacy (November only) andwork habits scores were markedly lower for those who subsequentlyfailed (significant at the t % level) and the motivation scores wereslightly lower (insufficient numbers for significance).
At first sight it appears that interviews were having little effectbut this was because changes tended to cancel in giving scale totals.Thus Table VI shows that students have become increasingly awareof the need to work but they apparently find it increasingly difficultto start work in the evenings, fewer read through lecture notes andmore said they could do better if somebody made them work. Theyincreasingly said it was difficult to work where they lived.
Two items may represent success for the interviewing system.There is a correlation between failure and reliance on a week ortwo of concentrated revision and between failure and having plenty
TABLE VI. RESPONSES TO SELECTED ESTIONS (%)
AverageBorderline Borderline Exceptional
Passes Fails Passes'redicted
Fails
No. of Students replying 132 7 6 4 i6Rely on week or two of
concentrated revision 71 (57) 57 (71) ioo (133) 81(91)Read through lecture
notes 24 (48) 43 (57) 17 (33) 50 3o, 13 (38Important to earn
money in at leastone vacation 86 (82) 57 (57) 83) 50 (50) 94 (94)
Slow to start work inthe evenings 72 (6i) 71 (43) inn (Ion) 0 (50) 94 (81)
Seem to have plenty offree time 35 (22) 29 (43) 67 (33) 0 (0) fp (in)
Must work to capacityto pass 67 (59) 86 (71) Inc (ion) 100 (m) 1714 (81)
Wish didn't have to takeat least one course 71 (8°) 57 (71) 100 (83) 50 (75) Hi (81)
Need somebody to makethem work 38 (25) 43 (29) 83 (67) 75 (0) 62 (31)
Difficult to work wherethey live 38 (28) 43 (14) 67 (u) 50(25) 50(31)
Figures in brackets represent answers in November.Other figures are for answers in May.
IS AT RISK OP FAILURE 51
of free time. There are also significant differences between scores ofstudents who subsequently passed and those who subsequentlyfailed.
There is also the evidence shown in Tz-hle Ib that 14 out of 15students who were interviewed and passed had increased their work-ing hours whereas only 8 out of 2,4 who failed d done so. Theimportance of working for a sufficient number or hours in non -formal study Ivas stressed at interviews, and students (at a later date)'were willing to attribute their increased work to the effect of theinterview, This is in accord with the work of Entwistle and Entwistle(1q7o) who showed that the number of hours worked, motivationand study habits all gave a correlation with achievement in thedegree examination, Similarly, Maclay (1 9(8) has reported thatthere was high failure rate Ibr students who worked for less thanten hours per week (outside formal instruction).
No comparison was possible with previous years, except withrespect to failure rates for students with similar entrance qualifica-tions or similar results in the December examinations. These cor-relations showed that the failure rate might have been 2-3% higherif no interviews had taken place in '968-69 and 1969 -70.
ConclusionsIt is clear from the records of the Faculty of Science that Decem-
ber terminal examination results were very effective in predictingpossible failure in the following June and September degreeexaminations; students with poor results (less than 30% in twosubjects) had no more than a 15% chance of continuing theirstudies beyond first year. November tests were sufficiently accurateto make diagnosis in November worthwhile.
While the questionnaires, intended to assess such attributes asadequacy, work habits and motivation, were able to indicate causesof failure, they were less effective' in predicting failure than theDecember examinations. The questionnaires were useful in establish-mg that, for borderline students (according to the Decemberexaminations), those with the better work habits were much morelikely to pass, ie gross inadequacy was a primary cause of failure,but, if' the inadequacy was small, good work habits were a decisivefactor.
The group of students who were interviewed and subsequentlypassed were outstanding in that they almost all increased their hoursof non set work. There is good reason for believing that the inter-views helped to bring about this increase in working hem's.
Students "at risk" of failure were made very aware of their needto work to 'capacity but, as with warnings about smoking, the effecton habits was temporary and nearly 9o% of those who failed reliedmostly on a week or two of concentrated revision. Only 37% ofthose who passed end were "at risk") relied on such concentrated
AtisitNTEr.s
revision but t is noteworthy that the average figure for the classwas 71 c%
1 t is clear that many students were taking at least one subjectreluctantly and that es,7a tuition was not a remedy if motivation wasabsent. The importance of motivation in student SUCCeSS teaslighted by a few cases (eg where a girl student had found a veryattractive fiat for the next year) when the motivation suddenlyimproved and the student's study habits and results were corres-pondingly changed.
It seems that if further progress is to he made in remedial action,universities will have to concentrate on improving motivation. Inthis respect the action of such universities as the Open Universityand Aberdeen University in employing counsellors can be viewedwith interest and approbation.
AcknowledgmentsWe gratefully acknowledge a grant from the Scottish Council for
Research in Education. We are indebted tri the Dean. and FacultyBoard of Science of the University of Dundee ror their support ofthis project and to the Faculty Interviewing Sub-Committee fortheir co-operation and help in arranging the administration of thequestionnaires. We would also like to express our thanks to theDepartMent of Education of the University of Dundee, for facilitiesand help throughout the project.
ReferencesENrwlsILl, N J and ENTsvIsmg, I) (107o). Relationships between personality,
study methods and academic performance. Br. y. Educ. Psyrhal., 4o, 132.ENTWISTLE, NJ and lifu.SCINt 1) 970, Study Methods and academie peribrm-
am, Universities Quarterly, 24, 147,Mr wool) 1 (1971). A report on student wtistage. Utticer.vities Quarterly, 25 189,FloArts, 1) E and 'ft:ASIAN, EJ (1971a). The Scottish first }e t1 chemistry student,
Scottish Educational Studies,Homo:, D E and YEAMAN, L,l 971b): Factors related to NUeCeSS in firm year
chemistry at Scottish universities, Submitted for publication.NIAtmAr, I (1968). A random sample or university graduates, Unicet.sities Ofiarierty,
23, flu.Nnorr, I) and WteAmi, J (1966). Predicting student perfounaww. Universitie
Quarterly. 20, 468.RIAMINS, C ll (1963). Higher Education (Report), I .ondim (HMSO).
(This artick first appeared in the Universities Quarterly Autumn 1(J71, Per-mission to reprint has been given by the editor and publishers, and is gratelitilyacknowledged.)
THE ABSENTEESbySHEILA Mrrtitlt ti.t,Senior Lecturer in Sociology, University of StirlingJust how compulsory is compulsory education? "l'his is one of thequestions which must be of considerable interest to educationauthorities, teachers and pupils when the whoa-leaving age is
THE "rrEs 53
raised in the autumn of this year. How far will school attendancesdrop among the adolescents undergoing involuntarily that extrayear at school? Considerable attention is clearly being devoted todevising programmes of work which will encourage the youngsters'co-operation and interest ; probably efforts are also being made todevise methods of ensuring attendance by using negative sanctionsagainst offenders. We can only speculate about the possible outcomeof an event which has not yet occurred.
