High-Ability Grouping: Benefits for Gifted Students' Achievement Development Without Costs in Academic Self-Concept
- PMID: 29171007
- DOI: 10.1111/cdev.12996
High-Ability Grouping: Benefits for Gifted Students' Achievement Development Without Costs in Academic Self-Concept
Abstract
Effects of full-time ability grouping on students' academic self-concept (ASC) and mathematics achievement were investigated in the first 3 years of secondary school (four waves of measurement; students' average age at first wave: 10.5 years). Students were primarily from middle and upper class families living in southern Germany. The study sample comprised 148 (60% male) students from 14 gifted classes and 148 (57% male) students from 25 regular classes (matched by propensity score matching). Data analyses involved multilevel and latent growth curve analyses. Findings revealed no evidence for contrast effects of class-average achievement or assimilation effects of class type on students' ASC. ASC remained stable over time. Students in gifted classes showed higher achievement gains than students in regular classes.
© 2017 The Authors. Child Development © 2017 Society for Research in Child Development, Inc.
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