Belfi Barbara, Haelermans Carla, De Fraine Bieke
Department of Educational Sciences, Center for Educational Effectiveness and Evaluation, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium.
Research Centre for Education and the Labour Market, Maastricht University, The Netherlands.
Br J Educ Psychol. 2016 Dec;86(4):501-525. doi: 10.1111/bjep.12120. Epub 2016 Jun 8.
The effects of school socio-economic composition on student achievement growth trajectories have been a hot topic of discussion among politicians around the world for many years. However, the bulk of research investigating school socio-economic composition effects has been limited in important ways.
In an attempt to overcome the flaws in earlier research on school socio-economic composition effects, this study used data from a large sample, followed students throughout primary education, addressed selection bias problems, identified the grade(s) in which school socio-economic composition mattered the most, and studied the differential effects of school socio-economic composition by individual socio-economic status (SES).
In a longitudinal design with seven occasions of data collection, the authors drew on a sample of N = 3,619 students (age at T1 about 5 years, age at T7 about 12 years) from 151 primary schools in Flanders (the northern part of Belgium).
Students in low-, medium-, high-, and mixed-SES schools were matched using propensity scores. To compare students' achievement growth trajectories in the different school compositions, multilevel regression modelling with repeated measurements was applied.
The results showed that students had more positive achievement growth in high-SES as compared to low-SES and mixed-SES schools. In two of the three comparisons, students in mixed-SES schools showed the lowest math development. The negative effects of mixed-SES schools on math achievement growth were the strongest for high-SES students.
Our findings contribute to the ongoing discussion on the effects of school socio-economic composition on student achievement growth.
多年来,学校社会经济构成对学生成绩增长轨迹的影响一直是世界各地政治家们热议的话题。然而,大部分研究学校社会经济构成影响的研究在重要方面存在局限性。
为了克服早期关于学校社会经济构成影响研究中的缺陷,本研究使用了来自大样本的数据,对学生整个小学教育阶段进行跟踪,解决了选择偏差问题,确定了学校社会经济构成影响最大的年级,并研究了学校社会经济构成对不同个体社会经济地位(SES)的差异影响。
在一个有七次数据收集的纵向设计中,作者选取了来自比利时北部弗拉芒地区151所小学的N = 3619名学生作为样本(T1时年龄约5岁,T7时年龄约12岁)。
使用倾向得分对低、中、高和混合SES学校的学生进行匹配。为了比较不同学校构成中学生的成绩增长轨迹,应用了重复测量的多层回归模型。
结果表明,与低SES和混合SES学校相比,高SES学校的学生成绩增长更为积极。在三项比较中的两项中,混合SES学校的学生数学发展水平最低。混合SES学校对高SES学生数学成绩增长的负面影响最为强烈。
我们的研究结果有助于正在进行的关于学校社会经济构成对学生成绩增长影响的讨论。