Furthermore, one of the problems about absence from school isthat, though far from uncommon, it is a relatively undocumentedaspect of child behaviour. Where detailed studies have been carriedout they have tended to concentrate on the most severe cases and,in particular, on those children who have been selected for psy-chiatric or psychological attention because of pr or persistenttruancy or because their absence was attributed to psycho-neuroticfactors (le school phobia). Such cases have been described in detailelsewhere (Tyerman, 1968; Hersoy, 1960; Kahn and Nursten, 1964).
The present paper deals with the wider field of absence as awhole, examining some of the educational and personal character-istics a children who fail to attend school and particularly of thosewhose absence appears to contain a voluntary element and hencecan be seen as avoidable. The findings it presents may proyide sonicfoundations, however slight, !Or estimating the effect on attendancepatterns of the raising of the school-leaving age.
MethodsThe study %vas based on the analysis of the attendance records Ibr
the autumn tel of 1969 of pupils attending seven secondaryschools in one education area of Central Scotland. The schoolsselected consisted of
(a) two sets of paired secondary schools, tine selective, one non-selective, which drew their pupils from the same districtoneset pertaining to a highly industrialised area, the other to acounty town and its surrounding villages;
(h) two comprehensive schoolsone in a rural area, the other ina more mixed industrial-mining-rural setting;
(e) one junior secondary type or school in another urban area.In each case coverage was limited to children who were below
statutory school-leitving age at the beginning of the term since itwas felt that those who stayed on at school voluntarily would differfrom those who were there compulsorily, both in their attendancepatterns and in their attitude to school.Extent of Absence
In all, the data provided us with lamination concerning approxi-mately 3600 children of whom only about one-fifth had perfectattendance records For the relevant term. Of those who had absencesrecorded, just over hall' had lost only to or fewer half-day sessions
54 THE A BS E NT E ES
equivalent to one school week or less) during the term. At the otherextreme, q% of the children had been absent on more than 4ooccasions (le had lost the equivalent of at least one month s SCing). . The average number of sessions lost by both boys and girls laybetween 15 and 16 half-days. This is the overall picture but clearlythere vciT differences between schools and the absence rate of theselective high schools was round to be only hair of that of the non-selective schools drawing their pupils from the same area. Thehighest absence rate (ie total absences as a percentage of totalpossible attendances) occurred in one of the junior secondary typeschools whery it reached 130/,', among second and third year pupils.This school was then housed in rather out-of-date and overcrowdedconditions, had recently suffered sonic administrative difficultiesbecause of the illness and subsequent death of the headmaster, anddrew its pupils inter a/ia 110M one "problem" housing estate. Noother school had an absence rate of over to%.
The longer a child stays at school, the more likely lie is to beabsent. Within each school, attendance was highest among the firstyear pupils and in all cases, except one of the high schools, it droppedquite markedly by the second and third year. Thus perfect attendancewas recorded for 29% of boys and 25% of girls in the first year, bythe second year, this had dropped to 23% and 19% respectively;and by the third only 21% of boys and 14% of girls maintained fullattendance. The proportion of children With 31 or more absencesrecorded, however, doubled among the girls from 70,4, of the firstyear to 14% of those in the third year and among the boys rosefrom 8% in the first year to t5% in the third year.
The level of absence, therefore, appears to increase as the childgets older, though it is true that the number of very bad attenders,that is those who Were absent more than Go occasions, seemed lessin the third year than in the secondpossibly because sanctionshad been appliedand this meant that the absence rate for theschool remained relatively constant between the second and thirdyear pupils.
Reasons for AbsenceThe decreasing proportion of children achieving perfect attend-
ance and the increasing number with moderately poor attendancerecords as they got older was of some interest since one would -notexpect an increased liability to illness in this age group (Bransby,1951; Shepherd el al, 1971). We therefore attempted to examinenot only the extern absence but also its cause. A pilot study of'parents' "notes" showed clearly that any classification or analysisby outsiders (such as the investigators) would be extremely un-reliable since it ryas quite impossible for us to assess their validity;medical certificates signed by a doetor were, understandably, rarefor short absences.
THE ABSF,N1 55
We therefore relied on the judgments of those who taught thechildren by asking them to make an assessment of the usual reasonsfor each child's absence using a standard list consisting of severeillness, mild illness, apparent illness (for less clear-cut causes),helping at home, trivial reasons and no satisfactory reason given.The results are summarised in Table L
FABLE 1. TEACHERS' ENT OF REASONS poR ABSENCE.
Reasons fur Absence
Genuine illnessApparent illnessHelping at homeTrivial or unsatisfactory reasons
Percentage of those withabsences during the term
Boys Girls74 Go
247 12
24 21
Medical reasons only (including apparent illnNon-medical reasons onlyMixed medical and non-medical reasons
7112 iI
I7 17
NoiwCategories in the top part of the table are not mutually exclusive and sototal more than t00% (e.g. a child can be shown both as suffering from genuineillness and as helping at home).
Here it can be seen that the majority of children who were absentowed this wholly or in part to illness. Even if we exclude those whoseabsence is attributed to "apparent" rather than genuine illness,50% of the boys and 56% of the girls were still recorded as beingabsent only for medical reasons. These, then, can be seen as the un-avoidable absentees. Even here, though, there is reason for doubtsince the difference between a medical and a non-medical excusefor absence may lie in the honesty of the parent rather than in thestate of the child. But, accepting reasons at their face value, whatof the t 2% whose absence was for purely non-medical reasons? Thebulk (86%) of this group fell into the category of those whose absencewas for trivial or unsatisfactory reasons and such reasons also con-tributed to the absence records of 85% of the boys and Go% of thegirls in the group who were absent for mixed medical and non-medical reasons. This is the overall picture for the total sample, butin fact there was surprisingly little variation between be differentage groups or, as Table I shows, between boys and girls.
Attitudes to SchoolOne of the most important questions which can be asked about
prevention of absence from school concerns the extent to which suchabsence reflects adverse attitudes to school. We therefore admini-stered questionnaires to one "matched half" of the children in aneffort to ensure the maximum information with the least disruptionof school time. These questionnaires were based on the NFER
E A14sl NTEEs
schedules (Barker-Lunn, 1966) but were supplemented by additionalitems more suitable tio our age group. We also asked the childrento provide some baiic information about their social background.The responses to each question on the attitude questionnaire werethen compared Ibr six categories of children according to theirabsence patterns dull -1g the first term of the school year, le thosewith (1) no absence; (2) one to five half-day sessions of absence;(3) six to ten sessions; (4) eleven to twenty sessions; (5) twenty-oneto forty sessions; and (6) more than forty sessions. The attitudeitems were each answered on a three-point scale reflecting a positive,intermediate and negative responsefor example, Going to schoolis a waste of time: Yes/Not Sure/No. Applying the chi-square testof significance we then found that the following items revealed ahigh degree of association (1),-,001) with extent of absence. Inother words, for these items the proportion of positive responsesdiminished and the unfavout.able responses increased as the amountof absence during the term increased.
