Anxious for Answers: A Meta-Analysis of the E!ects of Anxiety on African American K-12 Students’ Mathematics Achievement
Mathematics anxiety is recognized as a significant performance impediment that affects students across multiple ethnic and economic backgrounds. However, research has yet to fully examine the possible differential effect of mathematics anxiety on underrepresented K-12 students. Specifically, given t...
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doaj-90b2e138abf94e5bb3589812927d363a2020-11-25T02:41:48ZengColumbia University LibrariesJournal of Mathematics Education at Teachers College2156-14002156-13972015-12-016210.7916/jmetc.v6i2.611Anxious for Answers: A Meta-Analysis of the E!ects of Anxiety on African American K-12 Students’ Mathematics AchievementJamaal Rashad Young0Jemimah Lea Young1University of North TexasUniversity of North TexasMathematics anxiety is recognized as a significant performance impediment that affects students across multiple ethnic and economic backgrounds. However, research has yet to fully examine the possible differential effect of mathematics anxiety on underrepresented K-12 students. Specifically, given the long-standing achievement gap between African American and White students it is imperative that the possible differential effect of mathematics anxiety on African American students be addressed. The purpose of this study was to utilize the techniques of meta-analysis to summarize the effects of anxiety on mathematics achievement in K-12 African American student populations. The results suggest that anxiety has a statistically significant effect on the mathematics achievement of representative samples of African American students. Furthermore, this effect is mediated by student grade level. More representative research is needed to better ascertain the factors that promote and sustain mathematics anxiety in African American student populations. In particular, studies that disaggregate results based on student race are necessary for more robust estimates of this phenomenon.https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/jmetc/article/view/611 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Jamaal Rashad Young Jemimah Lea Young |
spellingShingle |
Jamaal Rashad Young Jemimah Lea Young Anxious for Answers: A Meta-Analysis of the E!ects of Anxiety on African American K-12 Students’ Mathematics Achievement Journal of Mathematics Education at Teachers College |
author_facet |
Jamaal Rashad Young Jemimah Lea Young |
author_sort |
Jamaal Rashad Young |
title |
Anxious for Answers: A Meta-Analysis of the E!ects of Anxiety on African American K-12 Students’ Mathematics Achievement |
title_short |
Anxious for Answers: A Meta-Analysis of the E!ects of Anxiety on African American K-12 Students’ Mathematics Achievement |
title_full |
Anxious for Answers: A Meta-Analysis of the E!ects of Anxiety on African American K-12 Students’ Mathematics Achievement |
title_fullStr |
Anxious for Answers: A Meta-Analysis of the E!ects of Anxiety on African American K-12 Students’ Mathematics Achievement |
title_full_unstemmed |
Anxious for Answers: A Meta-Analysis of the E!ects of Anxiety on African American K-12 Students’ Mathematics Achievement |
title_sort |
anxious for answers: a meta-analysis of the e!ects of anxiety on african american k-12 students’ mathematics achievement |
publisher |
Columbia University Libraries |
series |
Journal of Mathematics Education at Teachers College |
issn |
2156-1400 2156-1397 |
publishDate |
2015-12-01 |
description |
Mathematics anxiety is recognized as a significant performance impediment that
affects students across multiple ethnic and economic backgrounds. However, research has yet to fully examine the possible differential effect of mathematics anxiety on underrepresented K-12 students. Specifically, given the long-standing achievement gap between African American and White students it is imperative that the possible differential effect of mathematics anxiety on African American students be addressed. The purpose of this study was to utilize the techniques of meta-analysis to summarize the effects of anxiety on mathematics achievement in K-12 African American student populations. The results suggest that anxiety has a statistically significant effect on the mathematics achievement of representative samples of African American students. Furthermore, this effect is mediated by student grade level. More representative research is needed to better ascertain the factors that promote and sustain mathematics anxiety in African American student populations. In particular, studies that disaggregate results based on student race are necessary for more robust estimates of this phenomenon. |
url |
https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/jmetc/article/view/611 |
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