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Untested Admissions: Examining Changes in Application Behaviors and Student Demographics Under Test-Optional Policies Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2021-04-12 Christopher T. Bennett
This study examines a diverse set of nearly 100 private institutions that adopted test-optional undergraduate admissions policies between 2005–2006 and 2015–2016. Using comparative interrupted time series analysis and difference-in-differences with matching, I find that test-optional policies were associated with a 3% to 4% increase in Pell Grant recipients, a 10% to 12% increase in first-time students
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Students’ Sense Making of Higher Education Policies During the Vertical Transfer Process Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2021-04-10 Lauren Schudde, Huriya Jabbar, Eliza Epstein, Elif Yucel
More than a third of students enter higher education at a community college; most aim to earn a baccalaureate. Drawing on sense-making theory and longitudinal qualitative data, we examined how community college students interpret state transfer policies and how their interpretations influence subsequent behavior. Data from 3 years of interviews revealed how students adjudicate between multiple intersecting
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Can Free Community College Close Racial Disparities in Postsecondary Attainment? How Tulsa Achieves Affects Racially Minoritized Student Outcomes Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2021-04-09 Elizabeth Bell, Denisa Gándara
Promise programs, or place-based tuition-free college policies, have become increasingly popular among policymakers looking to expand postsecondary attainment. In this article, we examine Tulsa Achieves, a widespread, albeit understudied type of promise program that covers the balance of students’ tuition and fees after other aid is exhausted at a single community college. Utilizing a difference-in-differences
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Exploring Social, Emotional, and Behavioral Screening Approaches in U.S. Public School Districts Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2021-03-26 Jennifer N. Dineen, Sandra M. Chafouleas, Amy M. Briesch, D. Betsy McCoach, Sarah D. Newton, Dakota W. Cintron
Using a nationally representative sample of U.S. public school districts, we explored the current landscape of social, emotional, and behavioral (SEB) approaches and their impact on behavioral outcomes. Data suggest SEB screening is the exception rather than the rule, with most districts reporting that students are referred to an internal support team when SEB concerns arise. Districts more likely
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Off the Beaten Path: Can Statewide Articulation Support Students Transferring in Nonlinear Directions? Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2021-03-26 George Spencer
Students who transfer between colleges risk losing credits and decreasing their chances of degree completion. Despite emerging evidence regarding the effectiveness of articulation agreements to address this challenge, it is unclear if these policies support nonlinear transfer pathways—including lateral transfer between 4-year colleges or reverse transfer to 2-year colleges. I use propensity score weighting
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English Learner Labeling: How English Learner Classification in Kindergarten Shapes Teacher Perceptions of Student Skills and the Moderating Role of Bilingual Instructional Settings Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2021-03-16 Ilana M. Umansky, Hanna Dumont
Prior research has shown that English learner (EL) classification is consequential for students; however, less is known about how EL classification affects student outcomes. In this study, we examine one hypothesized mechanism: teacher perceptions. Using a national data set (Early Childhood Longitudinal Study—Kindergarten Cohort of 2010–2011 or ECLS-K:2011), we use coarsened exact matching to estimate
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The Role of College-Bound Friends in College Enrollment Decisions by Race, Ethnicity, and Gender Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2021-03-04 Steven Elías Alvarado
This study examines the association between college-bound friends and college enrollment using restricted transcript data from the High School Longitudinal Study. Propensity score matching and school fixed effects models suggest that having close college-bound friends is positively associated with enrolling in college. However, Black and Latino male students are much less likely to benefit from having
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College Acceleration for All? Mapping Racial Gaps in Advanced Placement and Dual Enrollment Participation Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2021-03-03 Di Xu, Sabrina Solanki, John Fink
This article documents the patterns of White-Black and White-Hispanic enrollment gaps in Advanced Placement (AP) and Dual Enrollment (DE) programs across thousands of school districts in the United States by merging several data sources. We show that the vast majority of districts have racial enrollment gaps in both programs, with wider gaps in AP than DE. Results from fractional regression models