9 o ys
I would leave school tomorrow if I could.I shall leave school as soon as I am allowed to.I should (not) like to go to University/College when I leave
school.I want to start earning a wage as soon as possible.Going to school is a waste of time.I (don't) like school.Doing well at school is (not) important to me.I'm useless at school work.I (don't) think I'm pretty good at school work.When we have tests I (don't) get very good marks.I don't seem able to do anything really well.I find a lot of school work difficult to understand.I'm (not) very good at maths.I (don't) expect to do well in exams.My teachers (don't) think I'm clever.My teachers are (not always) nice to me.
Girls:I would leave school tomorrow if I could.I shall leave school as soon as I am allowed to.I should (not) like to go to University/College when I leave
school.I want to start earning a wage as soon as possible.School is boring.I'm useless at school work.I think I'm (not) pretty good at school work.I find a lot of school work difficult to understand.
THE A II SENTKES 57
People who don't do their school work feel ashamed.Other classes think they're better than us.I have no-one to talk to at break.
Here then we have a clear and consistent picture of the associationof absence with two constellations of attitudes; on one hand theview that school is an imposition to be evaded as soon as possible,on the other hand, particularly among the boys, the pupil's self-conception of lack of academic ability, Among the girls there alsoseems to be an associated sense of social inferiority in some case.being in a position where one is shamed, and scorned by school-mates. The boys, on the other hand, are perhaps more likely to runinto trouble with authority.
These items, of course, constitute only the cases where a highlysignificant clegive of association was demonstrated and it is perhapsalso worth looking at the types of item which showed no relation toincreasing absence. For instance, on the whole, poor attendersshowed no greater anxiety about school than good attenders; norwere there differences between them regarding relationships withteachers or with other pupils; nor, with the exceptions shown forthe girls, was absence positively related to perceived lack of socialstatus within the school.
In this analysis we have, of course, included all types of' absenceand concentrated our attention solely on the number of sessionsmissed. Clearly, however, one might expect that those childrenwhose absence was involuntary (ie the "genuine illness" category)would not necessarily have any more adverse attitudes to school thangood attenders. The data are therefore being re-analysed, takinginto account the cause as well as the duration of absence and, on theresults so far available, it appears likely that this may produce evenmore clear-cut relationships between certain attitudes and voluntaryabsence from school. For instance 57% of the boys whose absenceappeared to be for entirely non-medical reasons said that they wouldlike to start earning a wage as soon as possible compared with only23% of the boys whose absence was solely due to illness. Further-more, within each causal eategen-y the proportion of boys tvantingto start earning as soon as possible rose as the amount of absencerose. On the other- hand, agreement with statements such as "I'museless at school work", which imply a poor self-image, seem muchmore characteristic of the boys absent for mixed medical and otherreasons, Indeed in several of the items there seems to be a tendencyfor the boy_s with poor attendance records for entirely non-medicalreasons to have a better positive self-image and to see themselves,their classmates and even their teachers in a favourable light.
Social CharacteristicsPoor attenders were more likely to come from families where the
father was a manual worker and particularly an unskilled or semi-
TA
BL
E H
. TY
PE O
F JO
B W
A1c
TE
D o
:L
rnvN
0 SC
HO
OL
BY
AB
SEN
CE
CA
TE
GO
RY
(B
OY
S)
.Per
cent
age
of i
o...^
,s; W
ishi
ng to
be
.Em
ploy
ed in
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
Prof
essi
onal
Low
er E
xecu
tive
Skill
edU
nski
lled.
Not
Kno
wn
Adm
inis
trat
ive
and
rout
ine.
Man
ual J
obs
or S
emi-
skill
edor
ans
wer
Abs
ence
and
Hig
her
non-
man
ual
(App
rent
ices
hips
)Jo
bsim
poss
ible
Cla
mif
icat
ion
Exe
cutiv
e Jo
bsJo
bsto
cla
ssif
y
No
abse
nce
(N=
1 09
)24
2298
92
Goo
d at
tend
ees
(N=
374)
.33
5,20
598
Mod
erat
e at
tend
ers
(N=
200)
:27
2119
Poor
atte
ndee
s (N
=67
)92
86
29
Med
ical
abs
ence
s: o
nly
(N=
389)
.
31.
.18,
I 7
797
Mix
ed r
easo
ns (
N=
;30)
.
9.7.
15.
229.
Non
-med
ical
rea
sons
onl
y (N
=49
)14
;829
2.5
14C
ause
of
abse
nce
not k
now
n (N
=73
)40
819
5122
-111K AnNEN'rEEs .59
skilled worker. They were also more likely to come from largenullities. Thus the average number of siblings of the boys who weregood attenders (ie those with to or fewer absences) was 2.1 7 whereasthe poor at tenders (ie those with 31 or more absences) had on average3.88 siblings apiece. When we also took into account the reasonabsence it became obvious that in each causal category we obtainedthe same picture: the children with the most absence were thosewith the largest number of brothers and sisters. The largest familiesof all (where the respondent had an average or 4.71 siblings) werethose of the boys with poor attendances whose absence was believedto be for entirely non-medical reasons.
Perhaps as a result or this larger family size the poor attendersamong the boys were also found more likely to have older brothersand sisters who had left school and this was most pronounced amongthose who were absent frequently for strictly non-medical reasons.The presence of working older siblings in the home, presenting an
of .example of increased personal and financial independence, couldbe seen as an influence away from the ethos of school towards thatof the outside world.
Friendships also could be important in drawing children to, oraway from, school and, here again, the poor attenders were foundto spend more time with neighbourhood friends who did not attendthe same school whereas the good altenders Were inclined to mixoutside school with classmates and other children from the sameschool as themselves. One "reason" which is often suggested forschool absence is that it is easier for children to play truant whenmother is out at work. We could find no evidence of this since themothers of the non-medical absentees were no more often employedthan the others. We did find, however, that boys with poor attend-ance for purely medical reasons were more likely to have workingmothers than were the better attendersa fact which is ratherdifficult to interpret without further information,
The School LeaverWhat happens to the regular absentee when he leaves school?
Does he adapt suceesslidly to the working life he has been longing:for? Or does he experience difficulty in settling to a regular workpattern? While the children were still at school we asked them whatplans they had for the future and found that the level of theiroccupational aspiration was positively related to their level ofattendance.
