Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Controlling for prior attainment reduces the po...

Electronic data

  • SERS_D_17_00175_Pennington_jy_2

    Rights statement: The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11199-017-0799-y

    Accepted author manuscript, 340 KB, PDF document

    Available under license: CC BY-NC: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Controlling for prior attainment reduces the positive influence that single-gender classroom initiatives exert on high school students' scholastic achievements

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Controlling for prior attainment reduces the positive influence that single-gender classroom initiatives exert on high school students' scholastic achievements. / Pennington, Charlotte Rebecca; Kaye, Linda K.; Qureshi, Adam W. et al.
In: Sex Roles, Vol. 78, No. 5-6, 03.2018, p. 385-393.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Pennington CR, Kaye LK, Qureshi AW, Heim D. Controlling for prior attainment reduces the positive influence that single-gender classroom initiatives exert on high school students' scholastic achievements. Sex Roles. 2018 Mar;78(5-6):385-393. Epub 2017 Jul 4. doi: 10.1007/s11199-017-0799-y

Author

Bibtex

@article{982b8f2ef8654457b0475f76db25180d,
title = "Controlling for prior attainment reduces the positive influence that single-gender classroom initiatives exert on high school students' scholastic achievements",
abstract = "Research points to the positive impact that gender-segregated schooling and classroom initiatives exert on academic attainment. An evaluation of these studies which reveal positive effects highlights, however, that students are typically selectively assigned to single- or mixed-gender instructional settings, presenting a methodological confound. The current study controls for students{\textquoteright} prior attainment to appraise the efficacy of a single-gender classroom initiative implemented in a co-educational high school in the United Kingdom. Secondary data analysis (using archived data) was performed on 266 middle-ability, 11–12 year-old students{\textquoteright} standardized test scores in Languages (English, foreign language), STEM-related (Mathematics, Science, Information and Communication Technology), and Non-STEM subjects (art, music, drama). Ninety-eight students (54, 55% female) were taught in single-gender and 168 (69, 41% female) in mixed-gender classrooms. Students undertook identical tests irrespective of classroom type, which were graded in accordance with U.K national curriculum guidelines. Controlling for students{\textquoteright} prior attainment, findings indicate that students do not appear to benefit from being taught in single-gender relative to mixed-gender classrooms in Language and STEM-related subjects. Young women benefitted from being taught in mixed-gender relative to single-gender classes for Non-STEM subjects. However, when prior ability is not controlled for, the intervention appears to be effective for all school subjects, highlighting the confounding influence of selective admissions. These findings suggest that gender-segregated classroom initiatives may not bolster students{\textquoteright} grades. It is argued that studies that do not control for selection effects may tell us little about the effectiveness of such interventions on scholastic achievement.",
keywords = "Single-gender classrooms, Co-education , Achievement, Gender-achievement gap, Education policy ",
author = "Pennington, {Charlotte Rebecca} and Kaye, {Linda K.} and Qureshi, {Adam W.} and Derek Heim",
note = "The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11199-017-0799-y ",
year = "2018",
month = mar,
doi = "10.1007/s11199-017-0799-y",
language = "English",
volume = "78",
pages = "385--393",
journal = "Sex Roles",
issn = "0360-0025",
publisher = "Springer New York",
number = "5-6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Controlling for prior attainment reduces the positive influence that single-gender classroom initiatives exert on high school students' scholastic achievements

AU - Pennington, Charlotte Rebecca

AU - Kaye, Linda K.

AU - Qureshi, Adam W.

AU - Heim, Derek

N1 - The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11199-017-0799-y

PY - 2018/3

Y1 - 2018/3

N2 - Research points to the positive impact that gender-segregated schooling and classroom initiatives exert on academic attainment. An evaluation of these studies which reveal positive effects highlights, however, that students are typically selectively assigned to single- or mixed-gender instructional settings, presenting a methodological confound. The current study controls for students’ prior attainment to appraise the efficacy of a single-gender classroom initiative implemented in a co-educational high school in the United Kingdom. Secondary data analysis (using archived data) was performed on 266 middle-ability, 11–12 year-old students’ standardized test scores in Languages (English, foreign language), STEM-related (Mathematics, Science, Information and Communication Technology), and Non-STEM subjects (art, music, drama). Ninety-eight students (54, 55% female) were taught in single-gender and 168 (69, 41% female) in mixed-gender classrooms. Students undertook identical tests irrespective of classroom type, which were graded in accordance with U.K national curriculum guidelines. Controlling for students’ prior attainment, findings indicate that students do not appear to benefit from being taught in single-gender relative to mixed-gender classrooms in Language and STEM-related subjects. Young women benefitted from being taught in mixed-gender relative to single-gender classes for Non-STEM subjects. However, when prior ability is not controlled for, the intervention appears to be effective for all school subjects, highlighting the confounding influence of selective admissions. These findings suggest that gender-segregated classroom initiatives may not bolster students’ grades. It is argued that studies that do not control for selection effects may tell us little about the effectiveness of such interventions on scholastic achievement.

AB - Research points to the positive impact that gender-segregated schooling and classroom initiatives exert on academic attainment. An evaluation of these studies which reveal positive effects highlights, however, that students are typically selectively assigned to single- or mixed-gender instructional settings, presenting a methodological confound. The current study controls for students’ prior attainment to appraise the efficacy of a single-gender classroom initiative implemented in a co-educational high school in the United Kingdom. Secondary data analysis (using archived data) was performed on 266 middle-ability, 11–12 year-old students’ standardized test scores in Languages (English, foreign language), STEM-related (Mathematics, Science, Information and Communication Technology), and Non-STEM subjects (art, music, drama). Ninety-eight students (54, 55% female) were taught in single-gender and 168 (69, 41% female) in mixed-gender classrooms. Students undertook identical tests irrespective of classroom type, which were graded in accordance with U.K national curriculum guidelines. Controlling for students’ prior attainment, findings indicate that students do not appear to benefit from being taught in single-gender relative to mixed-gender classrooms in Language and STEM-related subjects. Young women benefitted from being taught in mixed-gender relative to single-gender classes for Non-STEM subjects. However, when prior ability is not controlled for, the intervention appears to be effective for all school subjects, highlighting the confounding influence of selective admissions. These findings suggest that gender-segregated classroom initiatives may not bolster students’ grades. It is argued that studies that do not control for selection effects may tell us little about the effectiveness of such interventions on scholastic achievement.

KW - Single-gender classrooms

KW - Co-education

KW - Achievement

KW - Gender-achievement gap

KW - Education policy

U2 - 10.1007/s11199-017-0799-y

DO - 10.1007/s11199-017-0799-y

M3 - Journal article

VL - 78

SP - 385

EP - 393

JO - Sex Roles

JF - Sex Roles

SN - 0360-0025

IS - 5-6

ER -