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Academic Success
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Academic success is a central concern in education studies, examined across courses in educational psychology, curriculum and instruction, counseling, and teacher preparation. The topic draws academic interest because success in school is shaped by an overlapping set of factors — cognitive, social, familial, and institutional — that resist simple explanation. Researchers and students alike grapple with how to define success itself, whether through grades, retention, engagement, or long-term outcomes, and how different student populations experience those measures differently.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a broad range of approaches. Some take a policy and intervention focus, examining group counseling as a strategy for preventing academic failure or exploring how parental involvement shapes outcomes in secondary grades. Others adopt a case-study or comparative lens, looking at the academic profiles of home-schooled students or contrasting outcomes in single-parent versus two-parent households. Additional papers address classroom-level variables such as classroom management, learning styles among college students, and the role of teacher-student connectedness in supporting achievement.

A strong essay on academic success requires a clearly scoped thesis that identifies which students, which context, and which definition of success the argument addresses. Evidence drawn from specific educational settings, documented intervention outcomes, or well-supported theoretical frameworks carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating academic success as a single, uniform outcome — strong essays acknowledge that ability, family structure, institutional support, and individual learning differences all interact, and they focus their argument on how one or two of those factors operate in a concrete, traceable way.

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Thesis Doctorate
psychologucal disengagment
Psychological disengagement represents a coping mechanism used to resist negative evaluations. Ethnic minority students tend to disengage by devaluing the academic domain, which allows them to resist the negative impact poor grades have on their self-esteem. For ethnic majorities, disengagement can take the form of situation-specific discounting of a single grade or course. For high academic achievers, disengagement allows the student to persist in the face of adversity, but for low academic achievers disengagement can lead to the wholesale rejection of academic success and high rates of dropping out, but such patterns vary by ethnicity. This research report examines the relationship between academic performance and self-esteem for a small number of New York City college students and reveals that the pattern of disengagement along racial lines is anything but predictable.
Paper Undergraduate
Teaching in an Inclusive Learning Environment
This is a literature review that examines academic attainment of special education students based on challenger middle school's program. The paper indicates how various intervention methods are responsible for improvement of learning for special students. The paper outlines the need for training and planning in order to improve learning for special students.
Paper Doctorate
Improving Human Resource Management at Great Northern
Because all organizations are comprised of people, there will always be human resource issues involved and the manner in which these issues are resolved can spell the difference between organizational success and failure. This was the situation facing Joe Salatino, president of Great Northern America as he sought to formulate timely and responsive solutions to his company's human resource problems in order to save his company and achieve a competitive advantage in the future. To gain some fresh insights concerning how the president of this company could approach these problems, this paper provides a review of the relevant literature to explain why employees need to understand the importance of how people form perceptions and make attributions, an evaluation of the applicability of social learning theory to the circumstances, followed by an examination of ways that the president could use social learning theory to improve employee performance. Finally, a discussion concerning ways that the president of this company could leverage the value of self-efficacy to ensure the most successful salespeople are hired is followed by a summary of the research and important findings in the conclusion.
Paper Doctorate
Education: One the Major Debates
The focus of the article is to examine the purpose of college of my college experience and the extent of my major on that experience. The article examines how college provides a freedom that forces a person to develop a structure or individual experience through the irreplaceable variety created by courage. The other aspects addressed in the paper are the overall purpose of college education, liberating freedom of college, and the inadequacy of internship experiences.
Research Paper Doctorate
Inclusion: concepts, practices, and implementation
The transition from a middle school setting to a high school setting can be daunting for the best of students, but this transition may be particularly problematic for many special needs students that are transitioning…
Research Paper Doctorate
Russian Immigrant Children and Public Education in NYC
¶ … city known for its diversity the issue of public education and immigration go hand in hand. One of the most commonly cited reasons for immigration from any nation to the United States is educational opportunity for…
Paper High School
Personal responsibility in college student development
For the vast majority of college students who are not close to either far end of the academic performance spectrum, personal responsibility can make all the difference between academic success and failure. In principle, this essay makes the argument that there are six principal components of self-responsibility in college students: (1) Prioritizing Commitments, (2) Time Management, (3) Purposefulness, (4) Moral Development, (5) Public Image Management, and (6) Financial responsibility.
Essay Doctorate
Walden University Mission and Vision Statements Relate
¶ … Walden University mission and vision statements relate directly to the skills and experiences needed for success in the Walden Masters of Clinical Research Administration program.
Paper Undergraduate
Second language oral production in classroom contexts
1 Introduction This study is motivated by theoretical and pedagogical interests: to inform instructional design intended to integrate language and content and to explore how form and meaning intersect in SLA. Both interests draw on an extensive body of research that encompasses theory and practice underlying three different yet related frameworks and lines of inquiry: content-based language teaching, form-focused instruction and attention and awareness in SLA. All three of these areas are linked by a concern with the intersection of form and meaning in second language classrooms. Content-based language instruction was originally inspired as an alternative to traditional approaches to language teaching that favored form over meaning. Form-focused instruction brought language form to the foreground when meaning-focused, content-based approaches relegated the learning of language form to an incidental role. Research in attention and awareness has explored a focus on form and meaning as internal learner processes. The research questions guiding the present study were motivated by an interest in these areas.
Paper Undergraduate
Discussion of technological, educational, and professional topics
When designing a transition plan for a student, educators consider the developmental age of the student and the goals that have already been reached. New goals will be set for the student, building on skills that have…