This is shown clearly in Table II by the increasing proportion ofboys, as we move down column (d) from good attenders to poorattenders, who visualised themselves as occupied in unskilled orsemi-skilled jobs when they left school.
Similarly, when we related future plans to cause of absence, wefound that only one-third of the non-medical absentees saw them-
TIIE ABS ,NTEES
selves in white collar jobs compared with approximately half of theboys absent for purely medical reasons. At the other end of thescale, the plop-H.0mi of boys seeing their (inure in semi-skilled orunskilled work rose very markedly in the non-medical categorycompared with the others.
We have recently been able to follow up some of these children,now aged 16 to 18, to find out what happened when they left schooland entered the job market: Interviews were carried out with twogroups of children matched individually by age, sex, school andclass within school. One group consisted of bad attenders, the otherof The first and most striking difference was that, despite thematching process, many more of the good attenders were still infull-time education: This was particularly marked among the girlswhere, out of the 79 girls in each group, 32 good attenders 40%)were still at school or college compared with only to of the badattenders (13%). Among the boys the difference was less markedwith 23 good attenders, out of 77, still in full-time education com-pared with i i of the matched bad attenders who were still attendingon a voluntary basis. (A further two boys with bad attendancerecords were interviewed while on leave from approved schools.)
Considering only the children who had left school it was foundthat the boys with a had attendance record were much more likelyto change jobs than boys who were good attenders. Thus, 58% of thebad attenders had been in at least two full-time jobs since leavingschool compared with only 28% of the good attenders; 19% of thebad attenders had had more than three jobs, including two boyswith five jobs apiece and one with eight employers, compared with,t% of the good attenders, none of whom had reported more thanfour jobs: Among the girls just over 6o% of both good and badattendees had only had one job but lo% of the bad attenders werein their fourth or sub'sequent jobs whereas none of the good attendershad had more than three. A further indication that the poorattenders might find it difficult to settle to work is provided by thefact that eight of the boys with poor attendance records were un-employed at the time of the interview compared with only one goodattender. All the girls with good attendance records who had leftschool were still working but four of the bad attenders were un-employed, one sick and three had retired, temporarily at least, intohousewifery.
In general, the bad attenders, particularly the boys, seemed muchless settledthey were more likely to say that they wanted to do:something different (but not necessarily better) in the futurewhereasthe good attenders tended to see themselves as continuing in theirpresent employment at least for the next two years.
THE ABSENTEES UI
Conclusions
The analysis of this material is still proceeding but, from theresults already reached, one of the main points to emerge is thepresence among the bad attenders, particularly among those whoseabsences included some non-medical causes, of a group of boys oflow socio-economic background who appeared alienated fromschool. 'This alienation did not appear to involve hostility. to theirown particular school, about which indeed they often appeared tofeel quite favourably, so much as non-acceptance of the whol ideaof having to spend time in an educational system which had nopractical value Ibr them and whose aims they could not share.
Education is often seen as a channel for upward social mobilitya way of into a white collar job or a skilled tradebut theseboys did not have such aspirations. Rather they wished to earn awage as soon its possibleto achieve immediate rather than deferredgratification. Their more varied occupational careers when the:left school also suggests. less ability to adjust to circumstances andless tolerance of frustration than appeared to be the case among thegood attenders. Such young people are unlikely to settle happily toan enforced extra year at school. On the other hand, they areprobably a fairly small group and their absence is already at a highenough level to constitute a known problem.
On the positive side it seems unlikely that the present goodattenders will deteriorate. Their attitudes to school are morepositive, their aspirations are in tune with the values of the educa-tional system and they are already tending to stay on voluntarily inorder to achieve additional qualifications.
More important for future planning is the likely effect of theextra year on the other categories of absentees. In most of theanalysis by extent and cause of absence it has become evident thatwe appear to be dealing with a continuum with, at one extreme, theperfect attenders and those involuntary absentees who miss only afew days for reasons of-genuine infection or injury; at the other endis the group Nye have just been discussing, those absent on manyoccasions for what appear to be voluntary reasons.
If we consider separately the two categories of (a) extent ofabsence and (b) causes of absence, we find that many of the answersto our questions showed trends,.ie to increase or decrease in frequencyprogressively as we moved from good attenders to moderate attendersto poor attenders, on one hand, and from purely medical absentees,to mixed reasons for absence to non-medical, on the other. When wecombine the two categories, however, there is often considerableoverlap so that, far instance, people whose attendance is poorbecause of.illness may have a less favourable attitude to some aspectof school life than do pupils who are less often absent but whose"absences are mainly for non-medical causes,
62
In other words, the attitudes, Family characteristics etc, whichwe have shown to be particularly associated with the children whoare absent a lot for non - medical reasons are to be found to lesser orgreater extent in the other groups also For instance, the group ofchildren absent a lot for "illness" contains at least some memberswho do not seem qualitatively different from their counterparts inthe "mixed" category or even from those whose absence is forentirely non - medical reasons.
One result' of the additional year, then, might be to produceslight shifts of absence patterns through increasing the non-medicalcomponent in each case, For instance, a boy whose absence in thethird year was attributed entirely to medical reasons might, in thefourth year, start taking additional time off when he was not illthus moving into the "mixed reason" category and also increasingthe extent of his absence. On the other hand, the validity of theillness label is not always easy to establish. Ewen if We ignore thepossibility of deliberate falsehoods and parental collusion, estimatesof the severity of importance of any given symptom will vary fromone person to another so it would not be surprising if "genuine"mild illnesses also become more prevalent in sonic cases where thisacceptable excuse for absence was already being manipulated tosome extent, either by parents or children.
Whether or not the rate of absence increases from next September,then, will probably depend on the extent to which the fourth ye.programme can catch the interest of the people who at presentabsent for a moderate amount of time for medical or mixed reasonsand those who are beginning to go absent on purely non-medicalgrounds but as yet only doing so to a mild extent.Acknowledgment
This project was financed by the Scottish Council for Research inEducation.
ReferencesBARKER.LLINN, j (1966). atitffi/ of Inr retef on far use of Children's Attitude Scales.Mimeographed.BRANOY, E. IL (t95i). A study of abNet ce from school. The Medical Ulcer, 86,
223-,130, 237-240.1-kasov, L A (1960). Persistent non-a.xtt ocianCt! at sClioni. J. Child Px_ychol. Plyehiat.,i30 -t36.HLasov, L A (t 96o). Refusal to go to school. j. Child Plychol. Psyeldoi., X, 137-145.KAHN, H and Nuawrex, P (1964). Unwillingly in School. London, Pergamon.Stin-PHERD, M, OPPENIIEIM, a and Mrrcurlo 5 (um). Childhood Bcharitgar and
Menial Health. 'London, University of London Press.TYERMAN, M (1968). Truancy. London, University of London Press:
(Permission to reprint this article front Education in the North tri72, is gratcfulltacknowledged.)
