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    Urbanicity and Academic Self-Concept

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    Strein, Pickering & Grossman (2009) Urbanicity and Self Concept.pdf (166.6Kb)
    No. of downloads: 260

    Date
    2009-02-27
    Author
    Strein, William
    Pickering, Cyril
    Grossman, Julie
    DRUM DOI
    https://doi.org/10.13016/M2FG9X
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    Abstract
    The main focus of this study was the relationships between school urbanicity (size of community in which the school is located) and fifth-grade students’ academic self-concepts. Using multi-level modeling methodology (HLM) we were able to investigate “school effects”, net of individual students’ characteristics. School urbanicity had no effect on reading, math, or general academic self-concept. School-level effects were found consistently for aggregate school achievement in reading and math, congruent with Marsh’s Big-Fish-Little-Pond effect. Less consistent school-level effects were found for proportion of minority students and school-average SES. Individual level effects mirrored those reported in other literature with tested achievement having the greatest effect
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/1903/16312
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    • Counseling, Higher Education & Special Education Research Works

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