Suppr超能文献

心态×背景:学校、课堂和期望在数学成就上的不平等转化。

Mindset × Context: Schools, Classrooms, and the Unequal Translation of Expectations into Math Achievement.

机构信息

Tulane University.

University of Texas at Austin.

出版信息

Monogr Soc Res Child Dev. 2023 Sep;88(2):7-109. doi: 10.1111/mono.12471.

Abstract

When do adolescents' dreams of promising journeys through high school translate into academic success? This monograph reports the results of a collaborative effort among sociologists and psychologists to systematically examine the role of schools and classrooms in disrupting or facilitating the link between adolescents' expectations for success in math and their subsequent progress in the early high school math curriculum. Our primary focus was on gendered patterns of socioeconomic inequality in math and how they are tethered to the school's peer culture and to students' perceptions of gender stereotyping in the classroom. To do this, this monograph advances Mindset × Context Theory. This orients research on educational equity to the reciprocal influence between students' psychological motivations and their school-based opportunities to enact those motivations. Mindset × Context Theory predicts that a student's mindset will be more strongly linked to developmental outcomes among groups of students who are at risk for poor outcomes, but only in a school or classroom context where there is sufficient need and support for the mindset. Our application of this theory centers on expectations for success in high school math as a foundational belief for students' math progress early in high school. We examine how this mindset varies across interpersonal and cultural dynamics in schools and classrooms. Following this perspective, we ask: 1. Which gender and socioeconomic identity groups showed the weakest or strongest links between expectations for success in math and progress through the math curriculum? 2. How did the school's peer culture shape the links between student expectations for success in math and math progress across gender and socioeconomic identity groups? 3. How did perceptions of classroom gender stereotyping shape the links between student expectations for success in math and math progress across gender and socioeconomic identity groups? We used nationally representative data from about 10,000 U.S. public school 9th graders in the National Study of Learning Mindsets (NSLM) collected in 2015-2016-the most recent, national, longitudinal study of adolescents' mindsets in U.S. public schools. The sample was representative with respect to a large number of observable characteristics, such as gender, race, ethnicity, English Language Learners (ELLs), free or reduced price lunch, poverty, food stamps, neighborhood income and labor market participation, and school curricular opportunities. This allowed for generalization to the U.S. public school population and for the systematic investigation of school- and classroom-level contextual factors. The NSLM's complete sampling of students within schools also allowed for a comparison of students from different gender and socioeconomic groups with the same expectations in the same educational contexts. To analyze these data, we used the Bayesian Causal Forest (BCF) algorithm, a best-in-class machine-learning method for discovering complex, replicable interaction effects. Chapter IV examined the interplay of expectations, gender, and socioeconomic status (SES; operationalized with maternal educational attainment). Adolescents' expectations for success in math were meaningful predictors of their early math progress, even when controlling for other psychological factors, prior achievement in math, and racial and ethnic identities. Boys from low-SES families were the most vulnerable identity group. They were over three times more likely to not make adequate progress in math from 9th to 10th grade relative to girls from high-SES families. Boys from low-SES families also benefited the most from their expectations for success in math. Overall, these results were consistent with Mindset × Context Theory's predictions. Chapters V and VI examined the moderating role of school-level and classroom-level factors in the patterns reported in Chapter IV. Expectations were least predictive of math progress in the highest-achieving schools and schools with the most academically oriented peer norms, that is, schools with the most formal and informal resources. School resources appeared to compensate for lower levels of expectations. Conversely, expectations most strongly predicted math progress in the low/medium-achieving schools with less academically oriented peers, especially for boys from low-SES families. This chapter aligns with aspects of Mindset × Context Theory. A context that was not already optimally supporting student success was where outcomes for vulnerable students depended the most on student expectations. Finally, perceptions of classroom stereotyping mattered. Perceptions of gender stereotyping predicted less progress in math, but expectations for success in math more strongly predicted progress in classrooms with high perceived stereotyping. Gender stereotyping interactions emerged for all sociodemographic groups except for boys from high-SES families. The findings across these three analytical chapters demonstrate the value of integrating psychological and sociological perspectives to capture multiple levels of schooling. It also drew on the contextual variability afforded by representative sampling and explored the interplay of lab-tested psychological processes (expectations) with field-developed levers of policy intervention (school contexts). This monograph also leverages developmental and ecological insights to identify which groups of students might profit from different efforts to improve educational equity, such as interventions to increase expectations for success in math, or school programs that improve the school or classroom cultures.

