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Book

International Guide to Student Achievement

Book

International Guide to Student Achievement

DOI link for International Guide to Student Achievement

International Guide to Student Achievement book

International Guide to Student Achievement

DOI link for International Guide to Student Achievement

International Guide to Student Achievement book

Edited ByJohn Hattie, Eric M. Anderman
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2012
eBook Published 19 December 2012
Pub. Location New York
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203850398
Pages 528
eBook ISBN 9780203850398
Subjects Education
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Hattie, J., & Anderman, E.M. (Eds.). (2013). International Guide to Student Achievement (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203850398

ABSTRACT

The International Guide to Student Achievement brings together and critically examines the major influences shaping student achievement today. There are many, often competing, claims about how to enhance student achievement, raising the questions of "What works?" and "What works best?" World-renowned bestselling authors, John Hattie and Eric M. Anderman have invited an international group of scholars to write brief, empirically-supported articles that examine predictors of academic achievement across a variety of topics and domains.

Rather than telling people what to do in their schools and classrooms, this guide simply provides the first-ever compendium of research that summarizes what is known about the major influences shaping students’ academic achievement around the world. Readers can apply this knowledge base to their own school and classroom settings. The 150+ entries serve as intellectual building blocks to creatively mix into new or existing educational arrangements and aim for quick, easy reference. Chapter authors follow a common format that allows readers to more seamlessly compare and contrast information across entries, guiding readers to apply this knowledge to their own classrooms, their curriculums and teaching strategies, and their teacher training programs.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

