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TEACHER CHARACTERISTICS EXPLAINING THE EXTENT OF AGRICULTURAL AWARENESS ACTIVITIES INTEGRATED INTO THE ELEMENTARY
Author(s) -
Neil A. Knobloch,
Robert A. Martin
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
journal of agricultural education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2162-5212
pISSN - 1042-0541
DOI - 10.5032/jae.2002.04012
Subject(s) - agriculture , agricultural education , perception , psychology , sample (material) , regression analysis , variance (accounting) , population , variables , mathematics education , statistics , geography , demography , mathematics , sociology , business , chemistry , accounting , archaeology , chromatography , neuroscience
The exploratory correlational-regression study investigated the extent that the variability in the number of agricultural awareness activities conducted by elementary teachers in east-central Iowa could be explained by selected teacher characteristics—degree of education, grade level, agricultural classes, agricultural experience, and perceptions toward integrating agriculture. A sample of 689 teachers was systematically drawn from the target population of 2,067 elementary teachers. A survey was conducted using a mailed questionnaire. Forty-five percent of the teachers (311/689) returned the questionnaire, but because some questionnaires were unusable, the data sample consisted of 281 questionnaires (41% response rate). The four teacher characteristics (Degree, Grade Level (K-2), Agricultural Classes, and Agricultural Experience) and the perception of integrating agriculture domain (integration perception) were entered into a stepwise, multiple linear regression model. The full model was significant (p = .032) excluding the independent variable—degree. The variables of integration perception, grade level (K-2), agricultural classes, and agricultural experience explained 20% of the variance in the number of agricultural awareness activities conducted. According to Cohen (1988), this relationship (r 2 = .20) had a large effect size. Unique variance was 7.8% for integration perception, 4.0% for grade level (K-2), 2.4% for agricultural classes, and 1.4% for agricultural experience.

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