19 research outputs found

    Predicting Science Engagement with Motivation and Teacher Characteristics: a Multilevel Investigation

    No full text
    The purpose of this study was to investigate the student and teacher-level predictors of Turkish middle school students' engagement in science classes. Students' engagement was examined in terms of agentic, behavioral, cognitive, and emotional engagement. The participants of the study were 134 Turkish science teachers and their 3394 grade 7 students. Separate multilevel models were specified for each dimension of students' science engagement. Results of the HLM analyses indicated that dimensions of students' science engagement were significantly predicted mostly by the student-level variables including science self-efficacy, mastery approach and avoidance goals, and performance approach goals. Teacher-level variables were influential only on the cognitive and emotional engagement. There were also cross-level interactions in predicting science engagement. Results were discussed in the light of related literature

    Gingival crevicular fluid IL-6, tPA, PAI-2, albumin levels following initial periodontal treatment in chronic periodontitis patients with or without type 2 diabetes

    No full text
    To evaluate initial periodontal treatment effects on gingival crevicular fluid (GCF) interleukin-6 (IL-6), tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA), plasminogen activator inhibitor-2 (PAI-2), albumin levels in type 2 diabetic patients. GCF samples were collected from 20 type 2 diabetic, 22 non-diabetic non-smokers all with chronic periodontitis at baseline, 1-, 3-months following initial periodontal treatment. Biochemical analysis was performed by ELISA. Data were tested by Mann-Whitney U, Wilcoxon tests. The total amounts of albumin, IL-6, tPA, PAI-2 decreased significantly in diabetics after treatment (1- and 3-months) whereas, only PAI-2 decreased in non-diabetic group at 3-months (p < 0.05). There were statistically significant differences between the diabetics and non-diabetics at all time points for albumin, PAI-2 and at 1-, 3-months for GCF volume (p < 0.050) but only at baseline for IL-6 (p < 0.050). Present data suggest clinical improvements are less apparent in diabetic chronic periodontitis patients as reflected by disease markers in GCF and by an increase in concentrations of inflammatory proteins IL-6, tPA, and PAI-2 in GCF of this patient group following initial periodontal treatment
    corecore