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result(s) for
"Academic Ability"
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Does academic self-concept drive academic achievement?
by
Hansen, Kirstine
,
Henderson, Morag
in
Academic Ability
,
Academic Achievement
,
Academic careers
2019
Gaps in GCSE attainment have long been the concern of policy makers, academics, and social commentators, largely due to the importance of these exams for setting children on their future academic and career pathways. In the past a wide range of factors relating to the pupils, their families, and their schools have been found to account for differences in GCSE attainment. In this paper we examine the role of pupils' beliefs in their own academic ability (academic self-concept). Using Next Steps data, we examine whether pupils with higher academic self-concept do better or worse in their GCSEs than pupils with lower academic self-concept. Results show that on average, controlling for other characteristics, having high academic self-concept increases GCSE scores by four grades. When we compare academic self-concept to measured achievement we find that both high and low attainers have higher probabilities of achieving five A*-C GCSEs and higher GCSE point scores on average if they have high academic self-concept than similarly able students who have lower academic self-concept.
Journal Article
Enhancing Science Achievement Utilising an Integrated STEM Approach
by
Yaki, Akawo Angwal
,
Mohd Saat, Rohaida
,
V. Sathasivam, Renuka
in
Ability Grouping
,
Academic Ability
,
Academic achievement gaps
2019
Purpose – The integrated science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) education has been reported to improve students’ science achievement. Nevertheless, few studies have focused on how this approach affected different ability groups. Lack of equity or the presence of achievement gap can be detrimental because they can reduce medium and low-ability students’ interest in science, which in turn can affect national development. Thus, the purpose of this study is to determine the main and the interaction effects of integrated science, technology, engineering and mathematics (ISTEMA) on students’ science achievement and how this approach affects students with different academic abilities. Methodology – The research adopted a 2x3 factorial design. The sample size consisted of 100 Nigerian science students from Year 11. A total of 51 students with different academic abilities (low, medium and high) were assigned randomly to an experimental group. The experimental group was taught genetics using a fivephased iterative ISTEMA process. Pre-test and post-test data were collected using 40 multiple-choice questions adopted from a national high-stakes examination. Analysis of covariance, paired sample t-test and one-way analysis of variance were utilised in the data analysis. Findings – Findings for research question one revealed a main significant difference in science achievement between year 11 students who learned using ISTEMA and those using traditional methods. No significant interaction effect was observed between the instructional approach and students’ academic abilities, that is, students’ academic abilities and the instructional approach did not interact to enhance students’ achievement. The findings for research question two indicated that high, medium and low academic-ability students benefitted; however, students with low academic abilities had the highest mean gain. Significance – Findings in this study have revealed empirically that the ISTEMA, as an instructional approach, has the potential to close the academic achievement gap. The findings may also serve as a guide for policymakers to promote STEM education in schools.
Journal Article
What One Hundred Years of Research Says About the Effects of Ability Grouping and Acceleration on K-12 Students' Academic Achievement: Findings of Two Second-Order Meta-Analyses
by
Olszewski-Kubilius, Paula
,
Makel, Matthew C.
,
Steenbergen-Hu, Saiying
in
Ability Grouping
,
Academic Ability
,
Academic Achievement
2016
Two second-order meta-analyses synthesized approximately 100 years of research on the effects of ability grouping and acceleration on K-12 students' academic achievement. Outcomes of 13 ability grouping meta-analyses showed that students benefitedfrom within-class grouping (0.19≤g≤0.30), cross-grade subject grouping (g = 0.26), and special grouping for the gifted (g = 0.3 7), but did not benefitfrom between-class grouping (0.04≤g≤0.06); the effects did not vary for high-, medium-, and low-ability students. Three acceleration meta-analyses showed that accelerated students significantly outperformed their nonaccelerated same-age peers (g = 0.70) but did not differ significantly from nonaccelerated older peers (g = 0.09). Three other meta-analyses that aggregated outcomes across specific forms of acceleration found that acceleration appeared to have a positive, moderate, and statistically significant impact on students' academic achievement (g = 0.42).
Journal Article
Self-Concept Predicts Academic Achievement Across Levels of the Achievement Distribution: Domain Specificity for Math and Reading
by
Chen, Meichu
,
Susperreguy, Maria Ines
,
Duckworth, Kathryn
in
Ability
,
Academic Ability
,
Academic Achievement
2018
This study examines whether self-concept of ability in math and reading predicts later math and reading attainment across different levels of achievement. Data from three large-scale longitudinal data sets, the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development-Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development, and Panel Study of Income Dynamics-Child Development Supplement, were used to answer this question by employing quantile regression analyses. After controlling for demographic variables, child characteristics, and early ability, the findings indicate that self-concept of ability in math and reading predicts later achievement in each respective domain across all quantile levels of achievement. These results were replicated across the three data sets representing different populations and provide robust evidence for the role of self-concept of ability in understanding achievement from early childhood to adolescence across the spectrum of performance (low to high).
