The Achievement Gap, Revisited: An Empirical Assessment of What We Can Learn from East Asian Education

International mathematics assessments have established students in East Asia as among the best in the world and their U.S. counterparts as mediocre. What is not clear is why this “achievement gap” exists. The last major study to address this question, Stevenson and Stigler’s (1992) The Learning Gap,...

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Main Author: Czehut, Katherine
Other Authors: Brinton, Mary C.
Language:en_US
Published: Harvard University 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:10575
http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:9795483
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spelling ndltd-harvard.edu-oai-dash.harvard.edu-1-97954832015-08-14T15:41:36ZThe Achievement Gap, Revisited: An Empirical Assessment of What We Can Learn from East Asian EducationCzehut, KatherineEast Asiainternational comparativeparental involvementteacher effectivenessTIMSSsociologyelementary educationsociology of educationInternational mathematics assessments have established students in East Asia as among the best in the world and their U.S. counterparts as mediocre. What is not clear is why this “achievement gap” exists. The last major study to address this question, Stevenson and Stigler’s (1992) The Learning Gap, was published prior to empirical and methodological advances in international comparative research on education. Prevailing wisdom points to unverified differences in cultural beliefs, which often leads to defeatist conclusions. This dissertation offers a fresh perspective by applying sociological theory and methods to the issue. Specifically, I rely on underutilized data from the 2003 and 2007 Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) of fourth graders to compare educational systems across three major factors that influence math achievement: curriculum, teachers and parents. My main empirical findings are that there is greater uniformity of math instruction across classrooms in the participating East Asian nations of Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore and Taiwan than in the U.S. and that, among all participating educational systems, average achievement tends to be higher in those with greater uniformity of instruction. The implication is that the institutional arrangements that allow for less uniformity of instruction across classrooms in the U.S. might be partially responsible for the gap. Cross-regional differences in teacher effectiveness might also account for part of the gap, as three-level, hierarchical linear models of achievement in each nation indicate that U.S. math teachers are less effective than their East Asian counterparts—even after the quantity of instruction provided is taken into account. The main theoretical contribution is an alternative explanation for the apparent cross-regional disparity in the proportion of involved parents, which highlights how schools can make a difference in whether or not parents become involved. Such an approach promises a way out of the dead-end reached by previous theorists. However, this dissertation also draws attention to the limitations of the existing data. At present, there is not enough information available to substantiate the policy recommendations made in previous studies. As such, a central aim of this dissertation is to put research onto sounder methodological footing.SociologyBrinton, Mary C.2012-10-23T14:43:26Z2012-10-2320122012-10-23T14:43:26ZThesis or DissertationCzehut, Katherine. 2012. The Achievement Gap, Revisited: An Empirical Assessment of What We Can Learn from East Asian Education. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University.http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:10575http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:9795483en_USopenhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-of-use#LAAHarvard University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic East Asia
international comparative
parental involvement
teacher effectiveness
TIMSS
sociology
elementary education
sociology of education
spellingShingle East Asia
international comparative
parental involvement
teacher effectiveness
TIMSS
sociology
elementary education
sociology of education
Czehut, Katherine
The Achievement Gap, Revisited: An Empirical Assessment of What We Can Learn from East Asian Education
description International mathematics assessments have established students in East Asia as among the best in the world and their U.S. counterparts as mediocre. What is not clear is why this “achievement gap” exists. The last major study to address this question, Stevenson and Stigler’s (1992) The Learning Gap, was published prior to empirical and methodological advances in international comparative research on education. Prevailing wisdom points to unverified differences in cultural beliefs, which often leads to defeatist conclusions. This dissertation offers a fresh perspective by applying sociological theory and methods to the issue. Specifically, I rely on underutilized data from the 2003 and 2007 Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) of fourth graders to compare educational systems across three major factors that influence math achievement: curriculum, teachers and parents. My main empirical findings are that there is greater uniformity of math instruction across classrooms in the participating East Asian nations of Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore and Taiwan than in the U.S. and that, among all participating educational systems, average achievement tends to be higher in those with greater uniformity of instruction. The implication is that the institutional arrangements that allow for less uniformity of instruction across classrooms in the U.S. might be partially responsible for the gap. Cross-regional differences in teacher effectiveness might also account for part of the gap, as three-level, hierarchical linear models of achievement in each nation indicate that U.S. math teachers are less effective than their East Asian counterparts—even after the quantity of instruction provided is taken into account. The main theoretical contribution is an alternative explanation for the apparent cross-regional disparity in the proportion of involved parents, which highlights how schools can make a difference in whether or not parents become involved. Such an approach promises a way out of the dead-end reached by previous theorists. However, this dissertation also draws attention to the limitations of the existing data. At present, there is not enough information available to substantiate the policy recommendations made in previous studies. As such, a central aim of this dissertation is to put research onto sounder methodological footing. === Sociology
author2 Brinton, Mary C.
author_facet Brinton, Mary C.
Czehut, Katherine
author Czehut, Katherine
author_sort Czehut, Katherine
title The Achievement Gap, Revisited: An Empirical Assessment of What We Can Learn from East Asian Education
title_short The Achievement Gap, Revisited: An Empirical Assessment of What We Can Learn from East Asian Education
title_full The Achievement Gap, Revisited: An Empirical Assessment of What We Can Learn from East Asian Education
title_fullStr The Achievement Gap, Revisited: An Empirical Assessment of What We Can Learn from East Asian Education
title_full_unstemmed The Achievement Gap, Revisited: An Empirical Assessment of What We Can Learn from East Asian Education
title_sort achievement gap, revisited: an empirical assessment of what we can learn from east asian education
publisher Harvard University
publishDate 2012
url http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:10575
http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:9795483
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