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Getting Books in Children’s Hands: Creating a Citywide Book Distribution Policy Using a Mixed-Methods Geospatial Approach Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2021-02-22 Susan B. Neuman, Donna Celano, Maya Portillo
Recognizing the academic benefits of access to print for young children, book distribution programs abound in the United States. Designed to promote book ownership for low-income families, programs have unique delivery systems, leading to a largely fragmented policy. This article describes an urban city’s effort to build a coordinated book distribution program. Phase 1 examines the extent of book distributions
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Constraints, Values, and Information: How Leaders in One District Justify Their Positions During Instructional Decision Making Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2021-02-20 Alice Huguet, Cynthia E. Coburn, Caitlin C. Farrell, Debbie H. Kim, Anna-Ruth Allen
Using over 350 hours of observational data from district-level meetings, we investigate how leaders support their interpretations of problems and proposed solutions during closed-door negotiations around three policy decisions, and how they invoke race, class, and language in the process. District leaders primarily cite constraints from stakeholders, practical realities, and policies during deliberations
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Examining Clinical Teaching Observation Scores as a Measure of Preservice Teacher Quality Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2021-02-11 Brendan Bartanen, Andrew Kwok
We draw on rich longitudinal data from one of the largest teacher education programs in Texas to examine the properties of rubric-based observational evaluations of preservice teachers (PSTs) during clinical teaching. Using a variance decomposition approach, we find that little of the variation in observation scores is attributable to actual differences between PSTs. Instead, differences in scores
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“Maybe You Should Try It This Way Instead”: Youth Activism Amid Managerialist Subterfuge Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2021-02-11 Kevin L. Clay, David C. Turner, III
The authors theorize what we call managerialist subterfuge, drawing on distinct ethnographic studies to examine how adult “partners” leverage the language and strategies of corporate managerialism to undermine youths’ radical visions of change. Critical analysis of patterns in interview and participant observation data across two youth participatory action research projects revealed the ways in which
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“We Can Do Better”: University Leaders Speak to Tribal-University Relationships Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2021-01-10 Theresa Stewart-Ambo
Wielding degrees of influence within educational organizations, university leaders are critical in determining how institutions enact their espoused missions and support severely marginalized campus communities. How do universities address and improve educational outcomes for the most severely underrepresented communities? This article presents emergent findings from an illustrative multiple-case study
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Erratum for “Examining How Stakeholders at the Local, State, and National Levels Made Sense of the Changed Kindergarten” Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-12-01
Brown, C. P., Englehardt, J., Barry, D. P., & Ku, D. H. (2019). Examining how stakeholders at the local, state, and national levels made sense of the changed kindergarten. American Educational Research Journal, 56(3), 822–867. https://doi.org/10.3102/0002831218804152
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Student Mobility and Violent Crime Exposure at Baltimore City Public Elementary Schools Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-11-16 Julia Burdick-Will, Kiara Millay Nerenberg, Jeffrey A. Grigg, Faith Connolly
High levels of school mobility are a problem in many urban districts. Many of these same districts are also dealing with high rates of violent crime. In this study, we use 6 years (2010–2011 to 2015–2016) of administrative data from Baltimore City public elementary school students and crime data from the Baltimore Police Department to examine whether changes in violent crime at schools are associated
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The College Preparatory Pipeline: Disparate Stages in Academic Opportunities Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-11-12 Heather E. Price
The rise in college preparatory coursework across American high schools appears not to affect college enrollment and graduation rates. This study uses the Civil Rights Data Collection to evaluate three stages along the college preparatory pipeline: access to, enrollment in, and mastery of Advanced Placement® and International Baccalaureate® coursework to understand the cumulative academic opportunities
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Are Donations Bigger in Texas? Analyzing the Impact of a Policy to Match Donations to Texas’ Emerging Research Universities Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-10-30 Xiaodan Hu, Frank Fernandez, Denisa Gándara
