Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
364377 | Learning, Culture and Social Interaction | 2014 | 11 Pages |
In Germany, academic achievement at school depends primarily on students' socioeconomic status (SES). This contribution tries to find an explanation for this fact and adopts a sociolinguistic point of view: the language used at school contains specific speech variants that differ from the language experiences of low SES children. It is language skills – predominantly learned within families, their social strata and cultural rearing – that influence to some extent the chances of successful participation in school. By using differential-item functioning, this article focuses on German items within the domain of mathematics (TIMSS 2007) to analyze challenge-determining characteristics in those items that are more difficult to handle for low than for high SES students.