Exact(1)
I know this is a real stereotype (student 10: female, other ethnic group) In terms of their relationships with teachers, the "typical" Asian student was perceived by non-Asian teachers and one non-Asian student as shy, quiet, reserved, and under-confident (box 5).
Similar(59)
Media studies is often seen as a "mickey mouse" subject and a media student is perceived to be the degree equivalent of the couch potato.
While students reported many examples of compassionate treatment and inclusive behaviour, this was found to vary even within a college, depending on individual tutors and how a student is perceived.
How the commonly used term 'the typical student' is perceived stands out as particularly important.
Consistent with the cognitive theory, students are perceived to have more responsibility for their own learning.
It is also revealed that male students are perceived to have better critical thinking and problem solving skill.
These non-western students are perceived to have many problems, for example regarding their mastery of the Dutch language and their lack of studying skills.
More recently, gender diversity has received renewed attention in the educational debate: female participation and success rates in education seem to have surpassed those of males, and male students are perceived to lag behind where educational achievement is concerned.
Some graduate students were perceived as particularly proactive in technology use, such as recording meetings with their supervisors on their mobile telephone for later reference, using social networking sites to seek out others studying in similar areas, and videoconferencing from other countries for their research proposal presentations to university panels.
Both the administration of these schools as well as students were perceived to be supportive of these changes.
Female students are perceived to have more stress and to study harder in order to live up to expectations.
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