We examine the impact of the Texas Research Incentive Program (TRIP), a state policy that offers matching funds to incentivize private-sector donations to certain public universities. We use a national dataset and employ a generalized difference-in-differences approach with matching procedures to estimate the treatment effect of TRIP on revenues at eligible institutions. Results show that TRIP is associated
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The Intergenerational Transmission of Teaching Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-10-14 Alberto Jacinto, Seth Gershenson
Parental influences, particularly parents’ occupations, may influence individuals’ entry into the teaching profession. This mechanism may contribute to the relatively static demographic composition of the teaching force over time. We assess the role of parental influences on occupational choice by testing whether the children of teachers are disproportionately likely to become teachers themselves and
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Resisting the Neoliberal Role Model: Latino Male Mentors’ Perspectives on the Intersectional Politics of Role Modeling Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-09-04 Michael V. Singh
This article reports on research with two Latino male youth workers who express strong criticism of their positioning as “positive” role models for struggling Latino boys in a Latino male mentorship program. Drawing from analytic frameworks attune to the intersectional politics of race and neoliberalism, this article centers the voices of these educators to raise important questions about the neoliberal
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Remembering and Revisiting Pedagogies of the Home Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-09-03 Nichole M. Garcia, Dolores Delgado Bernal
Almost two decades after Delgado Bernal’s theorization of pedagogies of the home, this article examines pedagogies of the home of four Chicana/o college-educated families to understand the role of parent engagement not only in the college choice processes but also in college completion and graduate school enrollment. Using Chicana feminisms to inform educational oral histories, four Chicana/o parent-child
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School Effects Revisited: The Size, Stability, and Persistence of Middle Schools’ Effects on Academic Outcomes Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-08-28 Tracey Lloyd, Jared N. Schachner
Since the early 2000s, educational evaluation research has primarily centered on teachers’, rather than schools’, contributions to students’ academic outcomes due to concerns that estimates of the latter were smaller, less stable, and more prone to measurement error. We argue that this disparity should be reduced. Using administrative data from three cohorts of Massachusetts public school students
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Competing for Bachelor’s Degrees: Are Community Colleges Cutting Into the Market Share of 4-Year Institutions? Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-08-24 Dennis A. Kramer, II, Justin C. Ortagus, Jacqueline Donovan
To address local workforce needs and expand access to affordable bachelor’s degrees, some states allow community colleges to offer bachelor’s degree programs. Despite concerns that community college baccalaureate (CCB) programs will duplicate efforts and cut into the market share of nearby 4-year institutions, extant literature has yet to examine the impact of CCB adoption on bachelor’s degree program
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The Effects of Providing and Receiving Peer Feedback on Writing Performance and Learning of Secondary School Students Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-07-25 Yong Wu, Christian D. Schunn
Research has shown that engaging students in peer feedback can help students revise documents and improve their writing skills. But the mechanistic pathways by which skills develop have remained untested: Does receiving and providing feedback lead to learning because it produces more extensive revision behavior or is such immediate implementation of feedback unnecessary? These pathways were tested
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Can Center-Based Care Reduce Summer Slowdown Prior to Kindergarten? Exploring Variation by Family Income, Race/Ethnicity, and Dual Language Learner Status Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-07-25 Meghan P. McCormick, Mirjana Pralica, Paola Guerrero-Rosada, Christina Weiland, JoAnn Hsueh, Barbara Condliffe, Jason Sachs, Catherine Snow
This study examines growth in language and math skills during the summer before kindergarten; considers variation by family income, race/ethnicity, and dual language learner status; and tests whether summer center-based care sustains preschool gains. Growth in skills slowed during summer for all children, but the patterns varied by domain and group. Non-White and dual language learner students showed
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School’s Out: The Role of Summers in Understanding Achievement Disparities Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-07-08 Allison Atteberry, Andrew McEachin
Summer learning loss (SLL) is a familiar and much-studied phenomenon, yet new concerns that measurement artifacts may have distorted canonical SLL findings create a need to revisit basic research on SLL. Though race/ethnicity and socioeconomic status only account for about 4% of the variance in SLL, nearly all prior work focuses on these factors. We zoom out to the full spread of differential SLL and