WHO CARES ABM, ( :AFT APPRENTICES? 63
WHO CARES ABOUT THE CRAFT APPRENTICE?A Report of a Study of the Attitudes to Further Educationof 2000 Scottish Craft ApprenticesbyAD WEIRScottish Council for Research in Education, EdinburghThe recent publication by the Scottish Council for Research inEducation, A Day Of Work?, concentrates on a description ofthe attitudes towards further education of some 2000 craft appren-tices in Central Scotland. The data were collected during 1968 and1969 by means of questionnaire, interview and attitude scale and inthis article a brief summary will be given mainly in terms of eachcategory of student rather than each source of data. The categoriesof students involved can be considered in terms of the craft courseattended or the mode of attendance. Respondents were drawn fromthe City and Guilds Craft courses in Catering, Electrical InstallationWork, Mechanical Engineering, Fabrication Engineering andCarpentry and joinery, and over 200 of these followed full-time orblock release courses during the investigation.
Since we were dealing with entrants to craft apprenticeships it isnot surprising that the sample members had generally received a"junior secondary" (secondary modern) type of education, while themajority of their fathers were in manual occupations. A comparisonbetween national figures and those for sample members on these twodimensions indicates that in 1968 34% of. Scottish secondary schoolpupils attended junior secondary schools against 47% of samplemembers and that according to the Registrar-General's classifica-tion, 65% of the population are in manual occupations against 79%of the fathers of sample members, both differences being significantbeyond the 5% level. Not surprisingly, both in view of their back-ground and in view of the lack of formal entry requirements to craftcourses, few held any Scottish Certificate of Education passes,although a comparison of those who entered craft courses in 1965and 1968 indicated a growing tendency to hole such passes. Apersonal interpretation of this tendency would be that (a) employersare tending to frame job advertisements in terms of 0-gradepasses, and (b) the examinations are being attempted by schoolpupils lower down the ability distribution.
Many of the students had chosen their job in terms of their schoolexperience or because of its future prospects. These two differenttendencies are best illustrated by Joiners on the one hand, 7ocyoofwhom had been motivated by previous experience, and Electricianson the other, 65% of whom had been motivated by prospects. Theinterview evidence suggested that these jobs had been securedby personal contacts but the questionnaire evidence indicated amore important influence to be school and the Youth Employment
55110 CARES A11U4UT -1-iiE
Service. It has been observed in a number of other studies that theinfluence of Careers Teachers and Careers Officers is not particularlyapparent to school leavers, and that often a subject teacher, particu-larly in the crafts, is seen to have a more direct influence. Thestudents' answers showed little awareness of an active trainingpolicy in their firms but, apart from the 25% who saw emigrationas their main ambition, most students thought of their future asbeing mainly in their present job. The tendency for skilled andprofessional people to seek fulfilment through emigration is well-documented in the Scottish experience.
The criticisms of further education made by students fell into twomain areasthe college and the course:
Their experience of the commercial provision of cafes and clubsmade them a little critical of the facilities of their colleges. Collegeplayed little part in the students' social and recreational life, mainlybecause of the students' lack of interest and their other establishedpursuits. Only 6% of our sample had had any experience of collegeclubs and activities, and yet an examination of their leisure interestsindicated that these young people were fairly heavily involvedoutside the college. There are many possible explanations for thisseeming paradox, but one which struck the writer was the difficultyin involving day release craft studeols in college activities, especiallywhere the college had a fair sprinkling of full-time students followingdiploma or degree-level Courses, who were able to command thelargest share of the available social and recreational amenities.
Ii giving their opinions on their courses, the students preferredno one form of attendance above all others, although there was atendency for students in the later years of craft courses to indicate asupport for full-time courses. This could either have been due to acase of "distance lends enchantment ." or to a wish to have asecond chance to make up for lost opportunities. Within the course,more workshop activities was the change most frequently requested,although many students were reasonably satisfied with their presentcourse. The question of workshop activities came up on manyoccasions throughout the investigation. It is certainly not the casethat this was an uncritical desire to escape the classroom becauserespondents were not slow to point out the irrelevance of much ofthe practical content of their courses,_nor were they slow to highlightthe inadequacy of some of the workshop equipment. It seems ratherto have been due to their strong opinion that they were practicalmen who had chosen a practical job because of a desire to workwith their hands rather than their heads. They did not necessarilydespise the non-practical segments of their day, and in fact Theorywas the second most popular subject. What they did dislike, however,was a lack of activity methods or a lack of association between thesubject and their work which they noticed particularly in LiberalStudies, but also in Science and Calculations.
%%lin CARES "stir; ER E, II
The problem of workshop versus classroom is of particular import-ance at present when courses such as the 500 series arc largelyreplacing workshop activities and practical tests with laboratoryexperiments and projects. From the evidence of this study it wouldseem that craft students are best pleased when they are activelyinvolved in the course and least pleased when sitting inactively.How far colleges are able to and will seek to increase the oppor-tunities for student involvement in craft courses is open to doubt.It seems certain however that the gulf between training and educa-tion has widened so that many craft apprentices arc wonderingabout the relevance of their further education.
One final difficulty sample members mentioned when discussingtheir college was the travelling involved in attending college andthe consequent lengthening of their day of attendance. A policy ofrationalising college courses where they can be operated in terms ofefficiency in student numbers and utilisation of equipment makessome sense in technician and technologist courses, but in craftcourses, where potential enrolments are larger and equipment costslower, there seems less justification for centralising certain courses inone centre if thereby stUdents'have to travel twenty or thirty milesand often pass, other colleges en route.
Students' general criticisms of their further education fell intofour main areas. The facilities of the colleges, common rooms andrefectories were seen as unsatisfactory; the fact that for some coursesthe day of attendance was longer than the day of work was criticised;the relevance of some parts of the course, eg Calculations andLiberal Studies was questioned; and improvement was sought inthe flow of information from college authorities to, students. Thislast criticism is again an indication of the difficulty of communicatingwith day release students in general and craft apprentices in particu-lar. Colleges, not unnaturally, have a tendency to communicatebest with those who attend most frequently and those who cancomprehend the communications so that once more, as with collegeactivities, craft apprentices felt left out of the communicationnetwork.
In terms of three major ways of analysing students, by college,by mode of attendance and by course, few differences appearedbetween the attitudes of students in different colleges. Betweendifferent modes of attendance, the evidence generally indicated thatday release attendance was more likely to be associated with poorstudent attitudes than was equivalent full-time attendance,- Theindications were that course content, being composed of both'education and training, and length of day being generally no morethan 9.00 am to 5.00 pm, made a favourable impression on full-timestudents and ought to be more widespread. There is certainly amovement towards more block release and full-time courses through-out Britian, and if it Nvere.to continue our evidence indicates that it
%VII() GARES All()111"11W CHAF"I' a I REN`I :ES?
could lead to an improvement ill craft student attitudes to furthereducation. An additional consequence tioni more intensive periods&study would be that the larger proportion &students involved insuch attendance would be able to exert more pressure on the collegeauthorities and make it more likely that improvements would followin social and recreational amenities and in college communicationssystems.
