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PSY 620P April 7, 2015.  Parent-child relationships  Peer relationships  School and community influences.

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Presentation on theme: "PSY 620P April 7, 2015.  Parent-child relationships  Peer relationships  School and community influences."— Presentation transcript:

1 PSY 620P April 7, 2015

2  Parent-child relationships  Peer relationships  School and community influences

3 Child Classroom Engagement Motivation Self-Esteem Achievement Goals Classroom Practices Curriculum Content Instructional Design Teacher Characteristics Beliefs Instruction Techniques Relationships with students School Curriculum Policies Demographics Organization External Relations School, home, community linkages

4 direct and indirect effects on child…

5  At most schools, if a child is flailing academically, it is treated as a private matter. But at Success Academy Harlem 4, one boy’s struggles were there for all to see: On two colored charts in the hallway, where the students’ performance on weekly spelling and math quizzes was tracked, his name was at the bottom, in a red zone denoting that he was below grade level.

6  Though it serves primarily poor, mostly black and Hispanic students, Success is a testing dynamo, outscoring schools in many wealthy suburbs, let alone their urban counterparts.  In New York City last year, 29 percent of public school students passed the state reading tests, and 35 percent passed the math tests.  At Success schools, the corresponding percentages were 64 and 94 percent.  Charter schools are publicly funded but privately operated.

7  Curriculum Content  Work must be relevant to optimally engage students ▪ Historical reality of all students ▪ Developmental interests  Design of Instruction  Materials and activities allowing for scaffolded learning ▪ Appropriately challenging ▪ Integration of many cognitive operations ▪ Multiple modes of representing a problem ▪ Successive but integrated lessons

8  Instructional Formats  Whole Group Instruction  Small Group Instruction ▪ Ability-based groups vs. ▪ Collaborative/cooperative groups  Individualized Instruction

9  Beliefs about:  Role of teacher ▪ Weeder vs. cultivator ▪ Beliefs about intelligence and goal orientation  Self-efficacy ▪ Expectations for students’ performance  Differential treatment of students within same classroom based on ▪ ability level (high rec’d preferential treatment) ▪ Gender, race, ethnic groups, social class  Nature of Ability ▪ Entity vs. incremental views of intelligence ▪ How do these relate to goals?

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11 Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) MathScience

12  Instructional Practices  Classroom climate optimal when teacher is high in ▪ Supportiveness ▪ Control  Balance of Control and Autonomy Granting ▪ Promotes intrinsic motivation styles vs. learned helplessness ▪ Why?  Middle and high school teachers use of more control- oriented strategies ▪ Counter to the developmental quest for autonomy ▪ why?  Goodness-of-fit between student and instructional environment ▪ E.g., boys  reading; girls  science/math

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14  Trusting, caring, respectful teachers associated with optimal learning ▪ Why?   Feelings of security  allow children to approach, take initiative, engage, persist and take risk to develop positive achievement related self-perceptions  Parallels to attachment security

15  Within-class versus between-class groupings  Direct and indirect effects on child  Mixed effects depending on outcome measure and grouping characteristic ▪ Negative academic outcomes for low-ability groups ▪ Why? ▪ Negative ability self-concepts for high-ability groups ▪ Why?

16  School size  School resources  Associated with race and class  Academic and social climate  Educational policies and practices ▪ School ability orientation vs. school task orientation  Daily Schedule– Start / End Times

17  Protective effects of school-home linkage  Why?  Reasons teachers and/or parents wouldn’t solicit connection?  School-Community linkage  Ways to do this? ▪ Service learning  Beneficial?

18  Negative effects upon entry into middle school:  Declines in academic motivation, ▪ interest in school, ▪ achievement across early adolescent years (11-14);  Increases in test anxiety; ▪ focus on self-evaluation rather than task mastery  Increased school truancy and dropout  Middle school misfit developmental stage  levels of teacher control and reduced student autonomy  affective relationships between students and teachers  teacher efficacy  organization of instruction ▪ whole class instruction & between class ability groupings  grading practices (stricter grades)  motivational goals (emphasis on performance rather than mastery goals

19 Alfieri et al., 1996 T indicates children who have just transition from junior high school

20  Mechanism?  Stage-environment fit theory  In what way do practices misfit with developmental stage in ▪ Middle school? ▪ High school?  How to optimize stage-environment fit theory in middle school?  In high school?

21  Direct and indirect effects of neighborhoods  Mediating variables? ▪ family, school, peer networks  Mechanisms (Jencks & Mayer, 1990) ▪ Contagion ▪ Collective Socialization ▪ Resource Exposure  Developmental changes in effects  more exposure and effect of direct influences

22  School  Cross-age peer tutoring  Early maturing girls at high risk for school dropout ▪ Even after controlling for previous motivation and academic performance ▪ Why?


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