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What Teachers Want: School Factors Predicting Teachers’ Decisions to Work in Low-Performing Schools Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-06-11 Samantha Viano, Lam D. Pham, Gary T. Henry, Adam Kho, Ron Zimmer
Attracting and retaining teachers can be an important ingredient in improving low-performing schools. In this study, we estimate the expressed preferences for teachers who have worked in low-performing schools in Tennessee. Using adaptive conjoint analysis survey design, we examine three types of school attributes that may influence teachers’ employment decisions: fixed school characteristics, structural
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Linguistic Re-Formation in Florida Heartland Schools: School Erasures of Indigenous Latino Languages Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-06-08 Rebecca Campbell-Montalvo
By law, language information of students in U.S. schools must be identified during enrollment. This information affects language screening, federal reporting, provision of services, and so on. In the Florida Heartland, analyses of observations, records, a language inventory (survey), and interviews show that some students and parents’ languages identified during registration are not recorded accurately
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Putting PjBL to the Test: The Impact of Project-Based Learning on Second Graders’ Social Studies and Literacy Learning and Motivation in Low-SES School Settings Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-06-08 Nell K. Duke, Anne-Lise Halvorsen, Stephanie L. Strachan, Jihyun Kim, Spyros Konstantopoulos
This cluster randomized controlled trial investigated the impact of project-based learning with professional development supports on social studies and literacy achievement and motivation of second-grade students from low–socioeconomic status school districts. At random in within-school pairs, 48 teachers were assigned to the experimental or comparison group. Experimental group teachers were asked
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The Process and Politics of Educational Governance Change in New Orleans, Los Angeles, and Denver Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-05-26 Julie A. Marsh, Taylor N. Allbright, Danica R. Brown, Katrina E. Bulkley, Katharine O. Strunk, Douglas N. Harris
In recent years, some U.S. school districts have shifted away from direct management of schools, toward systems in which some or all schools operate under enhanced autonomy, accountability, and parental choice. Yet dynamics driving these changes are understudied, and there are few comparative studies of system-level governance shifts. To address these gaps, we use extensive qualitative data to analyze
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Can a Positive School Climate Promote Student Attendance? Evidence From New York City Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-05-26 Daniel Hamlin
Nearly 15% of American students are chronically absent from school. To address absenteeism, many states have recently made chronic absence a core component of their school accountability plans. Scholars have theorized that a positive school climate can promote student attendance, but empirical support for this idea is lacking. In this study, the relationship between four student-reported measures of
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Corrigendum to “Extracurricular Settings as a Space to Address Sociopolitical Crises: The Case of Discussing Immigration in Gender-Sexuality Alliances Following the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election” Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-05-19
Poteat, V. P., Calzo, J. P., Yoshikawa, H., Rosenbach, S. B., Ceccolini, C. J., & Marx, R. A. (2019). Extracurricular settings as a space to address sociopolitical crises: The case of discussing immigration in gender-sexuality alliances following the 2016 U.S. presidential election. American Educational Research Journal, 56(6), 2262–2294. https://doi.org/10.3102/0002831219839033
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“I’m a Teacher, I’m Gonna Always Protect You”: Understanding Black Educators’ Protection of Black Children Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-05-12 Maxine McKinney de Royston, Tia C. Madkins, Jarvis R. Givens, Na’ilah Suad Nasir
Many Black educators in the United States demonstrate a political clarity about white supremacy and the racialized harm it cultivates in and out of schools. We highlight the perspectives of some of these educators and ask, (1) How do they articulate the need to protect Black children? and (2) What mechanisms of protection do they enact in their classrooms and schools? Through further elaborating the
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Developing Ambitious Mathematics Instruction Through Web-Based Coaching: A Randomized Field Trial Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-05-05 Matthew A. Kraft, Heather C. Hill
This article describes and evaluates a web-based coaching program designed to support teachers in implementing Common Core–aligned math instruction. Web-based coaching programs can be operated at relatively lower costs, are scalable, and make it more feasible to pair teachers with coaches who have expertise in their content area and grade level. Results from our randomized field trial document sizable
