Echols Leslie
University of California at Los Angeles.
J Educ Psychol. 2015 Feb 1;107(1):272-283. doi: 10.1037/a0037440.
This study examined the influence of academic teaming (i.e., sharing academic classes with the same classmates) on the relationship between social preference and peer victimization among 6 grade students in middle school. Approximately 1,000 participants were drawn from 5 middle schools that varied in their practice of academic teaming. A novel methodology for measuring academic teaming at the level was employed, in which students received their own teaming score based on the unique set of classmates with whom they shared academic courses in their class schedule. Using both peer- and self-reports of victimization, the results of two path models indicated that students with low social preference in highly teamed classroom environments were more victimized than low preference students who experienced less teaming throughout the school day. This effect was exaggerated in higher performing classrooms. Implications for the practice of academic teaming were discussed.
本研究考察了学术分组(即与相同的同学一起上学术课程)对中学六年级学生社交偏好与同伴受害之间关系的影响。大约1000名参与者来自5所中学,这些学校在学术分组的做法上各不相同。采用了一种新颖的方法来衡量该水平的学术分组,即根据学生在课程表中与之共享学术课程的独特同学群体,为学生计算他们自己的分组得分。使用同伴和自我报告的受害情况,两个路径模型的结果表明,在高度分组的课堂环境中社交偏好较低的学生比在整个上学日经历分组较少的低偏好学生更容易受到伤害。在成绩较好的课堂上,这种影响更为明显。文中讨论了学术分组做法的相关影响。