The most important significant differences however were in termsof the craft course actually attended. This is not such a surprisingfinding with students, the majority &whom had tout days' exposurein industry to each day in college.
On a number of occasions it was observed that the status of aparticular trade within the community and the ways in whichschool-leavers found a job discriminated between the various coursesinvestigated.
It is also apparent that the way an industry organises its trztining,the opportunities for promotion which exist within that industry andthe student's perceptions of further education's relevance to hisindustry and his prospects arc of importance to each course grotip.In Catering, for example, girls seeking to enter the School MealsService arc well aware of the opportunities for speedy promotion,and in Electrical Work, boys soon learn that certification can bringconsiderable financial advantages. In Mechanical Engineering, onthe other hand, the size of many firms and the specialisation withinthem can discourage young men from being ambitious and canmake them look -cynically at the idea of further education as a"broadening" influence.
In courses such as Catering and Electrical Installation Workwhere the majority of students found no conflict between collegeand their jobs and ambitions, more favouluble attitudes prevailed.In these courses, students typically suppoi-ted their college, enjoyedtheir courses, and appreciated the purpose behind their furthereducation. But in other courses where conflicts Were evident, lessfavourable attitudes were found. Joiners, for example, indicated aconflict between the hours worked on the job and the trours workedat college, Mechanicals indicated a conflict between the "real"tasks at work and the "unreal" tasks in college, and the Fabricatorsindicated a conflict between the job they had and the job theydesired. The Fabricators were a good indication or an unfavourablegroup. The majority were in jobs they did not enjoy, jobs they hadentered after many earlier changes of employment. These boy_s hadlittle record of success in education and were not open to machinfluence from the college. Much of the evidence on this groupraises the question of the need tore - examine the jobs for which fouryears of day relepse are considered necessary. .
This study of attitudeS to further education among craft appren-tices has indicated that a number of factors influencing attitudes
GARKS BOur (RAFT APPRFNTICKS?
such as father's occupation and length of secondary education areoutwith the control of technical colleges but that a number of otherfactors are open to influence from the further education service.Among these factors are the forms of attendance offered to eachstudent, the facilities provided for student social and recreationalactivities, relationships between student and authority. the hours ofattendance required of each student, the "practical" content of eachcourse, and the students' success in external examinations and theconsequence of that success in terms of job opportunities.
Many of these factors influencing the day release craft student areintimately concerned with "time"expanding technologies demandmore time on the course for existing subjects and additional timefor new subjects; general education has to be allocated more time;shortened apprenticeships mean shortened courses in terms of yearsof study but conserved courses in terms of hours of study; morestringent requirements in terms of student enrolments mean morestudents have to travel greater distances for the most appropriatecourse, so that already a number of students are faced with a twelvehour day if they wish to attend college. And in addition there ispressure on students to become more involved in college clubs andsocieties. With these pressures it is not surprising to note wastageand deterioration in attitudes among some craft students.
The influential factors are also intimately concerned with thefunction of further education. Our evidence indicates that in someoccupations further education is held in low regard, and thatindustt and:education together will have to examine the causes,deciding either that many job entrants need less education andtraining than is presently offered or that there is a lack of oppor-tunity for many job entrants to advance through taking advantageof further education. In essence, is attendance at a technical collegedesigned to offer "further" education or is it only designed to offerthe "associated" education required by employers or trainingboards or trades unions?
Turning for a time from the content of the report, A Diu 0/f I Vork?.,and interpretations which can be made directly from the data, thereare a number of more general observations which can be made aboutcraft students in further education,
If my interpretation of the data is correct, there are two mainareas where a significant intervention can be madethe college andthe course.
For a number of years, further education demand grew andfurther education places were created without much thought to thesituation of the college or the competing demands of neighbouringcolleges. As a result it became common for technical colleges tobe comprehensive institutions as far as level of work and range ofsubjects was concerned. In more recent years, however, some of thelarger authorities have attempted a rationalisation lioth by type of
5V/11) CARES A ROI IT Till APIT ENTICES?
c-ork and ley I of work, with certain colleges hiving either specialistdepartments or specialist (ie higher level) courses. An example orthe first would he a college of building and_al example attic secondwould he a polytechnic.
With the demand for fluffier education places levelling off, andwith local government reorganisation in prospect, now is a con-venient time to examine the competing claims of comprehensive/specialist colleges, especially with regard to the craft apprentice.
From the evidence available in :I Day Off Work?, I would suggestthat Where rationalisation is possible it should be by level ofcourserather than by type of eourse. That is to say, congregate all craftcourses in One district in one college rather than all engineeringcourses in one district in one college. This may seem to be tantamount to introducing selection in further education at a time whenwe are removing it from secondary education, but I consider thatthe advantages outweigh the disadvantages.
It has been argued that technical colleges with students followingall levels and all types of job encourage a great deal of cross-fertilisation between occupational groups and wiio occupationalgroups and that the social contacts within such a colicge promote agreater understanding between people of dissimilar social back-grounds Those who put forward such arguments seem to me to betotally unaware of the ways in vhich colleges are organised andblind to the actual social groupings which students form.
Colleges generally allocate their -staff and their students, strictlyaccording to the level and type of their specialisation. Indeed thegrading of courses leaves colleges with little choice but to do thisTherefore the cross-fertilisation between courses is almost non-existent at the et-aft and technician level, and where day release isthe dominant mode of attendance it is difficult to sec what alterna-tives thct.e arc to such a pattern of organisation.
Social groupings equally tend to be formed along lines whichparallel the "type and level" structure. The formal organisation ofcolleges is such that the distribution of breaks, lunches, free time,often seems designed to inhibit social interaction between types andlevels of student in the totally comprehensive college.
Among the factors influencing social interaction are the size of thecollege, the formal organisation structure, the design and layout,and the opportunities for social activities outside the college. Myargument is that decisions which have been made in present collegeson these factors have tended to operate against the craft student andthat we have therelbre to seek alternative, types of college size,structure and design. The alternatives which scan most plausibleare the small college, comprehensive by type and level, where, if thecollege into function socially at all, craft students have to be involved,and the larger comprehensive by level,. where, since allstudents are not only following, cg, craft courses, but also have a
%VII° CAKh 1 trr T1 E CR. rat,
more common educational and socio-economic background, thereis a greater identity of put-pose socially and academically, therebypromoting more social Interaction among students and moreoveramong staff.