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Academic Tracking of English Learners With Disabilities in Middle School Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-04-22 Sara E. N. Kangas, Megan Cook
Despite increased attention to the academic progress of English learners (ELs) with disabilities as a result of the Every Student Succeeds Act of 2015, research has yet to investigate the educational opportunities of these students in secondary grades. This qualitative embedded case study examined the curricular access of 10 ELs with disabilities in middle school. Utilizing deficit thinking for its
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The Development and Sustainability of School-Based Parent Networks in Low-Income Latinx Communities: A Mixed-Methods Investigation Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-04-22 David E. Rangel, Megan N. Shoji, Adam Gamoran
Research suggests that school-based parent networks have significant benefits for children’s education, yet scholars know very little about how such relationships form and develop over time. This study uses interview and survey data with elementary school parents in predominantly low-income Latinx communities to examine how parents meet one another; how deeper, more trusting relationships develop;
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From Interpretation to Instructional Practice: A Network Study of Early-Career Teachers’ Sensemaking in the Era of Accountability Pressures and Common Core State Standards Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-04-22 Kenneth A. Frank, Jihyun Kim, Serena J. Salloum, Kristen N. Bieda, Peter Youngs
Accountability pressures and the Common Core State Standards for Mathematics have created complex demands for educators, especially early-career teachers (ECTs). Analyzing longitudinal data, including the social networks of 119 ECTs, we find that ECTs increase their ambitious mathematics instruction when their network members positively interpret accountability pressures and curricular standards as
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Sorting Through Performance Evaluations: The Influence of Performance Evaluation Reform on Teacher Attrition and Mobility Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-03-20 Luis A. Rodriguez, Walker A. Swain, Matthew G. Springer
The federal Race to the Top initiative signified a shift in American education policy whereby accountability efforts moved from the school to the teacher level. Using administrative data from Tennessee, we explore whether evaluation reforms differentially influenced mobility patterns for teachers of varying effectiveness. We find that the rollout of a statewide evaluation system, even without punitive
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“We’re in This Together”: Bridging and Bonding Social Capital in Elementary School PTOs Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-02-28 Brittany Murray, Thurston Domina, Amy Petts, Linda Renzulli, Rebecca Boylan
Scholarship on the links between families and schools encompasses contradictory notions about social capital and its relation to inequality. One view holds that schools can narrow inequality by generating dense relationships among families, while others suggest that advantaged parents can use these networks to hoard opportunities. This multiple case study analyzes qualitative data from diverse North
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A Model for Assessment in Play-Based Kindergarten Education Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-02-28 Angela Pyle, Christopher DeLuca, Erica Danniels, Hanna Wickstrom
Kindergarten teachers face the challenge of integrating contemporary assessment practices with play-based pedagogy. The current study addresses this challenge by presenting a kindergarten assessment framework rooted in theory and current classroom practices, based on teacher interview and observational data collected in 20 kindergarten classrooms. Ten teachers subsequently participated in extended
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Teacher Merit Pay: A Meta-Analysis Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-02-22 Lam D. Pham, Tuan D. Nguyen, Matthew G. Springer
Empirical research investigating the association between teacher pay incentives and student test scores has grown rapidly over the past decade. To integrate the findings from these studies and help...
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Targeted Linguistic Simplification of Science Test Items for English Learners Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-02-22 Tracy Noble, Stephen G. Sireci, Craig S. Wells, Rachel R. Kachchaf, Ann S. Rosebery, Yang Caroline Wang
In this experimental study, 20 multiple-choice test items from the Massachusetts Grade 5 science test were linguistically simplified, and original and simplified test items were administered to 310 English learners (ELs) and 1,580 non-ELs in four Massachusetts school districts. This study tested the hypothesis that specific linguistic features of test items contributed to construct-irrelevant variance
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Categorical Inequality in Black and White: Linking Disproportionality Across Multiple Educational Outcomes Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-01-23 Kenneth Shores, Ha Eun Kim, Mela Still
