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Dive into the research topics where Ibis Marlene Álvarez Valdivia is active.

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Featured researches published by Ibis Marlene Álvarez Valdivia.


Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry | 2004

Loneliness and Social Adaptation in Brazilian, Canadian, Chinese and Italian Children: A Multi-National Comparative Study.

Xinyin Chen; Yunfeng He; Ana Maria Faraco de Oliveira; Alida Lo Coco; Carla Zappulla; Violet Kaspar; Barry H. Schneider; Ibis Marlene Álvarez Valdivia; Hennis Chi-Hang Tse; Amanda DeSouza

BACKGROUND Research on childrens loneliness has been conducted mostly in Western, especially North American, cultures. The purpose of the study was to examine relations between loneliness and social adaptation among children and adolescents in four different societies. METHODS A total of 2263 children from grade 3 to grade 6, aged 9 to 12 years, in Brazil, Canada, P. R. China, and Southern Italy participated in the study. The participants completed a self-report measure of loneliness. Information about social behaviors and peer relationships was obtained from peer assessments. RESULTS Multi-group analyses revealed that the overall patterns of relations among social behaviors, peer relationships and loneliness differed across the samples. Specifically, sociability was positively associated with peer relationships and made negative indirect contributions to loneliness through peer relationships in all four samples. Aggression made significant indirect contributions to the prediction of loneliness in Chinese children, but not in other samples. Shyness-sensitivity was associated with loneliness directly in Brazilian and Italian children and indirectly through peer relationships in Canadian children, but not associated with loneliness in Chinese children. CONCLUSIONS The results suggest that the nature of childrens loneliness may be affected by the broad socio-cultural context.


International Journal of Behavioral Development | 2005

Social Withdrawal and Maladjustment in a Very Group-Oriented Society.

Ibis Marlene Álvarez Valdivia; Barry H. Schneider; Kenia Lorenzo Chavez; Xinyin Chen

Elementary-school children in Cuba and Canada participated in measures of loneliness, sociometric status, friendship, aggression, and social withdrawal. Withdrawal was associated with loneliness in the Cuban data from both cohorts, Grade 4 and Grade 6. In the Canadian data, withdrawal was only linked to loneliness in Grade 6. In contrast with North American data, aggression was a significant correlate of loneliness in the Cuban data from both cohorts. Social withdrawal was more strongly linked with loneliness in a Grade 6 cohort than among children in Grade 4. Especially in the Cuban Grade 6 data, there was considerable evidence that peer acceptance/rejection mediates the link between problematic social withdrawal and loneliness. These data are interpreted in light of the known functions of the peer group in Cuban society in regulating social behaviours that may be interpreted as not participating in the collective group or undermining its behavioural norms.


Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education | 2014

Assisting learning in e-assessment: a closer look at educational supports

Marc Lafuente; Ana Remesal; Ibis Marlene Álvarez Valdivia

This study analyses the educational support offered through information and communication technology during formative assessment in two different cases in higher education. We analysed one blended and one virtual case from two different universities. The study aimed at identifying specific patterns of educational support intended to foster two interaction processes: (1) the promotion of greater autonomy in the students and (2) the construction of more appropriate meanings by them. The analysis showed that these two processes were achieved with different attainment levels in each of the two study cases. Specific patterns of support mediated by technology were found underlying these different results. This led us to identify ‘suitable’ and ‘undesirable’ patterns of support in e-assessment practices.


International Journal of Inclusive Education | 2018

Teachers’ intercultural competence: a requirement or an option in a culturally diverse classroom?

Ibis Marlene Álvarez Valdivia; Iosbel González Montoto

ABSTRACT This paper reports an exploratory study of the development of intercultural competence (IC) in elementary school teachers in Catalonia, Spain, utilising mixed-method quantitative and qualitative assessments. Through enrolment in a teacher training activity, the starting point was the administration of the Intercultural development inventory (IDI) to assess IC. Later, a discussion group was held to reflect on the results of the evaluation and to discuss educational practices in the face of cultural diversity. The quantitative IDI findings indicated that, regardless of the presence of foreign origin students at schools, participant teachers overestimate their level of intercultural sensitivity; there is a tendency to emphasise similarities in all cultures, which can minimise significant cultural differences. Nevertheless, the teachers became interested in cultural diversity after considering their potentially controversial and problematic educational context. Beyond admitted limitations of this study, inherent to small-scale methodological approach, our practice-based reflective proposal highlights obstacles and potentialities for managing cultural diversity in the classroom. These findings support the conclusion that IC is distributed throughout members of a community rather than being strictly an individual attribute. At the same time, the study thus demonstrates a mixed-method training design as an effective means of developing and assessing IC.ABSTRACTThis paper reports an exploratory study of the development of intercultural competence (IC) in elementary school teachers in Catalonia, Spain, utilising mixed-method quantitative and qualitative assessments. Through enrolment in a teacher training activity, the starting point was the administration of the Intercultural development inventory (IDI) to assess IC. Later, a discussion group was held to reflect on the results of the evaluation and to discuss educational practices in the face of cultural diversity. The quantitative IDI findings indicated that, regardless of the presence of foreign origin students at schools, participant teachers overestimate their level of intercultural sensitivity; there is a tendency to emphasise similarities in all cultures, which can minimise significant cultural differences. Nevertheless, the teachers became interested in cultural diversity after considering their potentially controversial and problematic educational context. Beyond admitted limitations of this stud...


