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Dive into the research topics where Natalia Suárez is active.

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Featured researches published by Natalia Suárez.


Journal of Educational Research | 2015

Teachers' Feedback on Homework, Homework-Related Behaviors, and Academic Achievement.

José Carlos Núñez; Natalia Suárez; Pedro Rosário; Guillermo Vallejo; Rebeca Cerezo; Antonio Valle

ABSTRACT The authors intended to (a) identify the association between gender or grade level and teachers’ homework (HW) feedback and (b) examine the relationship between teachers’ HW feedback, HW-related behaviors (e.g., amount of HW completed), and academic achievement. Four hundred fifty-four students (Grades 5–12) participated in this study. The results showed that (a) at higher grade levels, there is a lower perceived amount of teachers’ HW feedback; (b) teachers’ HW feedback as perceived by students is positively and significantly related to the amount of HW completed and to the perceived quality of HW time management but not to the amount of time spent on HW; (c) the amount of HW completed and the perceived quality of HW time management positively and significantly predict academic achievement; and (d) teachers’ HW feedback as perceived by students has an indirect relationship with students’ academic achievement by its effect on students’ HW-related behaviors.


Educational Psychology | 2015

Homework and academic achievement across Spanish Compulsory Education

José Carlos Núñez; Natalia Suárez; Rebeca Cerezo; Julio Antonio González-Pienda; Pedro Rosário; Rosa Mourão; Antonio Valle

Homework (HW) is one of the most common school-related activities among parents, students and teachers. However, the need to assign HW to students has been extensively debated. The present investigation examines the relationship between specific HW variables (i.e. amount of HW completed, time spent on HW and perceived quality of HW time management) and academic achievement, while controlling for students’ gender and grade level. Participants included 454 students (ranging from 10 to 16 years of age) from three schools in northern Spain. A multivariate analyses of variance and path analyses showed that the amount of HW completed decreased with increased schooling, as did students’ perceived quality of HW time management. Data from hierarchical regression analyses completed by path analyses provided evidence that time spent on HW conjointly with perceived quality of HW time management explains how academic achievement is mediated by the amount of HW completed. These findings deepen the understanding of the complex impact of time spent on HW and on academic achievement.


Psicothema | 2015

Predicting approach to homework in primary school students

Antonio Valle; Irene Pan; Bibiana Regueiro; Natalia Suárez; Ellián Tuero

BACKGROUND The goal of this research was to study the weight of student variables related to homework (intrinsic homework motivation, perceived homework instrumentality, homework attitude, time spent on homework, and homework time management) and context (teacher feedback on homework and parental homework support) in the prediction of approaches to homework. METHOD 535 students of the last three courses of primary education participated in the study. Data were analyzed with hierarchical regression models and path analysis. RESULTS The results obtained suggest that students’ homework engagement (high or low) is related to students´ level of intrinsic motivation and positive attitude towards homework. Furthermore, it was also observed that students who manage their homework time well (and not necessarily those who spend more time) are more likely to show the deepest approach to homework. CONCLUSIONS Parental support and teacher feedback on homework affect student homework engagement through their effect on the levels of intrinsic homework motivation (directly), and on homework attitude, homework time management, and perceived homework instrumentality (indirectly). Data also indicated a strong and significant relationship between parental and teacher involvement.


Psicothema | 2015

Parents' conceptions of their homework involvement in elementary school

Jennifer Cunha; Pedro Rosário; Lúcia Macedo; Ana Rita Nunes; Sonia Fuentes; Ricardo Pinto; Natalia Suárez

BACKGROUND Homework is a universal practice used in schools, and is commonly related to academic achievement. According to literature, parental homework involvement has positive and negative aspects, depending on parents’ behaviors. METHOD Assuming a phenomenographic perspective, this study examined 4th graders’ parents’ conceptions of their involvement in homework. With the purpose of mapping the parents’ various conceptions of homework involvement, 32 semi-structured interviews were conducted and analyzed. RESULTS The results show that parents’ conceptions of homework involvement have a positive meaning, and focus primarily on the role played in the promotion of academic learning by (a) fostering their children’s autonomy, (b) exerting control over their learning, and (c) providing them with emotional encouragement (when children struggle with difficulties). CONCLUSIONS Given that parents perceive their involvement in their children’s homework as important, it is necessary to promote parent-teacher collaboration and parent-training workshops to improve the quality of parental homework involvement.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2017

