The Effects of School Characteristics on Student Academic Performance

This work expanded on previous research on school effectiveness by developing and testing hypotheses about the specific relationships between school characteristics---including aggregated student and classroom characteristics---and student academic performance. The work used data from the "Earl...

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Main Author: Yudd Moscoso, Regina
Other Authors: Educational Leadership and Policy Studies
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27346
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04272000-18110037/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-273462020-09-29T05:35:35Z The Effects of School Characteristics on Student Academic Performance Yudd Moscoso, Regina Educational Leadership and Policy Studies Cline, Marvin Gerald Wiswell, Albert K. Kronenberg, Philip S. Fortune, Jimmie C. Hutson, Barbara A. school accountability test score outcomes aggregated school measures This work expanded on previous research on school effectiveness by developing and testing hypotheses about the specific relationships between school characteristics---including aggregated student and classroom characteristics---and student academic performance. The work used data from the "Early Childhood Transitions Project," a study of intensive social and educational services in a suburban school system, to identify and test the effect of a limited set of school-level characteristics on test score gains made by individual students on the Metropolitan Achievement Test (MAT) between the second and third grade. The analyses found that there are differences in the size of schools, the percent of low performing students, and the percent of students who are non-English speaking across the schools in the sample. Test score gains are affected by concentrations of these types of students at the schools. Students at schools in this sample with high concentrations of non-English speaking students or high concentrations of Hispanic students achieve lower test score gains than students in other schools. Another "concentration effect" emerged from the analysis of high-performing students in the sample. In particular, female students with high scores on the second grade MAT who are in schools with large concentrations of students who perform poorly on the second grade exam have smaller third grade test score gains than similar students who are in schools without a concentration of low performing students. These results suggest that more attention be paid to the influence that the characteristics of the student population have on the school's ability to implement the curriculum. As a first step, researchers may want to simply document the differences in the educational characteristics of students entering schools. This would provide evidence of the segregation that occurs across schools. Researchers may then want to conceptualize students within schools in terms of their homogeneity on demographic measures and their homogeneity on educational characteristics. This "educational minority or majority" concept may bring researchers closer to understanding the school environment, as it is organized by schools and experienced by children. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:11:00Z 2014-03-14T20:11:00Z 2000-05-10 2000-04-27 2001-05-02 2000-05-02 Dissertation etd-04272000-18110037 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27346 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04272000-18110037/ yudddissertation.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic school accountability
test score outcomes
aggregated school measures
spellingShingle school accountability
test score outcomes
aggregated school measures
Yudd Moscoso, Regina
The Effects of School Characteristics on Student Academic Performance
description This work expanded on previous research on school effectiveness by developing and testing hypotheses about the specific relationships between school characteristics---including aggregated student and classroom characteristics---and student academic performance. The work used data from the "Early Childhood Transitions Project," a study of intensive social and educational services in a suburban school system, to identify and test the effect of a limited set of school-level characteristics on test score gains made by individual students on the Metropolitan Achievement Test (MAT) between the second and third grade. The analyses found that there are differences in the size of schools, the percent of low performing students, and the percent of students who are non-English speaking across the schools in the sample. Test score gains are affected by concentrations of these types of students at the schools. Students at schools in this sample with high concentrations of non-English speaking students or high concentrations of Hispanic students achieve lower test score gains than students in other schools. Another "concentration effect" emerged from the analysis of high-performing students in the sample. In particular, female students with high scores on the second grade MAT who are in schools with large concentrations of students who perform poorly on the second grade exam have smaller third grade test score gains than similar students who are in schools without a concentration of low performing students. These results suggest that more attention be paid to the influence that the characteristics of the student population have on the school's ability to implement the curriculum. As a first step, researchers may want to simply document the differences in the educational characteristics of students entering schools. This would provide evidence of the segregation that occurs across schools. Researchers may then want to conceptualize students within schools in terms of their homogeneity on demographic measures and their homogeneity on educational characteristics. This "educational minority or majority" concept may bring researchers closer to understanding the school environment, as it is organized by schools and experienced by children. === Ph. D.
author2 Educational Leadership and Policy Studies
author_facet Educational Leadership and Policy Studies
Yudd Moscoso, Regina
author Yudd Moscoso, Regina
author_sort Yudd Moscoso, Regina
title The Effects of School Characteristics on Student Academic Performance
title_short The Effects of School Characteristics on Student Academic Performance
title_full The Effects of School Characteristics on Student Academic Performance
title_fullStr The Effects of School Characteristics on Student Academic Performance
title_full_unstemmed The Effects of School Characteristics on Student Academic Performance
title_sort effects of school characteristics on student academic performance
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27346
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04272000-18110037/
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