School characteristics associated with the educational resilience of low-income and ethnic minority youth

This study empirically tested Benard’s (1991, 2004) theory of resilience and youth development by examining the influence of caring relationships, high expectations and opportunities for participation and contribution within the schools on the mathematics achievement and timely graduation of public...

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Main Author: Brooks, Jean Evelyn
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2010-12-2176
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-ETD-UT-2010-12-21762015-09-20T16:57:18ZSchool characteristics associated with the educational resilience of low-income and ethnic minority youthBrooks, Jean EvelynEducational resilienceHigh school graduationMathematics achievementAt-risk youthSchool climateMinority studentsLow-income studentsThis study empirically tested Benard’s (1991, 2004) theory of resilience and youth development by examining the influence of caring relationships, high expectations and opportunities for participation and contribution within the schools on the mathematics achievement and timely graduation of public high school students. Additional analyses focused on subsamples of students who were at risk of academic failure and school dropout—students from the lowest socioeconomic quartile, African American and Hispanic students, and a generic at-risk sample that includes students from these three groups plus students who had nontraditional families, had a disability, or were retained a grade in school. The study used data from the Educational Longitudinal Study: 2002, which was designed to monitor young people as they transition from tenth grade to postsecondary education and/or employment. Hierarchical Linear Models and Hierarchical Generalized Linear Models were used for the analyses. Experiences within the schools that conveyed caring relationships, high expectations, and opportunities for participation and contribution were associated with higher senior year mathematics achievement scores and increased odds of timely graduation for the overall public school sample and for the at-risk groups. Suggestions are made for increasing caring relationships, high expectations, and opportunities for participation and contribution within the schools. The limitations of this study and directions for further research are also discussed.text2011-02-07T19:14:22Z2011-02-07T19:14:32Z2011-02-07T19:14:22Z2011-02-07T19:14:32Z2010-122011-02-07December 20102011-02-07T19:14:32Zthesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2010-12-2176eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Educational resilience
High school graduation
Mathematics achievement
At-risk youth
School climate
Minority students
Low-income students
spellingShingle Educational resilience
High school graduation
Mathematics achievement
At-risk youth
School climate
Minority students
Low-income students
Brooks, Jean Evelyn
School characteristics associated with the educational resilience of low-income and ethnic minority youth
description This study empirically tested Benard’s (1991, 2004) theory of resilience and youth development by examining the influence of caring relationships, high expectations and opportunities for participation and contribution within the schools on the mathematics achievement and timely graduation of public high school students. Additional analyses focused on subsamples of students who were at risk of academic failure and school dropout—students from the lowest socioeconomic quartile, African American and Hispanic students, and a generic at-risk sample that includes students from these three groups plus students who had nontraditional families, had a disability, or were retained a grade in school. The study used data from the Educational Longitudinal Study: 2002, which was designed to monitor young people as they transition from tenth grade to postsecondary education and/or employment. Hierarchical Linear Models and Hierarchical Generalized Linear Models were used for the analyses. Experiences within the schools that conveyed caring relationships, high expectations, and opportunities for participation and contribution were associated with higher senior year mathematics achievement scores and increased odds of timely graduation for the overall public school sample and for the at-risk groups. Suggestions are made for increasing caring relationships, high expectations, and opportunities for participation and contribution within the schools. The limitations of this study and directions for further research are also discussed. === text
author Brooks, Jean Evelyn
author_facet Brooks, Jean Evelyn
author_sort Brooks, Jean Evelyn
title School characteristics associated with the educational resilience of low-income and ethnic minority youth
title_short School characteristics associated with the educational resilience of low-income and ethnic minority youth
title_full School characteristics associated with the educational resilience of low-income and ethnic minority youth
title_fullStr School characteristics associated with the educational resilience of low-income and ethnic minority youth
title_full_unstemmed School characteristics associated with the educational resilience of low-income and ethnic minority youth
title_sort school characteristics associated with the educational resilience of low-income and ethnic minority youth
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2010-12-2176
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