The importance one attaches to social interaction depends onhow far one sees the purpose of further education in social terms andhow far one sees the purpose in academic terms, From this writer'spoint of view, colleges where students were studying to a commonlevel, where Student Associations were aware of the real needs ofthe student body, where facilities were open and popular and wherestudents felt that supportive resources Were at their call, wouldprovide a much better background for craft apprentices than thepresent system does. But so long as day release remains the pre-dominant form of attendance, the course, not the college, willremain the major influence on the craft student.
Among. the improvements ,I would therefore suggest in craftcourses aremaking courses more "practical"; making days ofattendance shorter; and organising courses in shorter steps wherestudents were more aware of progression. The problems associatedwith "practical" and length of day of attendance have already beentouched on, but the problem of alternatives to present course
'structure deserves conSidet-able attention.I can see little value in a system of craft courses geared hopefldly
to retaining a student for four or five years and attempting to passon all the knowledge necessary in a job during these four or fiveyears. There are now so many different requirements within di fret-en tindustries at 'craft" level that ,course :structure may have to beindividually tailored for each course: The important decision to betaken is on the purpose of further education; in a sense the familiar"education or training?" decisiondo we seek to meet the needs ofthe employer or the needs of the employee? The concept of "educationpermanente" is currently under close scrutiny and such a conceptseems much more suited to meeting the needs of the individual, inthat the opportunity to benefit from further education is not simplyavailable between the ages of 16 and 2o, but is available to theindividual throughout his
One could envisage that, as is now becoming general, craftstudents would' spend the first year or two of apprenticeship on"general" courses such as course 50o or course 550 .,Thereafter acritical decision would have to be made fbr each individual as towhether lie could benefit from continuing his further education atthat time. After' taking this decision it would be reviewed periodicallyby employer and employee, with an opportunity for both parties torecommend a re-commencement orstudies'for t t-,:ariable, period: Inthis fashion, a series of modular courses would be available in Mostcrafts and students could drop into any module: at any , time. :Forsome students, it would be desirable to 'attend the modules "end=on",-
fi
70 CARES CI ApPRt N`rX1 'ES?
but (by many students there could be significant gaps between themodules. If such a system could be set up, then we would be morelikely to meet the individual's needs when they arose. Such a systemwould also make more clear the purpose of craft studies in secondaryschools. One can appreciate that in A situation where soon alterleaving school a young person must take a specific craft apprentice-ship or lose the opportunity almost forever, then some schools feelobliged to "prepare" young people for specific jobs. But where.opportunities for craft 'apprenticeships are available at differenttimes in a person's career, then schools can be much more generalin their "preparation" of the l4 and iy-Yearold, giving him theopportunity to sample a wide range of skills without feeling thepressures of having to make a hasty and often unwise choice.
These suggestions are similar in nattne to some of the commentsiii sections 103 el serf of the recent Government discussion documentTraining for i/ic Fulure, where a Training Opportunities Scheme isoutlined. Of particular relevance to this article is the comment insection to6 that training (and education) will bc open to "... youn-ger people . . . wino, for whatever reason, failed to acquire skillsimmediately after the end of their education or who find that theyhave mistaken their first choice of career."
This proposal provides an opportunity to revise many of oursystems for preparing young, people for eraployment, especially iftakeu together with the Confluents in section to7: "There will need,to be comprehensive arrangements, both for making availableinformation about courses, and ror counselling applicants,"
If colleges can be involved in these proposed new arrangements,then it is not too fanciful to foresee a much better set of provisionsbeing made For the potential craftsman. Gone would be the days ofthe irrevocable choice, often made on the basis of insufficient information, and in its place would be an opportunity for ,an intro-ductory general cast course, with a series of additional coursesavailable later in life where the craftsman could update his skills ortrade them in for new ones.
There would be a possible additional advantage, in that, havingset up a system for communicating:with and-counselling potentialstudents, colleges would see in this an opportunity for providing on-going assistance to craft students, thereby remedying many of the illswhich A ,Thy 0j1 If oth? suggests exist,
For years the craft apprentice has been the poor relation hi afurther education service where glory is seen to lie in polytechnicstatus trod CNAA recognition. He is still, .110WCVer, the dominantstatistic in student enrolments and the bread and butter of most staff.In view:of the numbel's of involved, it is time to devote On-siderable,resources to establishing the purp6ses of craft studies infurther education and to end the neglect of the craft,student,
(Permission to reproduce this article froau.Clidier ii1 Design Education and Calf!,Vol..t, No (Spring 197,4) is gratefully acknowledged.)
A LIST OF RESEARCHES
IN EDUCATION
AND EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY
presented for degrees in Scottish Universities
/971
Offprints or this list may be obtained on application toThe Scottish Council l'or Research in Education
THE SCOTTISii ,c1L FOR
159.92 MENTAL DEVELOPMENT AND CAPACI TYCOMPARATIVE PSYCHOLOGY
159.92276 ABNORMAL AND -SPECIAL CLASSES OF CHILDREN ANDADULTS
Harold, Helen An investigation of the psycholinguistic character-istics or readers and non- readers below IQ 5o MEd, Glasgow
159.92276(1) MENTALLY_ DEFECTIVE AND SUBNORMALFyfe, R An investigation into the relationship between reading
achievement and the development of perceptual activities in agroup of mentally handicapped children MEd, AberdeenGibson, M A training procedure designed to develop a conceptof substance conservation in mentally handicapped children
MEd, Glasgow159.9232 DEVEL0PMENT OR EMERGENcE OF PERSONALITYSee Icaushal, A P (Under 159.982)159.9233 CONSrIIUENT ELEMENTS OF PERSONALITY(1) GENERAL
