Latest Submissions

  • Item type:Item,
    Factors associated with the performance of seniors in Adventist academies in the Indian certificate of secondary education examinations
    (Adventist International Institute of Advanced Studies, 1999-10) Yentrapati, Abraham John
    The purpose of this study was to identify factors that are associated with the performance of senior academy students on the Indian certificate of secondary Education Examinations. The problem addressed in this study was, "What are the factors influencing academy seniors, ICSE test scores?" A total of 522 respondents participated voluntarily in this study representing 30 high schools out of 31 listed by the Education Department of the Southern Asia Division of Seventh-day Adventists. Out of the 30 schools that participated in this study, ten schools were located in Central India Union; twelve schools in South India Union; while eight schools were located in Northern and Northeast India Union. Respondents were all the senior students who took the 1998 ICSE examination. They rated their perceptions on a 66-item questionnaire on items associated with the student performance utilizing a 5-point Likert scale. The Factors Associated with Performance of Students (FASP) instrument used in this study was an adaptation from earlier instruments by Hebron (1991), and by Musumbi (199s). The method used in this study was a correlational survey. Four research questions and three hypotheses were posed. The data collection was done from March, 1998 to June 1998. The questionnaire response rate was 52%. Means and standard deviations were computed for each of the items on the questionnaire. Statistical treatment included one-way ANOVA, multiple regression, and pearson product-moment correlation. The level of significance for all tests was set at alpha < .05. The major conclusions of this study were as follows: (a) principal leadership is a positive predictor of test performancei (b) older students tended to perform better on the language test; (c) students from higher income families excelled in the history, civics, and geography subject; (d) male students excelled in history, civics, and geography while female students tended to excel in language and (e) statistically significant predictors of test performance include the Parent Factor with total-score, math score, and science score. However, the significant predictors, although reliab1e, accounted for a low amount of variance (.02). Major recommendations include (a) that continued refinement of the research instrument be done by testing in other contexts and by using other response categories; (b) that the reliability of the Parent-Child Factor be improved by adding more items, testing, and refining items, (c) that a study be conducted to test the assumption trat the ICSE examination is valid, reliable, sensitive, and discriminating; (d) that other predictors of student test performance be tested such as student personality, grade point average, hours of study per week, and career qoals; (e) that the three Seventh-day Adventist Unions in India revlew their choice of high school completion exam; (f) that a predictive study be undertaken to determine the reliabillty of the ICSE exam as a predictor of post-secondary academic performance.
  • Item type:Item,
    Richard Rice's anticipatory theory of divine foreknowledge : a critical evaluation
    (Adventist International Institute of Advanced Studies, 2001-12) Kasay, Laurent Bisogho
    The purpose of this disserLation is to describe and evaluate Richard Rice's anticipatory theory of divine foreknowledge. It seeks to answer the question whether this theory is acceptable within the theological framework of the Seventh-day Adventist church to which he belongs. Rice, a proponent of free will theism, rejects the concept of absolute divine foreknowledge because it jeopardizes human freedom, deprives God of interaction with his creatures, and makes Him responsible for evil. To avoid these problems Rice proposes that future events, especially those related to free human decisions and actions, must remain open or indefinite until they occur since they are indefinite, they do not exist and thus cannot be objects of divine foreknowledge. God can only anticipate perfectry from present factors. The evaluation of Rice's theory compares Rice's open view of God with the view of God by other Seventh-day Adventist writers. It reveals that the main difference between them is Rice's brelief in a "limited divine foreknowledgie" to which his concept of perfect divine perfection is tied. This limitatlon is rooted in philosophical presuppositions that confuse epistemological and ontological realms and in an inadequate biblical interpretation. Rice's anticipatory theory of divine foreknowledge relies on philosophy to the detriment of reliance upon scripture. It is highly speculative. Since Rice's concept of perfect anticipation is speculative and not biblically based, the study concludes that it is unacceptable within the Adventist theological framework.

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