Hannon Brenda
Department of Psychology & Sociology, Texas A&M University-Kingsville, Kingsville, TX 78363-8202, USA.
J Intell. 2019 Aug 1;7(3):18. doi: 10.3390/jintelligence7030018.
This exploratory study shows that the contributions of cognitive, metacognitive awareness, performance avoidance, test anxiety, and socioeconomic family background factors to SAT scores (i.e., overall SAT, SAT-V, SAT-M) may vary as a function of ethnicity (i.e., European-American, Hispanic). Four hundred and fifty-seven students, 282 European-American and 175 Hispanic, completed multiple measures of cognitive, metacognitive awareness, social/personality (i.e., test anxiety, performance avoidance, academic self-efficacy), and socioeconomic family background factors, which were used in regression analyses predicting overall SAT, SAT-V, and SAT-M scores. The results show that most factors contributed significantly to overall SAT, SAT-M, and SAT-V scores. In addition, the ethnicity X test anxiety interaction was significant for all three SAT measures, a finding that suggests ethnic differences in the contributions of test anxiety to overall SAT, SAT-M, and SAT-V scores. For European-American students, test anxiety had no influence on overall SAT and SAT-M scores, whereas for Hispanic students test anxiety had a negative influence on overall SAT and SAT-M scores. For SAT-V scores, interpreting the ethnicity X test anxiety interaction was more complicated because both the significant main effect of test anxiety and the ethnicity X test anxiety interaction must be interpreted together. Whereas test anxiety negatively influenced European-Americans' SAT-V scores, this negative influence was less than the influence it had on Hispanic students' SAT-V scores. Indeed, for Hispanic students with high test anxiety, this negative influence was profound. Taken as a whole, these results suggest that any theory explaining the SAT may need to take into account multiple predictors as well as the possibility that the contributions of these predictors may vary as a function of ethnicity.
这项探索性研究表明,认知、元认知意识、成绩回避、考试焦虑以及社会经济家庭背景因素对学术能力评估测试(SAT)分数(即SAT总分、SAT语文、SAT数学)的影响可能因种族(即欧裔美国人、西班牙裔)而异。457名学生(282名欧裔美国学生和175名西班牙裔学生)完成了对认知、元认知意识、社会/人格(即考试焦虑、成绩回避、学业自我效能感)以及社会经济家庭背景因素的多项测量,这些测量结果被用于回归分析,以预测SAT总分、SAT语文和SAT数学分数。结果表明,大多数因素对SAT总分、SAT数学和SAT语文分数都有显著影响。此外,种族×考试焦虑的交互作用对所有三项SAT测量都具有显著意义,这一发现表明考试焦虑对SAT总分、SAT数学和SAT语文分数的影响存在种族差异。对于欧裔美国学生,考试焦虑对SAT总分和SAT数学分数没有影响,而对于西班牙裔学生,考试焦虑对SAT总分和SAT数学分数有负面影响。对于SAT语文分数,解释种族×考试焦虑的交互作用更为复杂,因为必须同时解释考试焦虑的显著主效应和种族×考试焦虑的交互作用。虽然考试焦虑对欧裔美国学生的SAT语文分数有负面影响,但这种负面影响小于对西班牙裔学生SAT语文分数的影响。事实上,对于考试焦虑程度高的西班牙裔学生,这种负面影响是深远的。总体而言,这些结果表明,任何解释SAT的理论可能都需要考虑多个预测因素,以及这些预测因素的影响可能因种族而异的可能性。