Murphy, H F Neurotidsm in primary school children underdiffering competitive conditions MEd, Glasgow
(2) MORAL AND RELIGIOUS
See Stallibrass, Julia (Under 159.9284)159.9281 INTELLioENcE (GENERAL)Liddle, I W Equivalence ®a developmental study of cognitive
equivalence in a sample of Scottish school children MEd, Dundee159.9282 INTELLIGENcit TESTS
Quinn, G H An investigation into the cflciene,}= of the GlasgowPicture Intelligence Test MEd, GlasgowStallibrass, Julia The relationship between cognitive and moral
judgment development in children MEd, StrathclydeSec also:Fyfe, R (Under 159.92276(1))Henderson, Mrs M M 0 (Under 159.92Lynas, R (Under 159.954)Meereath, (Under 159.9285)159,9285 NINTAI, ABILITY
Gardner, A P W A development approach to r ding difficultiesMEd, GlasgowHenderson, Mrs M M 0 Frostig and Readinga correlation
study of the Frostig Development Test of Visual Perception andearly reading attainment MEd, 1)undeeMeereatb, D The differential aptitude tests as predictors ofachievement in the Scottish Certificate of Education "0" Gradcexaminations MEd, Glasgow
RESEARCH IN EDUCATION 73
Valle ly, Hannah Patterns of sentence structure MEd, GlasgowSee also Harold, Helen (Under 159.92276)159.9285(3) ARILITY IN ENGLISH: LINGUISTIC ABILITY
See McKay, j (Under 371.39(4)159.93 SENSE AND SENSE PERCEPTION159.93771 VisuAl PERCEPTION: CHROMAESTHESIA,
Sec Henderson, Mrs M M 0 (Under 159.9285)
159.95 HIGHER MENTAL PROCESSES: ATTENTION,MEMORY, LEARNING, THOUGHT, ETC
159.954 I NtAr:INATION : CREATIVE POWER
Diddle, I Creativity and correlates of authoritarianismMEd, Glasgow
Lynas, R Convergent thinking, divergent thinking and scholasticachievement in Scottish adolescents MEd, Glasgow
159.9552 CoNcEpTSCann, W An exploratory investigation of the conservation of
volume in twelve to sixteen year old Aberdeen school childrenMEd, Aberdeen
See als6 Gibson, M (Under 159.92276(1 ))
159.982 SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY (GENERAL)Grieve, R Sonic studies of language use and class inclusion
PhD, St AndrewsKauslial, A P Immigrant patents' attitudes to school and their
children's progress in school MEd, Glasgow
370.69 EDUCATORS: EDUCATIONISTSSteven, W T A study of the life and educational thought of
David .Fordyce MEd, Glasgow
370.734 COMPARATIVE EDUCATIONBrand, Mrs jean A comparative study of marginal personality
in Indian immigrant children and Scottish childrenMEd, Glasgow
Chandy, Verghis A cross-cultural study of bilingualism in theHebrides, Nigeria and Pakistan MEd, Aberdeen
Hiddleston, Sally Hungarian children in Jugoslavia andimmigrant children in Scotland MEd, Glasgow
71 S rl"r 1,0Ft
370.93-.99 HISTORY OF EDUCATION IN sPECIALCO UNTR I ES
37o.941 SoomANuCable, J A Popular lectures and classes can science in Scotland in
the eighteenth century MEd, GlasgowCowie, F P Elementary education in Perth under the School
Board, 1873-1919 . MEd, DundeeRoberts, J H The National Council of Labour Colleges and
1Volking class education in Scotland, 1919-1.963. MEd, EdinburghThomson, D Education in Banffshire, i945-197o..MEd, DundeeWalker, J H The ad hoc administration of education in Scotland,
4 Fu.ANcz.
MEd,- Glasgow1872-1929
Browning, D Discipline in the French educational systemMEd, Glasgow
370.96 ArtuoAJoof, Mani Biram !lice foundationsof education: the Gambia,
An educational survey up to 1924 MEd, AberdeenProsser, R C The development and organisation of adult educa-
tion in Kenya 1945-7o, .with.special.reference to African rural-development MEd, Edinburgh
371.1 'I.IF:ACHINC; AND :ADMINISTRATIVE PERSONNELMcAusland S B C : The motivation of special school teachers
MEd, GlasgowKleinberg, Mrs Susan M Recruitment to educational studies:
Scieiological and psychological perspectives on the Stirling Planfor the prepaation of graduate [cachet's MSc, Stirling
McNie, R W. A study of two Scottish Teachers' AssociationsMEd, Glasgow
371.2 SCHOOL ORGANISATION: ADMINISTRATION ANDSUPERVISION: SCHOOL RECORDS
Anderson, C K Sources of satisfaction and dissatisfaction in thejob situation of teachersan exploratory inductive study
MEd, GlasgowCumming, C E Studies in educational costs PhD, GlasgowFavon, M 1-low la-uw should a school be? A size-cost study of
Scottish comprehensive schools MEd, GlasgowFrame, J D F Working class families and selective schooling
MEd, Glasgow'McDonald, Rosemary An investigation into w housemaster
system in ei comprehensive school MEd, Glasgow
RESEAR(11 IN EDUCATION75
McKenna, J J ElFect of ETV preparation MEd, GlasgowWitherow, N C Curriculum development in mathematics
MEd, DundeeYoung, A H Comprehensive re-organisation in Rearewshire. A
ease study MEd, Glasgow
371.27 EXAMINATIONSWhite, Joan G The reliability and validity of au objective
multiple- choice test in chemistry at "0" grade MEd, Aberdeen
371.3 METHODS OF INSTRUCTION AND STUDY: ALLKINDS OF CLASSROOM ACTIVITY
371.33 ORAL AND VISUAL INsTauurtoN: VISUAL AIDS
McCormick, J Schools radio: an experiement MEd, GlasgowMcGettrick, B J A model for managing a programmed learning
situation MEd, Glasgow
371.39 TEACHING METHOD371.39(4) ENGLISH
Craig, Moira A study of the reading comprehension and attain-ments in English or children taught to read with words in colour
MEd, GlasgowMcKay, J An analysis of a battery of tests of English ability and a
comparison, of the effectiveness of two methods of teachingEnglish MEd, Aberdeen
Myers, F M Linguistics and the teaching of poetryMEd Glasgow
371.39(14) SciENcE
Sillar, D An investigation into the desirable affective outcomesof the science courses in Scotland MEd, Glasgow
371.52 SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: ABSENCE, TRUANCY, ETCTrapp, Barbara A study of twelve school refusals MEd, Glasgow
372 PR I MARY EDUCATIONMcCoy, J J Primary school attitudes to ofletices and punishment
MEd, Glasgow
:373 SECONDARY EDUCATION373.2 TYPES OF SECONDARY Sc 1100ES
Dyer, ft M Streaming and mixed-alyear of a comprehensive school
lily grouping in the first.MEd, Abercleen-'
76 THE SCOTTISH N FOR
Smith, j D Prediction of comprehensive school achievement fromprimary school information MEd, Glasgow
See also:Favon, M (Under 371.2)Young, A lI (Under 371.2)
374 FURTHER AND ADULT EDUCATIONGuidi, B G F The role of general studies in technical colleges
MEd, GlasgowMorris, M Conflict, authority and responsibility in further
education MEd, GlasgowSimpson, P Liberal education for industrial workers in theory
and practice MSc, EdinburghTwelvetrees, A C A comparative tudy of community associa-
tions in Edinburgh MSc, Edinburgh
378 HIGHER EDUCATIONBoyle, j j M An exploratory study of some characteristics and
attitudes of external university students MEd, Glasgow
ItE Itt:11
PUBLICATIONS OF THESCOTTISH COUNCIL
FOR RESEARCH INTO EDUCATION
77
Fear ofpublication
1930 1 SCOTTISH SPINNING SCHOOLS (with illustrations)By IRENE F M DEAN, FRHis-rSoc 25p net
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