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What are
the key factors that promote academic success among students whose demographic
characteristics and school circumstances place them at high risk of failure?
This paper provides highly suggestive, although not conclusive, answers to this
question. Through path analysis modeling techniques applied to data collected
in MDRC’s evaluation of the First Things First school reform initiative in a
large urban school district, the paper explores the influence of two psychological
variables — student engagement and perceived academic competence — on achievement
in reading and mathematics.
This study’s findings may have important implications for understanding how
students learn in the classroom. Consonant with previous research, they indicate
that both engagement in school and students’ perception of their own academic
competence influence achievement in mathematics for high school students. But
the study departs from earlier work in suggesting that perceived academic competence
may be more influential than engagement in boosting achievement in both mathematics
and reading. Indeed, analyses indicate that perceived competence had a stronger
influence on subsequent engagement than engagement had on students’ perceptions
of themselves as competent learners.
The findings also make clear that supportive teachers
and clear and high expectations about behavior are key to the development of
both student engagement and perceived competence. This study suggests that the
earlier schools and teachers begin to build students’ confidence in their ability
to do well, the better off students will be. Because students’ perceptions of
their capacity for success are key to their engagement in school and learning,
schools should be designed to enhance students’ feelings of accomplishment.
Teachers whom students see as supportive and who set clear expectations about
behavior help create an atmosphere in which students feel in control and confident
about their ability to succeed in future educational endeavors.
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