Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4941257 | Studies in Educational Evaluation | 2016 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
The relation between teacher-set performance goals for 361 individual students and these students' mathematics achievement was investigated. High performance goals were found to strongly relate to student performance, with an effect size of d = 0.80. The performance goals were set by the teachers at the end of a step-by-step procedure, consisting of initial teacher expectations, the use of data, and team input. This procedure was expected to decrease negative expectancy bias. Higher teacher performance goals than teachers' initial expectations, so-called positive changes, were positively associated with the performance of initially low achievers. Initially high achievers, for whom the teachers made a positive change, performed worse than comparable students for whom initial expectation and final goal were the same.
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Authors
Evelien S. Ritzema, Marjolein I. Deunk, Roel J. Bosker, Mechteld F. van Kuijk,