part |1 pages

Section 1. Understanding Achievement

chapter 1|4 pages

1 Defining Student Achievement

ByThomas R. Guskey

chapter 1|3 pages

2 Academic Achievement: An Elementary School Perspective

ByAlan Bates, Rena Shiffl et, and Miranda Lin

chapter 1|3 pages

3 Academic Achievement: An Adolescent Perspective

ByR. Trent Haines, Christian E. Mueller

chapter 1|3 pages

4 Adult Education and Achievement

ByM Cecil Smith

chapter 1|3 pages

5 Academic Achievement: A Higher Education Perspective

ByTerrell L. Strayhorn

chapter 1|4 pages

6 Developmental Education for Adults and Academic Achievement

ByJoshua D. Hawley, Shu Chen Chiang

part |1 pages

Section 2. In uences from the Student

chapter 2|3 pages

1 Entry to School

ByCollette Tayler

chapter 2|3 pages

2 Piagetian Approaches

ByPhilip Adey, Michael Shayer

chapter 2|2 pages

3 Entry to Tertiary Education

ByEmer Smyth

chapter 2|3 pages

4 Physical Activity

ByJanet Clinton

chapter 2|3 pages

5 Gender Influences

ByJudith Gill

chapter 2|3 pages

6 Engagement and Opportunity to Learn

ByPhillip L. Ackerman

chapter 2|3 pages

7 Behavioral Engagement in Learning

ByJennifer Fredricks

chapter 2|4 pages

8 Goal Setting and Academic Achievement

ByDominique Morisano, Edwin A. Locke

chapter 2|2 pages

9 Self-Reported Grades and GPA

ByMarcus Credé, Nathan R. Kuncel

chapter 2|3 pages

10 Conceptual Change

ByStella Vosniadou, Panagiotis Tsoumakis

chapter 2|3 pages

11 Social Motivation and Academic Motivation

ByTim Urdan

chapter 2|2 pages

12 Attitudes and Dispositions

ByRobert D. Renaud

chapter 2|3 pages

13 Personality Influences

ByMeera Komarraju

chapter 2|2 pages

14 Academic Self-Concept

ByHerbert W. Marsh, Marjorie Seaton

chapter 2|3 pages

15 Self-Efficacy

ByMimi Bong

chapter 2|3 pages

16 Motivation

ByDale H. Schunk, Carol A. Mullen

chapter 2|4 pages

17 Friendship in School

ByAnnemaree Carroll, Stephen Houghton, Sasha Lynn

chapter 2|3 pages

18 Indigenous and Other Minoritized Students

ByRussell Bishop

chapter 2|2 pages

19 Low Academic Success

ByDavid A. Bergin

chapter 2|3 pages

20 Learning Difficulties in School

ByR. Allan Allday, Mitchell L. Yell

part |1 pages

Section 3. In uences from the Home

chapter 3|4 pages

1 Resident and Nonresident Fathers

ByWilliam Jeynes

chapter 3|3 pages

2 Home Environment

ByBurkhard Gniewosz, Jacquelynne S. Eccles

chapter 3|3 pages

3 Socioeconomic Status and Student Achievement

ByErin Bamgarner, Jeanne Brooks-Gunn

chapter 3|3 pages

4 Welfare Policies

ByLisa A. Gennetian, Pamela A. Morris

chapter 3|3 pages

5 Family–School Partnerships and Academic Achievement

Edited ByJohn Hattie, Eric M. Anderman

chapter 3|3 pages

6 Parent Involvement in Learning

ByWendy S. Grolnick, Jacquelyn N. Raftery-Helmer, Elizabeth S. Flamm

chapter 3|3 pages

7 Maternal Employment and Achievement

ByRachel G. Lucas-Thompson, Wendy A. Goldberg

chapter 3|3 pages

8 Television and Academic Achievement

ByAndrew J. Martin

part |1 pages

Section 4. In uences from the School

chapter 4|3 pages

1 Charter Schools and Academic Achievement

ByAnn Allen

chapter 4|3 pages

2 Ability Grouping

ByEd Baines

chapter 4|3 pages

3 Evaluating and Improving Student–Teacher Interactions

ByAnne H. Cash, Bridget K. Hamre

chapter 4|3 pages

4 Mixed-Grade Elementary-School Classes and Student Achievement

ByLinley Cornish

chapter 4|3 pages

5 School-Based Mental Health

ByErin Dowdy, Matthew P. Quirk, Jenna K. Chin

chapter 4|3 pages

6 Achievement in Faith-Based Schools

ByL. Mickey Fenzel

chapter 4|3 pages

