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Fitzpatrick, Brian R.; Mustillo, Sarah – Sociology of Education, 2020
Research on college admissions shows that all students tend to benefit from overmatching, but high-status students are most likely to be overmatched, and low-status students are most likely to be undermatched. This study examines whether mismatching takes place when students are sorted into classrooms in middle school. Given prior research on…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Grouping (Instructional Purposes), Equal Education, Advantaged
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Mijs, Jonathan J. B. – Sociology of Education, 2016
Country rankings based on the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) invite politicians and specialists to speculate about the reasons their countries did well or failed to do well. Rarely, however, do we hear from the students on whose performance these rankings are based. This omission is unfortunate for two reasons. First,…
Descriptors: Mathematics Achievement, Attribution Theory, Secondary School Students, International Assessment
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Ferrare, Joseph J. – Sociology of Education, 2013
Significant attention has been given to how students become grouped or "tracked" through the courses they share in common. However, this work has yet to be connected to a targeted analysis of the way in which courses are grouped with other courses through the students they co-enroll. Drawing on insights from field theory, the author…
Descriptors: Social Class, Social Organizations, High Schools, Multidimensional Scaling
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Richer, Stephen – Sociology of Education, 1976
The paper explicates the major assumptions of reference-group theory in order to deduce hypotheses with direct application to studies of classroom ability grouping. (Author)
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Educational Research, Educational Sociology, Group Dynamics
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Leiter, Jeffrey – Sociology of Education, 1983
Third-grade students in high ability groups in mathematics achieved greater gains than students in low ability groups. The opposite results occurred in reading achievement. Possible reasons for this difference include different instructional techniques for reading and math and the effect of home environment on learning. (IS)
Descriptors: Achievement Gains, Educational Research, Grade 3, Grouping (Instructional Purposes)
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Sorensen, Aage Bottger – Sociology of Education, 1970
An attempt is made to specify the crucial dimensions of organizational differentiation. This conceptual framework is then used in the formulation of a set of mechanisms that may account for a relationship between organizational differentiation and student behavior. (Author/JB)
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Academic Achievement, Conceptual Schemes, Educational Sociology
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Torche, Florencia – Sociology of Education, 2005
Chile has experienced considerable educational expansion over the past few decades, as well as a privatization reform in 1981 that introduced full parental choice through a voucher system, in the context of a market-oriented transformation of the country. Using a cohort analysis of the 2001 Chilean Mobility Survey, this article examines trends in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Equal Education, Educational Change, Privatization
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Hallinan, Maureen T. – Sociology of Education, 1994
Maintains that ability-group tracking focuses on two issues: (1) whether tracking is more effective in promoting student learning; and (2) whether all students benefit from tracking to the same degree. Concludes that tracking, as currently practiced, tends to be both inequitable and, at least for some students, ineffective. (CFR)
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Academic Ability, Educational Philosophy, Educational Practices
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Felmlee, Diane; Eder, Donna – Sociology of Education, 1983
How students' ability group assignments affect their attention spans is examined. Data were gathered from videotaped lessons of first-grade reading groups. Assignment to a low-ability group had a strong negative effect on student attentiveness, suggesting that classroom factors are important in shaping student behavior. (Author/IS)
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Attention Span, Classroom Research, Grade 1
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Riehl, Carolyn – Sociology of Education, 2001
Considers how qualitative research has enhanced knowledge of four topics in the sociology of education: (1) educational inequality, (2) socialization, (3) identity formation, and (4) school organization and educational policy. Argues that qualitative studies have introduced new voices, perspectives, and themes into traditional understanding. (CAJ)
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Educational Sociology, Elementary Secondary Education, Equal Education
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Oakes, Jeannie – Sociology of Education, 1994
Responds to Maureen Hallinan's review of research and recommendations regarding grouping students for instructional purposes. Contends that ability grouping is much more than an administrative practice. Concludes that the school's normative, social, and political climate should be the object of reform. (CFR)
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Academic Ability, Educational Philosophy, Educational Practices
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Pallas, Aaron M.; And Others – Sociology of Education, 1994
Examines three possible mechanisms for the effects of first-grade reading group placement. Finds that first-grade ability-group placement can have persistent effects on children's achievement in school for several years and may shape expectations of the children by parents and teachers. (CFR)
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Academic Achievement, Educational Objectives, Educational Philosophy
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Stevenson, David Lee; And Others – Sociology of Education, 1994
Asserts that students' opportunities to learn subjects can be organized into sequences that span grades and schools. Examines national patterns in opportunities for learning mathematics and science from grade 8 to grade 10. Finds that the level of mathematics in grade 8 is closely related to that taken in high school, but this is not true of…
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Access to Education, Educational Attainment, Educational Opportunities
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Arum, Richard; Shavit, Yossi – Sociology of Education, 1995
Reports on a reevaluation study of the effects of high school vocational education on students' odds of being unemployed and students' occupational attainment. Finds that vocational education inhibits the likelihood of attending college and finding subsequent professional/managerial employment, but reduces the risk of unemployment. (CFR)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, College Bound Students, Curriculum Design, Education Work Relationship
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Jenkins, Patricia H. – Sociology of Education, 1995
Reports on a study of the effects of personal characteristics, family involvement, and ability grouping on school participation and commitment. Finds that decreasing levels of school commitment are associated with increasing rates of school crime, misconduct, and nonattendance. (CFR)
Descriptors: Attendance, Crime, Delinquency, Delinquency Causes