27 research outputs found

    Curricular Tracking, Studentsā€™ Academic Identity, and School Belonging

    Get PDF
    Curricular tracking is common in many countries, yet this school practice might have unintended consequences for studentsā€™ attitudes toward school. We examined the changes in adolescentsā€™ school belonging among sixth graders placed in honors versus regular math, with academic identity as a mediator in this relation. Early adolescents (N = 322; 72% White; 164 girls) in the southeastern United States completed measures of school belonging and academic identity at the beginning and end of their sixth-grade year. With parent education, prior math achievement, and prior school belonging controlled, honors math placement predicted increases in school belonging from the beginning to the end of studentsā€™ sixth-grade year, and this association was positively mediated by academic identity. Results of this study are important for further understanding the influences of tracking on studentsā€™ motivational beliefs

    Nonprescription Stimulant Use at a Public University: Studentsā€™ Motives, Experiences, and Guilt

    Get PDF
    We examined the use of nonmedical prescription stimulants (NPSs) among students (N = 1,208) at a large public university in southeastern United States. After students who had been prescribed stimulants had been removed from the sample, 202 of the remaining 1,067 students (i.e., 18.9%) reported having engaged in NPS use in their lifetime. NPS use was strongly associated with membership in Greek societies and with binge drinking behavior. NPS users overwhelmingly reported engagement in NPS use for academic rather than for recreational purposes, and as anticipated, NPS users with academic motives reported stronger academic benefits than NPS users with social/recreational motives. Reports of guilt were low, and frequent users reported less guilt than infrequent users. Implications for interventions are discussed

    Academic Self-concept in Black Adolescents: Do Race and Gender Stereotypes Matter?

    Get PDF
    We examined the relation between race- and gender-group competence ratings and academic self-concept in 252 Black seventh- and eighth-graders. On average, youth reported traditional race stereotypes, whereas gender stereotypes were traditional about verbal abilities and were nontraditional regarding math/science abilities. Among boys, in-group gender and in-group race-based competence ratings (i.e. ratings of boys and Blacks) were related to math/science and verbal self-concepts. However, only gender-based ratings (i.e. ratings of girlsā€™ abilities for reading/writing) were related to girlsā€™ self-concepts. These findings suggest that the influence of race stereotypes on Black adolescentsā€™ academic self-concepts is different for girls than boys. Whereas self-relevant gender groups were associated with both Black girlsā€™ and boysā€™ academic self-concept, race-based competence ratings were only relevant for the academic self-views of Black boys

    Math and language gender stereotypes: Age and gender differences in implicit biases and explicit beliefs.

    No full text
    In a cross-sectional study of youth ages 8-15, we examined implicit and explicit gender stereotypes regarding math and language abilities. We investigated how implicit and explicit stereotypes differ across age and gender groups and whether they are consistent with cultural stereotypes. Participants (N = 270) completed the Affect Misattribution Procedure (AMP) and a survey of explicit beliefs. Across all ages, boys showed neither math nor language implicit gender biases, whereas girls implicitly favored girls in both domains. These findings are counter to cultural stereotypes, which favor boys in math. On the explicit measure, both boys' and girls' primary tendency was to favor girls in math and language ability, with the exception of elementary school boys, who rated genders equally. We conclude that objective gender differences in academic success guide differences in children's explicit reports and implicit biases

    Self-views of African-American Youth are Related to the Gender Stereotypes and Ability Attributions of Their Parents

    No full text
    We examined relations among African American mothersā€™ (N = 392) stereotypes about gender differences in mathematics, science, and reading performance, parentsā€™ attributions about their childrenā€™s academic successes and failures, and their seventh and eighth grade childrenā€™s academic self-views (domain-specific ability attributions and self-concept). Parentsā€™ stereotypes about gender differences in abilities were related to their ability attributions for their childrenā€™s successes and failures within academic domains. Mothersā€™ attributions, in turn, were related to childrenā€™s attributions, particularly among girls. Mothersā€™ attributions of their childrenā€™s successes to domain-specific ability were related to the self-concepts of daughters, and failure attributions were related to domain-specific self-concepts of sons. The influences of parentsā€™ beliefs on young adolescentsā€™ identity beliefs are discussed
    corecore