摘要

当青少年对高中生活的美好憧憬转化为学术成功时,会发生什么?本专着报告了社会学家和心理学家之间的合作努力的结果,该合作旨在系统地研究学校和课堂在破坏或促进青少年对数学成功的期望与他们随后在早期高中数学课程中的进步之间的联系。我们的主要重点是数学中社会经济不平等的性别模式,以及它们如何与学校的同伴文化以及学生对课堂中性别刻板印象的看法联系在一起。为此,本专着提出了“心态×环境理论”。该理论将教育公平方面的研究定向为学生心理动机与其在学校获得机会之间的相互影响。心态×环境理论预测,在面临成绩不佳风险的学生群体中,学生的心态与发展结果之间的联系将更为紧密,但只有在心态有足够的需求和支持的学校或课堂环境中才会如此。我们对该理论的应用集中在高中数学成功期望上,这是学生在高中早期取得数学进步的基础信念。我们研究这种心态如何在学校和课堂环境中的人际和文化动态中变化。基于这种观点,我们提出以下问题:1. 哪些性别和社会经济身份群体在数学成功期望与数学课程进展之间表现出最强或最弱的联系?2. 学校的同伴文化如何塑造不同性别和社会经济身份群体的学生在数学成功期望与数学进展之间的联系?3. 课堂性别刻板印象的看法如何在不同性别和社会经济身份群体的学生在数学成功期望与数学进展之间的联系?我们使用了来自美国约 10000 名 9 年级公立学校学生的全国代表性数据,这些数据来自于国家学习心态研究(NSLM),这是美国公立学校青少年心态的最新、全国性、纵向研究。该样本在性别、种族、族裔、英语学习者(ELL)、免费或减价午餐、贫困、食品券、邻里收入和劳动力市场参与度以及学校课程机会等大量可观察特征方面具有代表性。这允许推广到美国公立学校人口,并对学校和课堂层面的环境因素进行系统调查。NSLM 对学校内学生的完整抽样也允许比较具有相同期望的不同性别和社会经济群体的学生在相同的教育环境中。为了分析这些数据,我们使用了贝叶斯因果森林(BCF)算法,这是一种用于发现复杂、可复制的交互效应的最佳机器学习方法。第四章研究了期望、性别和社会经济地位(以母亲教育程度衡量)之间的相互作用。青少年对数学成功的期望是他们早期数学进步的有意义预测因素,即使在控制了其他心理因素、数学先修成绩和种族和族裔身份之后也是如此。来自低社会经济地位家庭的男孩是最脆弱的身份群体。与来自高社会经济地位家庭的女孩相比,他们在从 9 年级到 10 年级期间未能在数学方面取得足够进步的可能性高出三倍以上。来自低社会经济地位家庭的男孩也从他们对数学成功的期望中获益最多。总的来说,这些结果与心态×环境理论的预测一致。第五章和第六章研究了学校层面和课堂层面因素在第四章报告的模式中的调节作用。在最高成就的学校和最具学术导向的同伴规范的学校(即具有最正式和非正式资源的学校)中,期望对数学进步的预测性最低。学校资源似乎弥补了期望水平较低的不足。相反,期望在低/中等成就的学校和同伴之间学术性不强的学校中对数学进步的预测性最强,尤其是对来自低社会经济地位家庭的男孩。这一章与心态×环境理论的某些方面一致。在一个还没有最优地支持学生成功的环境中,脆弱学生的结果最依赖于学生的期望。最后,课堂刻板印象的看法很重要。性别刻板印象的看法预测数学进步较少,但对数学成功的期望更强烈地预测课堂上性别刻板印象较高的数学进步。除了来自高社会经济地位家庭的男孩之外,所有社会人口统计学群体都出现了性别刻板印象的交互作用。这三个分析章节的研究结果表明,将心理和社会学观点相结合以捕捉多种教育层面的价值。它还利用了代表性抽样带来的环境可变性,并探讨了经过实验室测试的心理过程(期望)与现场开发的政策干预手段(学校环境)之间的相互作用。本专着还利用发展和生态方面的见解,确定了哪些群体的学生可能从不同的努力中受益,例如提高对数学成功的期望,或改善学校或课堂文化的学校计划。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验