Relative Age Effects in Mathematics and Reading: Investigating the Generalizability across Students, Time and Classes

A child’s age in comparison to the age of her or his classmates (relative age) has been found to be an influential factor on academic achievement, particularly but not exclusively at the beginning of formal schooling. However, few studies have focused on the generalizability of relative age effects....

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Main Authors: Katharina eThoren, Elisa eHeinig, Martin eBrunner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00679/full
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spelling doaj-6bb7796385b7452d934f54080f721ead2020-11-24T23:54:19ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782016-05-01710.3389/fpsyg.2016.00679195306Relative Age Effects in Mathematics and Reading: Investigating the Generalizability across Students, Time and ClassesKatharina eThoren0Elisa eHeinig1Martin eBrunner2Martin eBrunner3Free University BerlinFree University BerlinFree University BerlinBerlin Brandenburg Institute for School Quality Improvement (ISQ)A child’s age in comparison to the age of her or his classmates (relative age) has been found to be an influential factor on academic achievement, particularly but not exclusively at the beginning of formal schooling. However, few studies have focused on the generalizability of relative age effects. To close this gap, the present study analyzes the generalizability across students with and without immigrant backgrounds, across three student cohorts that entered school under a changing law of school enrollment, and across classes. To this end, we capitalized on representative large-scale data sets from three student cohorts attending public schools in Berlin, the capital of Germany. We analyzed the data using a multilevel framework. Our results for the overall student sample indicate relative age effects for reading and mathematics in favor of the relatively older students in Grade 2 that become somewhat smaller in size in Grade 3. By Grade 8, relative age effects had vanished in reading and had even reversed in favor of the relatively young in mathematics. Furthermore, relative age effects were not found to be systematically different among students with and without immigrant backgrounds, student cohorts, or across classes. Taken together, these results empirically underscore the broad generalizability of the findings as found for the overall student population and replicate the pattern of findings on relative effects as identified by the majority of previous studies.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00679/fullrelative age effectsImmigrant studentsGeneralizabilityMultilevel modellinglarge-scale assessment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katharina eThoren
Elisa eHeinig
Martin eBrunner
Martin eBrunner
spellingShingle Katharina eThoren
Elisa eHeinig
Martin eBrunner
Martin eBrunner
Relative Age Effects in Mathematics and Reading: Investigating the Generalizability across Students, Time and Classes
Frontiers in Psychology
relative age effects
Immigrant students
Generalizability
Multilevel modelling
large-scale assessment
author_facet Katharina eThoren
Elisa eHeinig
Martin eBrunner
Martin eBrunner
author_sort Katharina eThoren
title Relative Age Effects in Mathematics and Reading: Investigating the Generalizability across Students, Time and Classes
title_short Relative Age Effects in Mathematics and Reading: Investigating the Generalizability across Students, Time and Classes
title_full Relative Age Effects in Mathematics and Reading: Investigating the Generalizability across Students, Time and Classes
title_fullStr Relative Age Effects in Mathematics and Reading: Investigating the Generalizability across Students, Time and Classes
title_full_unstemmed Relative Age Effects in Mathematics and Reading: Investigating the Generalizability across Students, Time and Classes
title_sort relative age effects in mathematics and reading: investigating the generalizability across students, time and classes
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2016-05-01
description A child’s age in comparison to the age of her or his classmates (relative age) has been found to be an influential factor on academic achievement, particularly but not exclusively at the beginning of formal schooling. However, few studies have focused on the generalizability of relative age effects. To close this gap, the present study analyzes the generalizability across students with and without immigrant backgrounds, across three student cohorts that entered school under a changing law of school enrollment, and across classes. To this end, we capitalized on representative large-scale data sets from three student cohorts attending public schools in Berlin, the capital of Germany. We analyzed the data using a multilevel framework. Our results for the overall student sample indicate relative age effects for reading and mathematics in favor of the relatively older students in Grade 2 that become somewhat smaller in size in Grade 3. By Grade 8, relative age effects had vanished in reading and had even reversed in favor of the relatively young in mathematics. Furthermore, relative age effects were not found to be systematically different among students with and without immigrant backgrounds, student cohorts, or across classes. Taken together, these results empirically underscore the broad generalizability of the findings as found for the overall student population and replicate the pattern of findings on relative effects as identified by the majority of previous studies.
topic relative age effects
Immigrant students
Generalizability
Multilevel modelling
large-scale assessment
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00679/full
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