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Social-Psychological Interventions in Education: They're Not Magic
by
Walton, Gregory M.
, Yeager, David S.
in
Academic Achievement
/ Academic achievement gaps
/ Academic learning
/ Achievement Gap
/ Beliefs
/ College students
/ Context Effect
/ Education
/ Educational Environment
/ Educational psychology
/ Educational Research
/ Educational Researchers
/ Intelligence
/ Intervention
/ Personality psychology
/ Persuasion
/ Persuasive Discourse
/ Prosocial Behavior
/ Psychoeducational intervention
/ Psychological research
/ Psychology
/ Recursion
/ Resistance (Psychology)
/ Self Efficacy
/ Social psychology
/ Stereotypes
/ Student Attitudes
/ Students
2011
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Social-Psychological Interventions in Education: They're Not Magic
by
Walton, Gregory M.
, Yeager, David S.
in
Academic Achievement
/ Academic achievement gaps
/ Academic learning
/ Achievement Gap
/ Beliefs
/ College students
/ Context Effect
/ Education
/ Educational Environment
/ Educational psychology
/ Educational Research
/ Educational Researchers
/ Intelligence
/ Intervention
/ Personality psychology
/ Persuasion
/ Persuasive Discourse
/ Prosocial Behavior
/ Psychoeducational intervention
/ Psychological research
/ Psychology
/ Recursion
/ Resistance (Psychology)
/ Self Efficacy
/ Social psychology
/ Stereotypes
/ Student Attitudes
/ Students
2011
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Do you wish to request the book?
Social-Psychological Interventions in Education: They're Not Magic
by
Walton, Gregory M.
, Yeager, David S.
in
Academic Achievement
/ Academic achievement gaps
/ Academic learning
/ Achievement Gap
/ Beliefs
/ College students
/ Context Effect
/ Education
/ Educational Environment
/ Educational psychology
/ Educational Research
/ Educational Researchers
/ Intelligence
/ Intervention
/ Personality psychology
/ Persuasion
/ Persuasive Discourse
/ Prosocial Behavior
/ Psychoeducational intervention
/ Psychological research
/ Psychology
/ Recursion
/ Resistance (Psychology)
/ Self Efficacy
/ Social psychology
/ Stereotypes
/ Student Attitudes
/ Students
2011
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Social-Psychological Interventions in Education: They're Not Magic
Journal Article
Social-Psychological Interventions in Education: They're Not Magic
2011
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Overview
Recent randomized experiments have found that seemingly \"small\" socialpsychological interventions in education—that is, brief exercises that target students' thoughts, feelings, and beliefs in and about school—can lead to large gains in student achievement and sharply reduce achievement gaps even months and years later. These interventions do not teach students academic content but instead target students 'psychology, such as their beliefs that they have the potential to improve their intelligence or that they belong and are valued in school. When social-psychological interventions have lasting effects, it can seem surprising and even \"magical, \" leading people either to think of them as quick fixes to complicated problems or to consider them unworthy of serious consideration. The present article discourages both responses. It reviews the theoretical basis of several prominent social-psychological interventions and emphasizes that they have lasting effects because they target students 'subjective experiences in school, because they use persuasive yet stealthy methods for conveying psychological ideas, and because they tap into recursive processes present in educational environments. By understanding psychological interventions as powerful but context-dependent tools, educational researchers will be better equipped to take them to scale. This review concludes by discussing challenges to scaling psychological interventions and how these challenges may be overcome.
Publisher
SAGE Publications,American Educational Research Association
Subject
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