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Academic achievement

About: Academic achievement is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 69460 publications have been published within this topic receiving 2227289 citations. The topic is also known as: academic performance & educational achievement.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined evidence on the effect of class size on student achievement and showed that the results of quantitative summaries of the literature depend critically on whether studies are accorded equal weight.
Abstract: This paper examines evidence on the effect of class size on student achievement. First, it is shown that results of quantitative summaries of the literature, such as Hanushek (1997), depend critically on whether studies are accorded equal weight. When studies are given equal weight, resources are systematically related to student achievement. When weights are in proportion to their number of estimates, resources and achievements are not systematically related. Second, a cost-benefit analysis of class size reduction is performed. Results of the Tennessee STAR class-size experiment suggest that the internal rate of return from reducing class size from 22 to 15 students is around 6%.

607 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the impact of collective, or shared, leadership on key teacher variables and student achievement was investigated and the relative contribution of different sources of such leadership and whether differences among patterns of collective leadership were related to differences in student achievement.
Abstract: Purpose: This study aimed to estimate the impact of collective, or shared, leadership on key teacher variables and on student achievement As well, it inquired about the relative contribution of different sources of such leadership and whether differences among patterns of collective leadership were related to differences in student achievementMethods: Evidence included 2,570 teacher responses from 90 elementary and secondary schools in which four or more teachers completed usable surveys Student achievement data in language and math averaged over 3 years were acquired through school Web sites Data were analyzed using path-analytic techniquesFindings: Collective leadership explained a significant proportion of variation in student achievement across schools Higher-achieving schools awarded leadership influence to all school members and other stakeholders to a greater degree than that of lower-achieving schools These differences were most significant in relation to the leadership exercised by school

606 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Dale H. Schunk1
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated how goals and self-evaluation affect motivation and achievement outcomes of fourth-grade students in a setting where they worked under conditions involving either a learning goal of learning how to solve problems (learning goal) or a goal of merely solving them (performance goal).
Abstract: Two studies investigated how goals and self-evaluation affect motivation and achievement outcomes. In both studies, fourth-grade students received instruction and practice on fractions over sessions. Students worked under conditions involving either a goal of learning how to solve problems (learning goal) or a goal of merely solving them (performance goal). In Study 1, half of the students in each goal condition evaluated their problem-solving capabilities. The learning goal with or without self-evaluation and the performance goal with self-evaluation led to higher self-efficacy, skill, motivation, and task orientation than did the performance goal without self-evaluation. In Study 2, all students in each goal condition evaluated their progress in skill acquisition. The learning goal led to higher motivation and achievement outcomes than did the performance goal. Research suggestions and implications for educational practice are discussed.

605 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Jaekyung Lee1
TL;DR: In this paper, a look below the surface at Black-White and Hispanic-White achievement gap trends over the past 30 years is presented, where the authors identify the key factors that seem to have contributed to bifurcated patterns in achievement gaps.
Abstract: Racial and ethnic achievement gaps narrowed substantially in the 1970s and 1980s. As some of the gaps widened in the 1990s, there were some setbacks in the progress the nation made toward racial and ethnic equity. This article offers a look below the surface at Black-White and Hispanic-White achievement gap trends over the past 30 years. The literature review and data analysis identify the key factors that seem to have contributed to bifurcated patterns in achievement gaps. The conventional measures of socioeconomic and family conditions, youth culture and student behavior, and schooling conditions and practices might account for some of the achievement gap trends for a limited time period or for a particular racial and ethnic group. However, they do not fully capture the variations. This preliminary analysis of covariations in racial and ethnic gap patterns across several large data sets has implications for future research on the achievement of minority groups.

604 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a meta-analysis of 51 studies examines the relationship between various kinds of parental involvement programs and the academic achievement of pre-kindergarten-12th-grade school children.
Abstract: This meta-analysis of 51 studies examines the relationship between various kinds of parental involvement programs and the academic achievement of pre-kindergarten-12th-grade school children. Analyses determined the effect sizes for various parental involvement programs overall and subcategories of involvement. Results indicate a significant relationship between parental involvement programs overall and academic achievement, both for younger (preelementary and elementary school) and older (secondary school) students as well as for four types of parental involvement programs. Parental involvement programs, as a whole, were associated with higher academic achievement by .3 of a standard deviation unit. The significance of these results is discussed.

604 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20241
2023760
20221,530
20211,695
20202,633
20192,737