We characterize the extent to which Black-White gaps for multiple educational outcomes are linked across school districts in the United States. Gaps in disciplinary action, grade-level retention, classification into special education and Gifted and Talented, and Advanced Placement course-taking are large in magnitude and correlated. Racial differences in family income and parent education are strikingly
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Teacher-Child Racial/Ethnic Match and Parental Engagement With Head Start Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2020-01-07 Anna J. Markowitz, Daphna Bassok, Jason A. Grissom
Parental engagement is central to Head Start’s two-generation mission. Drawing on research linking teacher-child racial/ethnic match to educational outcomes, the present study explores whether teacher-child match increases parental involvement in Head Start activities designed to support children and families. Using data from the 2006 and 2009 waves of the Head Start Family and Child Experiences Survey
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“You Were Going to Go to College”: The Role of Chicano Fathers’ Involvement in Chicana Daughters’ College Choice Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2019-12-11 Nichole M. Garcia, Rebeca Mireles-Rios
Using pláticas, the sharing of cultural teachings through intimate and informal conversations, this article analyzes our personal college choice processes as Chicanas by examining the impact of being raised by Chicano college-educated fathers. Drawing on two theoretical frameworks, college-conocimiento, a Latinx college choice conceptual framework, and critical raced-gendered epistemologies, we demonstrate
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A Multisite Randomized Controlled Trial of the Effectiveness of Descubriendo la Lectura Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2019-12-10 Geoffrey D. Borman, Trisha H. Borman, So Jung Park, Scott Houghton
We present findings from a randomized controlled trial of Descubriendo la Lectura (DLL), an intervention designed to improve the literacy skills of Spanish-speaking first graders, who are struggling with reading. DLL offers one-on-one native language literacy instruction for 12 to 20 weeks to each school’s lowest performing first-graders. Examining literacy outcomes for 187 students, hierarchical linear
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Digital Versus Paper Reading Processes and Links to Comprehension for Middle School Students Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2019-12-09 Amanda P. Goodwin, Sun-Joo Cho, Dan Reynolds, Katherine Brady, Jorge Salas
This study explores digital and paper reading processes and outcomes for 371 fifth to eighth graders completing a reading task similar to standardized testing. Results showed students highlighted and annotated more when reading the paper versus digital text. Also, reading on paper versus digitally was slightly supportive of reading comprehension for the longer section of text. For behaviors, digital
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Moving Beyond a Culture of Niceness in Faculty Hiring to Advance Racial Equity Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2019-12-06 Román Liera
This study applies cultural historical activity theory to examine the experiences of 17 professors at a religiously affiliated private university who participated in a 10-month, inquiry-based intervention to change their culture around faculty hiring. The findings illustrate that professors who use race-conscious language and tools to interrogate their campus culture’s historical roots with racism
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The Predictive Validity of Classroom Observations: Do Teachers’ Framework for Teaching Scores Predict Kindergarteners’ Achievement and Motivation? Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2019-12-06 Helen Patrick, Panayota Mantzicopoulos, Brian F. French
We used multilevel analysis to examine the predictive validity of scores from the Framework for Teaching (FFT), the observation measure used most often to evaluate teachers’ instruction. We investigated how well 81 kindergarten teachers’ FFT scores for eight reading and eight mathematics lessons observed throughout the year predicted students’ year-end achievement and motivation in reading and mathematics
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Racialized Compensatory Cultivation: Centering Race in Parental Educational Engagement and Enrichment Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2019-12-06 Lori Delale-O’Connor, James P. Huguley, Alyssa Parr, Ming-Te Wang
In this study, we examine the intersections and divergences of class- and race-based parenting motivations and practices as they connect to education through an exploration of the purposeful, race-conscious ways that a socioeconomically mixed sample of Black families approaches and practices academic and social enrichment and development. Drawing from focus groups and interviews with 28 African American
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Assessing the Assessment: Evidence of Reliability and Validity in the edTPA Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2019-12-04 Drew H. Gitomer, José Felipe Martínez, Dan Battey, Nora E. Hyland
The Educative Teacher Performance Assessment (edTPA) is a system of standardized portfolio assessments of teaching performance mandated for use by educator preparation programs in 18 states, and ap...