7 Class Size

ByJohn Hattie

chapter 4|3 pages

8 Financing Schools

ByEric A. Hanushek

chapter 4|3 pages

9 Influences of School Layout and Design on Student Achievement

ByC. Kenneth Tanner

chapter 4|3 pages

10 Grade Retention

ByShane R. Jimerson, Jacqueline A. Brown

chapter 4|3 pages

11 Inclusive Education

ByGeoff Lindsay

chapter 4|3 pages

12 School-Wide Positive Behavior Interventions and Supports and Academic Achievement

ByKent McIntosh, Sophie V. Ty, Robert H. Horner, George Sugai

chapter 4|3 pages

13 School Connectedness

ByClea McNeely

chapter 4|3 pages

14 Teacher Mentoring, Coaching, and Consultation

Edited ByJohn Hattie, Eric M. Anderman

chapter 4|3 pages

15 The Link between Student Mobility and Academics

Edited ByJohn Hattie, Eric M. Anderman

chapter 4|3 pages

16 Service-Learning

ByShelley H. Billig

chapter 4|3 pages

17 Single-Sex Schools and Academic Achievement

ByShirley L. Yu, Isabel Rodriguez-Hejazi

chapter 4|3 pages

18 Summer School and Student Achievement in the United States

ByJordan D. Matsudaira

chapter 4|3 pages

19 Within Class Grouping: Arguments, Practices, and Research Evidence

ByYiping Lou

chapter 4|3 pages

20 Special Education and Academic Achievement

ByBenjamin Zablotsky, Michael S. Rosenberg

chapter 4|3 pages

21 Social and Emotional Learning and Academic Achievement

ByJessika Zmuda, Catherine P. Bradshaw

chapter 4|3 pages

22 Middle School Transitions

ByEric M. Anderman

part |1 pages

Section 5. In uences from the Classroom

chapter 5|4 pages

1 Classroom Instructional Contexts

ByDebra K. Meyer

chapter 5|3 pages

2 Academic Motivation and Achievement in Classrooms

ByLynley H. Anderman

chapter 5|4 pages

3 Elementary Classroom Management

ByInge R. Poole, Carolyn M. Evertson

chapter 5|4 pages

4 Emotion and Achievement in the Classroom

ByThomas Goetz, Nathan C. Hall

chapter 5|3 pages

5 Secondary Classroom Management

ByAnne Gregory, Jennifer R. Jones

chapter 5|3 pages

6 Homework and Academic Achievement

ByJianzhong Xu

chapter 5|3 pages

7 The Role of Formative Assessment in Student Achievement

ByAryn C. Karpinski and Jerome V. D’Agostino

chapter 5|4 pages

8 Peer Influences in Elementary School

ByGary W. Ladd

chapter 5|3 pages

9 Acceleration for All

ByHenry M. Levin, Pilar Soler

chapter 5|3 pages

10 Ability Grouping

Edited ByJohn Hattie, Eric M. Anderman

chapter 5|3 pages

11 Collaboration in the Classroom

ByNoreen M. Webb

part |1 pages

Section 6. In uences from the Teacher

chapter 6|3 pages

1 Teacher–Student Relationships

ByHeather A. Davis

chapter 6|4 pages

2 National Board for Professional Teaching Standards

ByMary E. Dilworth

chapter 6|3 pages

3 Classroom Management and Student Achievement

ByH. Jerome Freiberg

chapter 6|3 pages

4 Fostering Student Creativity in the Era of High-Stakes Testing

ByBree Frick

chapter 6|3 pages

5 Nontraditional Teacher Preparation

ByBelinda G. Gimbert

chapter 6|3 pages

6 Quality of Teaching

ByLaura Goe

chapter 6|3 pages

7 Methods for Studying Teacher and Teaching Effectiveness

ByAlexander Gröschner, Tina Seidel, Richard J. Shavelson

chapter 6|4 pages

8 Teachers’ Expectations

ByLee Jussim

chapter 6|3 pages

9 Teacher Enthusiasm and Student Learning

ByMelanie Keller, Knut Neumann, Hans E. Fischer

chapter 6|4 pages

10 Teachers’ Cultural and Professional Identities and Student Outcomes

ByRevathy Kumar, Linda Alvarado

chapter 6|3 pages

11 Teacher Intelligence: What Is It and Why Do We Care?

ByAndrew J. McEachin, Dominic J. Brewer

chapter 6|3 pages