International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education | 2017

Students’ feedback beliefs and anxiety in online foreign language oral tasks

Sidney Martin; Ibis Marlene Álvarez Valdivia

Research about the interrelation between anxiety and corrective feedback has mostly been conducted in face-to-face environments. The present study examines the relationship between students showing anxiety when speaking a FL and feedback as a potential anxiety inhibitor in an online oral synchronous communication task. Two questionnaires, the Foreign Language Anxiety Scale (FLAS) and the Corrective Feedback Belief Scale (CFBS), were administered to 50 students from the School of Languages in an online learning environment. T-test analysis showed a significant difference between the learners’ preferences in two methods of CF. Recast and Metalinguistic feedback were better rated by the students who reported higher levels of anxiety in oral communication classes. Additionally, the High-level anxiety group rated teacher feedback as more effective than the other sources of feedback when compared to the Low-level anxiety group. These results indicate the need to take into account individual differences in terms of anxiety foreign language learning and students’ beliefs about CF in order to help them achieve their learning goals in an interactive online environment.


Journal of Adolescent Research | 2016

School Adjustment and Friendship Quality of First- and Second-Generation Adolescent Immigrants to Spain as a Function of Acculturation

Ibis Marlene Álvarez Valdivia; Barry H. Schneider; Cecilia Villalobos Carrasco

The purpose of this study was to determine the links between school adjustment, friendship, and identification with both the cultures of origin and with the host culture. Our overriding hypothesis was that integration in Berry’s terms, that is, simultaneous identification with both the culture of origin and the majority Spanish/Catalan culture, would predict better school adjustment. We also expected the same integrated acculturative stance to be linked with closer and less conflictual friendships. The participants were 682 students, in six public high schools in Catalonia, Spain. Of these, 226 were first- and second-generation immigrants, and this subset was used in most of the analyses reported herein. The results showed that acculturation to the host culture and acculturation to the culture of origin are both adaptive but in different ways. These results applied to both first- and second-generation immigrants. Identification with the culture of origin was a significant predictor of closeness in friendship. In contrast, identification with the host culture is linked with school adjustment. Integrated adolescents, who identify simultaneously with host culture and culture of origin, do best at school according to teachers but not significantly better than assimilated students, who identify primarily with the host culture.


Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry | 2004

Loneliness and social adaptation in Brazilian, Canadian, Chinese and Italian children: a multi-national comparative study: Loneliness and social adaptation in Brazilian, Canadian, Chinese and Italian children

Xinyin Chen; Yunfeng He; Ana Maria Faraco de Oliveira; Alida Lo Coco; Carla Zappulla; Violet Kaspar; Barry H. Schneider; Ibis Marlene Álvarez Valdivia; Hennis Chi-Hang Tse; Amanda DeSouza


Archive | 2009

Pisa como excusa: repensar la evaluación para cambiar la enseñanza

Carles Monereo Font; Monique Boekaerts; Ibis Marlene Álvarez Valdivia; Marcelúi Canal Besora; Montserrat Castelló Badia; Patrick Cerrato Alonso; Mariona Corcelles Seuba; David Duran Gisbert; Isabel Gómez Alemany; Rafael Lemus Arce; Montserrat Núñez Castilla; Sonia Serrano de Lamo; Laura Vicente Villanueva


Electronic journal of research in educational psychology | 2017

Evaluar para contribuir a la autorregulación del aprendizaje

Ibis Marlene Álvarez Valdivia


Electronic journal of research in educational psychology | 2017

Evaluación del aprendizaje en la universidad: una mirada retrospectiva y prospectiva desde la divulgación científica

Ibis Marlene Álvarez Valdivia

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Isabel Gómez Alemany

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Xinyin Chen

University of Pennsylvania

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Marly Odette Casanova Uribe

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Amanda DeSouza

University of Western Ontario

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Hennis Chi-Hang Tse

University of Western Ontario

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Yunfeng He

University of Hong Kong

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