Journal Article
Parental Educational Expectations and Academic Achievement in Children and Adolescents—a Meta-analysis
by
Ebeling, Markus
,
Pinquart, Martin
in
Academic Ability
,
Academic Achievement
,
Academic Aspiration
2020
The present meta-analysis assessed concurrent and longitudinal associations between parental educational expectations and child achievement, and factors that mediate the effect of expectations on achievement. A systematic search in electronic databases identified 169 studies that were included in a random-effects meta-analysis. We found small to moderate bivariate cross-sectional (
r
= .30) and longitudinal associations (
r
= .28) between parental expectation and achievement which persisted after statistically controlling for socioeconomic status. Associations varied, in part, by children’s age, socioeconomic status, ethnicity, matching of type of expectations and achievement, type of expectation assessed, publication status, and informant. The analysis of cross-lagged effects indicated that parental expectations predicted change in child achievement, thus indicating that expectations had an effect over and above the effect of prior achievement. Effects of expectations on change in achievement were even stronger (
r
= .15) than the effects of achievement on change in expectation (
r
= .09). Parental expectations tended to be higher than the child achievement. Associations between expectations and achievement were partially mediated by educational expectations in the offspring, child academic engagement, and academic self-concept, and to a lesser extent, by parental achievement-supportive behaviors. We conclude that parents are recommended to communicate positive educational expectations to their children. The transmission of positive expectations to the offspring and the encouragement of academic engagement seem to be more effective in realizing parental expectations than parental behavioral academic involvement such as checking homework and staying in contact with teachers.
Journal Article
The contextual teaching–learning mapping of academically successful Pasifika students
by
Tait, Kirstin
,
Horsley, Jenny
,
Tait, Carolyn
in
Academic Ability
,
Academic Achievement
,
Academically Gifted
2018
This qualitative study examined how six academically high-achieving Pasifika secondary school students in New Zealand reported the interplay of home and school environments during their final year of secondary school. These six students had gained a New Zealand Qualifications Authority Scholarship which provided government funding for university study. The data from interviews with them revealed their fluid, complex identities. A teaching and learning map provided a theoretical framework to understand the interplay of home, school, and the wider cultural environment. In schools, the students responded to learning experiences that were facilitated by knowledgeable teachers who recognised the participants’ individuality. The findings highlighted the importance of having family members who are able to navigate between home and school and create alignment between the institutional context and the home.
Journal Article
Expectations on Track? High School Tracking and Adolescent Educational Expectations
2015
This paper examines the role of adaptation in expectation formation processes by analyzing how educational tracking in high schools affects adolescents' educational expectations. I argue that adolescents view track placement as a signal about their academic abilities and respond to it in terms of modifying their educational expectations. Applying a difference-in-differences approach to the National Educational Longitudinal Study of 1988,1 find that being placed in an advanced or honors class in high school positively affects adolescents' expectations, particularly if placement is consistent across subjects and if placement contradicts tracking experiences in middle school. My findings support the hypothesis that adolescents adapt their educational expectations to ability signals sent by schools.
Journal Article
Development of Motivational Variables and Self-Esteem During the School Career: A Meta-Analysis of Longitudinal Studies
by
Scherrer, Vsevolod
,
Preckel, Franzis
in
Academic Ability
,
Academic achievement
,
Achievement Need
2019
Theoretical approaches and empirical research suggest a decline in the levels of motivational variables and self-esteem among students during the school career. However, precise statements about the magnitude of the change remain elusive. Conducting a meta-analysis of 107 independent longitudinal studies with 912 effect sizes, we found an overall decrease of Glass's Δ = -.108 over an average duration of 1.654 years. Change significantly differed by construct with the largest decreases in intrinsic motivation, math and language academic self-concepts, mastery achievement goals, and performance-approach achievement goals. There were no significant mean-level changes in self-esteem, general academic self-concept, academic self-efficacy, and performance avoidance achievement goals. School stage and transition to middle school or high school were not significantly associated with the change. Findings generalized over academic domain and questionnaire used for all constructs except for academic self-concept. The decline was larger in Europe than in North America or Asia.
Journal Article