How do student prior achievement and homework behaviors relate to perceived parental involvement in homework

José Carlos Núñez; Joyce L. Epstein; Natalia Suárez; Pedro Rosário; Guillermo Vallejo; Antonio Valle

This study investigated how students’ prior achievement is related to their homework behaviors (i.e., time spent on homework, homework time management, and amount of homework), and to their perceptions of parental involvement in homework (i.e., parental control and parental support). A total of 1250 secondary students from 7 to 10th grade participated in the study. Structural equation models were fitted to the data, compared, and a partial mediation model was chosen. The results indicated that students’ prior academic performance was significantly associated with both of the students’ homework variables, with direct and indirect results linking achievement and homework behaviors with perceived parental control and support behaviors about homework. Low-achieving students, in particular, perceived more parental control of homework in the secondary grades. These results, together with those of previous research, suggest a recursive relationship between secondary school students’ achievement and their perceptions of parental involvement in homework, which represents the process of student learning and family engagement over time. Study limitations and educational implications are discussed.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2016

Homework Involvement and Academic Achievement of Native and Immigrant Students

Natalia Suárez; Bibiana Regueiro; Joyce L. Epstein; Isabel Piñeiro; Sara Mari Diaz; Antonio Valle

Homework is a debated issue in society and its relationship with academic achievement has been deeply studied in the last years. Nowadays, schools are multicultural stages in which students from different cultures and ethnicities work together. In this sense, the present study aims to compare homework involvement and academic achievement in a sample of native and immigrant students, as well as to study immigrant students’ relationship between homework involvement and Math achievement. The sample included 1328 students, 10–16 years old from Spanish families (85.6%) or immigrant students or students of immigrant origin (14.4%) from South America, Europe, Africa, and Asia. The study was developed considering three informants: elementary and secondary students, their parents and their teachers. Results showed higher involvement in homework in native students than in immigrant. Between immigrants students, those who are more involved in homework have better academic achievement in Math at secondary grades. There weren’t found gender differences on homework involvement, but age differences were reported. Immigrant students are less involved in homework at secondary grades that students in elementary grades. The study highlights the relevance of homework involvement in academic achievement in immigrant students.


Cultura Y Educacion | 2017

Changes in involvement in homework throughout compulsory secondary education / Cambios en la implicación en los deberes escolares a lo largo de la Educación Secundaria Obligatoria

Bibiana Regueiro; Antonio Valle; José Carlos Núñez; Pedro Rosário; Susana Rodríguez; Natalia Suárez

Abstract This paper analyses the changes found in students’ involvement in homework throughout the four grade levels of compulsory secondary education in Spain (ages 12–15). It also analyses the relationship between the changes in students’ involvement in homework throughout schooling and motivational and emotional variables related to homework. Findings indicated that: (a) the amount of homework completed and homework time management diminished slightly throughout the grade levels researched; however, this result is clearer in terms of the amount of homework completed; (b) prior academic achievement is significantly related to the variables associated with students’ involvement in homework; (c) the motivational and affective variables researched explained statistically significant variance related to two of the three dependent variables associated with involvement in homework; and (d) the association between the motivational and affective variables and involvement in homework is lower.


Psicothema | 2011

Implementation of training programs in self-regulated learning strategies in Moodle format: Results of a experience in higher education

José Carlos Núñez; Rebeca Cerezo; Ana Bernardo; Pedro Rosário; Antonio Valle; Estrella Fernández; Natalia Suárez


Metacognition and Learning | 2015

Relationships between Perceived Parental Involvement in Homework, Student Homework Behaviors, and Academic Achievement: Differences among Elementary, Junior High, and High School Students.

José Carlos Núñez; Natalia Suárez; Pedro Rosário; Guillermo Vallejo; Antonio Valle; Joyce L. Epstein


European Journal of Education and Psychology | 2015

Perfiles motivacionales como combinación de expectativas de autoeficacia y metas académicas en estudiantes universitarios

Antonio Valle; Bibiana Regueiro; Susana Rodríguez; Isabel Piñeiro; Carlos Freire; Mar Ferradás; Natalia Suárez

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