12 Pedagogical Content Knowledge

ByJulie Gess-Newsome

chapter 6|3 pages

13 Teacher Beliefs about Teaching and Learning: The Role of Idea-Oriented Pedagogy

ByRichard Prawat

chapter 6|3 pages

14 School Reform

ByLinda Valli, Carla Finkelstein

chapter 6|2 pages

15 Teacher Efficacy

ByJohn A. Ross

chapter 6|3 pages

16 Teachers’ Epistemological Beliefs and Achievement

ByGregory Schraw, Joanne Brownlee, Lori Olafson

chapter 6|3 pages

17 Teacher Motivation and Student Achievement Outcomes

Edited ByJohn Hattie, Eric M. Anderman

chapter 6|3 pages

18 The Relation of Teacher Characteristics to Student Achievement

Edited ByJohn Hattie, Eric M. Anderman

part |1 pages

Section 7. In uences from the Curriculum

chapter 7|3 pages

1 Values Education Programs

ByTerence Lovat

chapter 7|3 pages

2 Activity-Based Learning Strategies

ByKira J. Carbonneau, Scott C. Marley

chapter 7|4 pages

3 Bilingual Education Programs and Student Achievement

ByJill Fitzgerald, Jackie Eunjung Relyea-Kim

chapter 7|3 pages

4 Intelligent Tutors—Strategy Types

ByBonnie J. F. Meyer

chapter 7|4 pages

5 Creativity and Creativity Programs

ByHeather L. Hammond, Lauren E. Skidmore, Amanda Wilcox-Herzog, James C. Kaufman

chapter 7|3 pages

6 Outdoor Education

ByJustin Dillon

chapter 7|4 pages

7 Role of Discussion in Reading Comprehension

ByIan A. G. Wilkinson, Kathryn Nelson

chapter 7|4 pages

8 The Impact of Calculators on Student Achievement in the K-12 Mathematics Classroom

ByAimee J. Ellington

chapter 7|3 pages

9 Second Language Vocabulary

ByYongqi Gu

chapter 7|3 pages

10 Language Teaching Curricula

ByEli Hinkel

chapter 7|3 pages

11 Measurement of History Achievement in the United States and Europe

ByMark Smith, Joel Breakstone, Sam Wineburg

chapter 7|4 pages

12 Reading: Phonics Instruction

ByWilliam E. Tunmer, Alison W. Arrow

chapter 7|2 pages

13 Repeated Reading

ByWilliam J. Therrien, Sarah J. Watt

chapter 7|2 pages

14 Reading: Sentence Combining: Grammar Programs

ByBruce Saddler, Nicole Bak

chapter 7|3 pages

15 Extracurricular Activities in Secondary Schools

ByBoaz Shulruf, Grace Ying Wang

chapter 7|2 pages

16 Improving Academic Achievement with Social Skills

ByFrank M. Gresham, Michael J. Vance, Jeffrey Chenier

chapter 7|3 pages

17 Visual Perception Programs

Edited ByJohn Hattie, Eric M. Anderman

chapter 7|3 pages

18 Reading: Vocabulary Programs

ByA. Wilson, R. Jesson, S. McNaughton

chapter 7|3 pages

19 Achievement in Adolescent Health Education

ByMegan Sanders, Rashea Hamilton, Eric M. Anderman

chapter 7|4 pages

20 Writing Achievement

ByMark Torrance, Raquel Fidalgo

chapter 7|3 pages

21 Reading: Comprehension Programs

ByJanice F. Almasi, Barbara Martin Palmer

chapter 7|3 pages

22 Response to Intervention: The Sum Is Greater than Its Parts

ByPaul J. Riccomini, Gregory W. Smith

chapter 7|3 pages

23 Successful Mathematics Achievement Is Attainable

ByPatti Brosnan, Aaron Schmidlin, Melva R. Grant

part |1 pages

Section 8. In uences from Teaching Strategies

chapter 8|3 pages

1 Goal Orientation

ByAndrew J. Martin

chapter 8|3 pages

2 Goal Setting and Personal Best Goals

ByAndrew J. Martin

chapter 8|3 pages

3 Keller’s Personalized System of Instruction

ByEric J. Fox

chapter 8|4 pages

4 Concept Mapping

ByJoseph D. Novak

chapter 8|3 pages

5 Direct Instruction

ByGregory Arief D. Liem and Andrew J. Martin

chapter 8|3 pages

6 Reciprocal Teaching

ByAnnemarie Sullivan Palincsar

chapter 8|3 pages

7 Cooperative, Competitive, and Individualistic Learning Environments