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Elementary English Learner Classroom Composition and Academic Achievement: The Role of Classroom-Level Segregation, Number of English Proficiency Levels, and Opportunity to Learn Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2019-11-27 Peggy Estrada, Haiwen Wang, Timea Farkas
Using mixed methods, we investigated (a) the association of the extent of English learner (EL) classroom-level segregation (proportion EL) and number of EL English proficiency levels with elementary EL academic achievement, using 2 years of administrative data, and (b) school staff–reported opportunity to learn–related advantages and disadvantages in segregated versus integrated compositions, using
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¡Ya Basta! Countering the Effects of Neoliberal Reform on an Urban Turnaround High School Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2019-11-15 Barbara L. Pazey
This article provides an account of the ways in which students and adult supporters of an urban turnaround high school mobilized to defy the rhetoric of neoliberal reforms and the subsequent deficit narrative imposed on them and on their school. Their counternarratives refute the master narratives advanced by federal and state educational reforms. The current rationale of neoliberal reforms and the
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Out of Site, Out of Mind: The Evolving Significance of Race in the Story of an Early Quaker-Freedmen School Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2019-10-30 Sarah Byrne Bausell, Torri A. Staton, Sherick Hughes
This article documents collective memories of the founding, curriculum, and attendees of one of the first (1866) Reconstruction Era Quaker-Freedmen School sites in the Southeastern United States. It applies critical oral history methodology including the collection of primary documents, previous investigations into the school, and interviews of community elders. Through the close study of the school’s
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Summer Credit Recovery Impact on Newcomer English Learners Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2019-10-30 Angela Johnson
Prior research shows that English learners (ELs) lag behind their peers in academic achievement and education attainment. The persisting gap is partly attributed to ELs’ limited exposure to academic content. This article investigates the efficacy of a summer credit recovery program aimed at expanding high school newcomer ELs’ access to academic subjects. Leveraging student-level data from a large urban
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Social Context Matters: Bridging Philosophy and Sociology to Strengthen Conceptual Foundations for College Access Research Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2019-10-30 Michele S. Moses, Kathryn E. Wiley
Scholars in distinct academic disciplines may examine the same or similar phenomena, often relying on concepts that are well known within each discipline. In this article, we examine two related sociological concepts—capital and adaptive preferences—each used to explain young people’s choices and aspirations. We make the case that integrating the philosophical concept of the “social context of choice”
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Taking Their First Steps: The Distribution of New Teachers in School and Classroom Contexts and Implications for Teacher Effectiveness Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2019-10-24 Paul Bruno, Sarah J. Rabovsky, Katharine O. Strunk
Novice teachers’ professional contexts may have important implications for their effectiveness, development, and retention. However, due to data limitations, descriptions of these contexts are often unidimensional or vague. Using 10 years of administrative data from the Los Angeles Unified School District, we describe patterns of new teacher sorting using 24 context measures organized along three
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It’s Who You Know: The Role of Social Networks in a Changing Labor Market Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2019-10-09 Huriya Jabbar, Marisa Cannata, Emily Germain, Andrene Castro
Teacher labor markets are evolving across the United States. The rise of charter schools, alternative teacher certification, and portfolio districts are transforming teachers’ access to employment, changing the way they search for and apply for jobs, and may also change the role that social networks play in the job search. However, we know little about how teachers use their networks to find jobs,
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The Concept of Academic Mobility: Normative and Methodological Considerations Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2019-09-27 Rafael Quintana, Richard Correnti
Most of the literature on the development of educational inequality has operated under the achievement gaps paradigm, often assuming that the underlying normative and methodological foundations related to equality and justice in education are a settled matter. In this article, we argue that important normative dimensions are overlooked with traditional mean-based measures, and that metrics that capture
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“Put the Jesuit Out Front”: How a Catholic, Jesuit University Addresses LGBQ Issues Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2019-09-26 Bryce E. Hughes
The campus climate for LGBQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, queer) communities in higher education has improved, but not necessarily at religiously affiliated institutions. This case study explores how faculty, staff, and students at a Jesuit, Catholic university address LGBQ issues through interviews, participant observation, and document review. Findings revealed that participants employed a variety of
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Differences at the Extremes? Gender, National Contexts, and Math Performance in Latin America Am. Educ. Res. J. (IF 5.013) Pub Date : 2019-09-24 Ran Liu, Andrea Alvarado-Urbina, Emily Hannum
Studies of gender disparities in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) performance have generally focused on average differences. However, the extremes could also be important because disparities at the top may shape stratification in access to STEM careers, while disparities at the bottom can shape stratification in dropout. This article investigates determinants of gender disparities
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