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Showing papers by "Timothy Z. Keith published in 1992"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the influence of ability, time, quality of instruction, motivation, and academic coursework on high school students' achievement, also controlling for relevant background variables, were analyzed with longitudinal data from a national sample.
Abstract: Tested the influence of ability, time, quality of instruction, motivation, and academic coursework on high school students' achievement, also controlling for relevant background variables. Structural equation models were analyzed with longitudinal data from a national sample. Intellectual ability and academic coursework had powerful direct effects on achievement, and homework had a smaller direct effect. The indirect effects of quality of instruction and motivation were stronger than their direct effects; quality affected motivation, which affected coursework. Supplemental analyses were very consistent with the initial findings. Results support these variables as influences on school learning, a finding which also supports the theories from which the variables were derived. School learning theory and research are relevant for school psychologists who seek interventions for children with learning problems. Public and professional concern about the quality of American education highlights the need for a better understanding of the important influences on school learning. Theories of school learning (e.g., those of Bloom, 1976; Carroll, 1963, 1989; Cooley & Leinhardt, 1975; Walberg, 1981; and Wiley & Harnischfeger, 1974; see Walberg, 1986, for a comparison of these and other theories), would seem to offer little help in this search for important influences because they appear to focus on entirely different aspects of learning. Walberg (1981), for

144 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article used LISREL to test a conceptual model of school learning, examining the effects of five variables (ability, quality, motivation, course work, and homework) common to school learning theories on student grades.
Abstract: Theories of school learning consistently point to ability, quality of instruction, motivation, and academic instructional time as important influences. Research also supports those variables and related variables as important for learning, but few researchers have assessed the combined effects or examined both direct and indirect effects. Here we used LISREL to test a conceptual model of school learning, examining the effects of five variables (ability, quality, motivation, course work, and homework) common to school learning theories on student grades. A large, nationally representative sample of high school youth was used to test the model. Following a test of the model for the entire sample, we tested it separately for each major ethnic group, and for boys and girts. Each theory-derived influence was supported, although there were differences in the magnitude of influences across ethnic groups. A particularly interesting finding was that Asian-American students' learning, in particular, seemed...

78 citations