ByDavid W. Johnson, Roger T. Johnson

chapter 8|4 pages

8 Peer Tutoring School-Age Children

ByDilara Deniz Can, Marika Ginsburg-Block

chapter 8|3 pages

9. Problem Solving

ByR. Taconis

chapter 8|3 pages

10 Problem-Based Learning

ByDavid Gijbels, Piet Van den Bossche, and Sofi e Loyens

chapter 8|4 pages

11 The Search for the Key for Individualised Instruction

ByCatherine Scott

chapter 8|3 pages

12 Instructional Simulations

Edited ByJohn Hattie, Eric M. Anderman

chapter 8|4 pages

13 Programmed Instruction

Edited ByJohn Hattie, Eric M. Anderman

chapter 8|3 pages

14 Multimedia Learning

ByRichard E. Mayer

chapter 8|3 pages

15 Technology-Supported Learning and Academic Achievement

ByPeter Reimann, Anindito Aditomo

chapter 8|3 pages

16 Feedback

ByHelen Timperley

chapter 8|3 pages

17 Individualized Instruction

ByHersh C. Waxman, Beverly L. Alford, Danielle B. Brown

chapter 8|3 pages

18 Worked Examples

ByPaul Ayres, John Sweller

chapter 8|3 pages

19 Spaced and Massed Practice

ByDominic A. Simon

chapter 8|2 pages

20 Questioning

ByScotty D. Craig

chapter 8|3 pages

21 Effects of Testing

ByJaekyung Lee, Young-Sun Lee

chapter 8|3 pages

22 Metacognitive Strategies

ByLinda Baker

chapter 8|3 pages

23 Mentoring

ByBrian Hansford, Lisa Catherine Ehrich

chapter 8|3 pages

24 Teacher Immediacy

ByAnn Bainbridge Frymier

chapter 8|4 pages

25 The Impact of Teaching Assistants on Pupils

ByRob Webster, Peter Blatchford

chapter 8|2 pages

26 Time on Task

ByTamara van Gog

chapter 8|3 pages

27 Study Skills

ByDale H. Schunk, Carol A. Mullen

chapter 8|2 pages

28 Matching Style of Learning

BySteve Higgins

chapter 8|3 pages

29 Two Types of Perceived Control over Learning: Perceived Efficacy and Perceived Autonomy.

ByNir Madjar, Avi Assor

chapter 8|3 pages

30 Distance Education

ByYong Zhao, Jing Lei

chapter 8|3 pages

31 Home School Programs

ByAndrea Clements

chapter 8|3 pages

32 Evidence Based Reading Comprehension Programs for Students with Learning Disabilities

Edited ByJohn Hattie, Eric M. Anderman

part |1 pages

Section 9. In uences from an International Perspective

chapter 9|3 pages

1 Some Challenges to Educational Achievement in the Russian Federation since the End of the Soviet Union

ByJulian G. Elliott

chapter 9|4 pages

2 Large-Scale Assessments of Achievement in Canada

ByKadriye Ercikan, Maria Elena Oliveri, Debra Sandilands

chapter 9|2 pages

3 Student Achievement in Israel: The Challenges of Ethnic and Religious Diversity

ByYariv Feniger

chapter 9|3 pages

4 Academic Achievement in Finland

ByJennifer Chung, Michael Crossley

chapter 9|3 pages

5 Ghana

ByDavid Peterson del Mar

chapter 9|4 pages

6 Academic Achievement in South Africa

ByAnil Kanjee

chapter 9|3 pages

7 Educational Assessment and Educational Achievement in South America

ByJorge Manzi, David D. Preiss

chapter 9|3 pages

8 Changing Definitions of Student Learning and Achievement in Postconflict Nepal

ByShabnam Koirala-Azad

chapter 9|3 pages

9A Historical Perspective on Educational and Academic Achievement in Nigeria

ByCharles Okonkwo, Richard Tabulawa

chapter 9|3 pages

10 International Large-Scale Assessment Studies of Student Achievement

ByPetra Stanat, Oliver Lüdtke

chapter 9|3 pages

11 Academic Achievement in Singapore

ByPak Tee Ng

chapter 9|3 pages

12 Academic Achievement in South Korea

ByJongho Shin

chapter 9|3 pages

13 An Overview of Student Achievement and Related Factors in Taiwan

ByJeng Liu
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