Lecture 8
Part 1 – adolescents in school
Schools:
Classroom factors:
Classroom climate
Teachers' expectations
Instructional quality
Social organizations of schools
Educational tracks
Select school
Admission by lottery
School size
Part 2 – Dutch school system
NL: freedom of education
Education shall be the constant concern of the Government
All persons shall be free to provide education (start their own school), without prejudice to the authorities’ right of supervision
Now: many different school types
Consequences of freedom of education for classroom climate
Diversity educational approaches
Relatively large differences in learning outcomes in different schools
Consistency values home & school
Segregation: similar peers
“free-market system” (popularity of schools varies > competition between schools)
NL: early educational tracking
Level on which they receive their teaching
Red countries: single school for both primary and lower secondary education
Pink: transition between primary and lower secondary education, but still with common core curriculum for students
Blue: differentiated branches/tracks
Decrease in combined educational tracks in the 1st year of secondary school
Consequences of early educational tracking for classroom climate
Achievement constrained by level of instruction
Less contact between different social groups
Lower status of vocational pathways
Selection based on?
But: reading level at age 15 overlaps (PISA)
How is the Dutch system doing?
Conclusion: the way a society organizes a school system shapes the experiences of adolescents in the classroom.
Part 3 – school transition
School transition involves many changes
e.g., “knowing how to change classes”
Longer distance to school, how to use a locker, lunch at school
What do children worry about? (UK)
Decline in engagement, motivation and performance
School grades also drop
Scores on standardized achievement tests do not decline
More to do with stricter grading, than with actual achievement
Cumulative change theory
Theory: transitions will be harder for children who experience several life changes at the same time (e.g., pubertal development, change in resident, start dating, family disruption)
Transition between grade 6 and 7
Kindergarten to grade 8 in one school
Findings: more life changes > lower grades (for both girls and boys)
More life changes > lower self-esteem (girls)
Person-environment fit theory
Theory: negative changes in motivation and engagement after the school transition result from a mismatch between the environment and adolescents'’ needs
It is not the transition itself that causes problems, but school environment does not fit the need of adolescents.
Basic needs (self-determination theory)
Dutch context
Impact of a school transition
Individual differences in experiencing the school transition
depending on academic and psychosocial problems pre-transition
Depending on social support (peers, parents) during transition
Self-esteem in primary school > self-esteem in secondary school
When peer acceptance was lower than expected > decrease in self-esteem
Depending on abilities to cope with changes
Hypothesis: reactivity of self-esteem higher for children high on neuroticism
Findings: only children high on neuroticism experienced a drop in self-esteem when their acceptance was lower than expected
Remember:
Dutch context: more transitions?
Part 4 – impact of grades
Characteristic for average class in secondary school is “grade addiction”: at the start of the class the teacher announces that it is important to attend well because a test will soon be given. When the teacher does not say this, the students will ask whether they will receive a grade
The classroom experiment
prof. Dylan William: changing practice from giving grades to giving feedback/comments
Bases his idea on the work of Buttler & Nissan, testing the effects of grades with written feedback or no feedback
Grades vs. No feedback: they do perform better, but students in no feedback condition: higher motivation (intrinsic motivation)
Written feedback vs. Grades: higher performance + higher motivation
Natural experiment comparing grades vs no grades – Klapp (2015)
She found a negative main effect of grading
Strongest effect for low-ability students: graded low-ability students received lower subsequent grades through grades 7-9 and has lower odds to finish upper secondary education, compared to ungraded low-ability students
Possible explanations
How did you feel on seeing your report card for the first time?
Contextual influences on motivation, engagement and achievement
Teachers (expectations, relationship quality, classroom management, teaching strategies, performance vs. Mastery orientation)
Peers (friends selection & socialization, peer norms, connectedness)
Parents (Values & expectations, involvement in school, parenting style, quality of home environment)
Looking at classroom context
Children who perceived the performance norms in their class to be high, were more affectively reactive to their grades, which resulted in a stronger indirect effect of grades via negative affect on emotional engagement.
Conclusion
Grades are not only indications of performance
Grades have social and motivational impact
Awareness of the psychological impact of grades may help teachers to understand their students’ engagement in school
Do the benefits of grades outweigh the costs?
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