For better or for worse? a nationwide study of the social psychological effects of gender and ability grouping in mathematics

被引:0
作者
Catsambis S. [1 ]
Mulkey L.M. [2 ]
Crain R.L. [3 ]
机构
[1] City University of New York, Queens College
[2] University of South Carolina, Beaufort
[3] Columbia University, Teachers College
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Subject Area; Education Research; Variable Effect; Social Comparison; Psychological Effect;
D O I
10.1023/A:1012675523595
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This exploratory investigation employs the National Education Longitudinal Survey (NELS:88) to examine equity in tracking from a new, less-studied angle, with the view that tracking may not be all good or all bad, but that its effects are variable. The present study considers how these variable effects might, in part, be produced through a mechanism of social comparison conceptualized by Marsh et al. as the big-fish-little-pond effect (BFLPE). It compares similar students, except that some are in schools that use tracking and some are in schools that do not use tracking. Unlike previous studies of between-track effects, it asks whether tracking works uniformly for males and females within the same track placement in a particular subject area. Analyses yielded significant differences in students' attitudes toward mathematics, educational aspirations, self-esteem, locus of control, and engagement in school. These systematic effects suggest the mechanisms of the BFLPE. Despite the 'reflected glory' of being in a high ability track, when males, in contrast to females, are grouped with peers of similar high ability in a subject area that defines their competence, they seem to lose their competitive edge. Low ability males are positively affected through the mechanism of comparing with their peers because the competition to do well is relatively less keen than in high tracks. © 2001 Kluwer Academic Publishers.
引用
收藏
页码:83 / 115
页数:32
相关论文
共 53 条
[1]  
Adler P.A., Kless S.J., Adler P., Socialization in gender roles: Popularity among elementary school boys and girls, Sociology of Education, 65, 3, pp. 169-188, (1992)
[2]  
Ahlgren A., Sex differences in the correlates of cooperative and competitive school attitudes, Developmental Psychology, 19, pp. 881-888, (1983)
[3]  
Ahlgren A., Johnson D., Sex differences in cooperative and competitive attitudes from the second through the twelfth grades, Developmental Psychology, 15, pp. 45-49, (1979)
[4]  
Aldrich J.H., Nelson F.D., Linear Probability, Logic and Probit Models, (1984)
[5]  
How Schools Shortchange Girls, (1992)
[6]  
Anderson E.M., Maehr M.L., Motivation and schooling in the middle grades, Review of Educational Research, 64, pp. 187-210, (1994)
[7]  
Argys L.M., Rees D.I., Brewer D., Detracting America's schools: Equity at zero cost?, Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 15, 4, pp. 623-645, (1996)
[8]  
Bornholt L.J., Goodnow J., Cooney G., Influence of gender stereotyping on adolescents' perceptions of their own achievement, Sex Roles, 3, pp. 310-314, (1994)
[9]  
Braddock II J.H., Maclver Douglas J., Student grouping in the middle grades: Analyses from the NELS:88 and principals' supplement, Annual Meeting of the American Educational Research Association, (1991)
[10]  
Butler R., Interest in the task and interest in peers' work in competitive and noncompetitive conditions: A developmental study, Child Development, 60, pp. 562-570, (1989)