Marjon Bruinsma
University of Groningen
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Publication
Featured researches published by Marjon Bruinsma.
European Journal of Teacher Education | 2010
Marjon Bruinsma; Ellen Jansen
This study investigated 198 pre‐service teachers’ intrinsic and extrinsic motivation for becoming teachers and focused on the distinction between adaptive motives, which promote lasting and effective engagement, and maladaptive motives, which promote superficial engagement. We examined the relationships with teacher self‐efficacy, the quality of the teacher training programme, classroom teaching experiences and the time pre‐service teachers expect to spend in the profession. The analyses indicated that female pre‐service teachers and pre‐service teachers with higher prior ability showed more intrinsic adaptive motives. Intrinsic adaptive motives were positively related to the quality of the teacher training programme and the classroom teaching experiences. Pre‐service teachers with positive teaching experiences indicated greater teacher self‐efficacy. Pre‐service teachers with extrinsic maladaptive motives indicated having had negative teaching experiences and they intended to remain in the profession for shorter periods. Teacher self‐efficacy was positively related to the amount of time pre‐service teachers intended to remain in the profession.
Educational Research and Evaluation | 2005
Ellen Jansen; Marjon Bruinsma
This research project investigated the relationship between students pre-entry characteristics, perceptions of the learning environment, reported work discipline, the use of deep information processing strategies, and academic achievement. Ability measured by grade-point average in pre-university education was the most important predictor of achievement, followed by work discipline, age, and gender. Involvement, work discipline, and perceived course difficulty affected the perception of the quality of the instructor/course. Surprisingly, the perception of the quality of the instructor/course was negatively related to perceived difficulty. The use of deep information processing strategies did not result in higher grades.
Higher Education Research & Development | 2009
Marjon Bruinsma; Ellen Jansen
The goal of this study was to illustrate survival analysis with higher education data and gain insight into a limited set of factors that predict when students passed their first‐year examination at a Dutch university. Study participants consisted of 565 first‐year students in four departments. Data were collected on when students pass their first‐year examination, prior achievement and procrastination. The analysis showed that 69% of the students had not passed their examination within the nominal study length of 12 months. The estimated median lifetime, the time when 50% of the students had passed their examination, was after 23 months. Students from the 2nd department passed their examination fastest. Female students reached the estimated median lifetime at 20 months, younger students at 16 months, older students at 24+ months and students with high prior achievement scores at 12 months. The analysis finally indicated that age, prior achievement and procrastination predicted passing first‐year examinations.
Curriculum and teaching | 2007
Marjon Bruinsma; Ellen Jansen
REICE: Revista Electrónica Iberoamericana sobre Calidad, Eficacia y Cambio en Educación | 2005
Marjon Bruinsma; Ellen Jansen
Pedagogische Studien | 2018
Els van Rooij; Jantina Brouwer; Marjon Bruinsma; Ellen Jansen; Vincent Donche; Dorien Noyens
Archive | 2011
Marjolein Torenbeek; C.J.M. Suhre; Ellen Jansen; Marjon Bruinsma
Tijdschrift voor Hoger Onderwijs | 2009
Marjon Bruinsma; Ellen Jansen
Improving student learning through the curriculum. | 2009
Marjon Bruinsma; Ellen Jansen
Archive | 2008
W Hofman; Ellen Jansen; C.J.M. Suhre; Marjon Bruinsma