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Background: Low socio-economic status (SES) is a persistent risk factor for educational attainment. Parent expectations and student's academic self-concepts contribute to this link; however, few studies have examined how changes in these constructs over time contribute to SES gaps in attainment and how teachers may buffer against the consequences of these changes.
Aims: We examine SES differences in (a) changes in parent expectations and academic self-concepts from primary to secondary school and (b) interactions between teacher-student interaction quality and parent expectations to uncover the role these processes play in SES differences in attainment.
Sample And Methods: Using the Growing Up in Ireland cohort (N = 5190), children reported on their academic self-concepts (9 and 13 years); quality of teacher interactions (13 years); and third-level attainment (20 years). Primary caregivers reported on their educational expectations and SES (9 and 13 years).
Results: From 9 to 13 years, children from low SES families experience a steeper drop in academic self-concept and no rise in their parents' expectations compared with their high SES peers. Both initial levels and changes in children's self-concepts and parents' expectations predicted attainment, with parents' expectations a stronger influence in low SES families. Teacher-child interactions at age 13 moderated the effect of parents' expectations on attainment; however, this was cumulative for low SES children and compensatory for high SES children.
Conclusions: We discuss how findings regarding these developmental processes can be used in school policy and practices aimed at addressing SES differences in educational attainment.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bjep.70025 | DOI Listing |
Br J Educ Psychol
September 2025
The Economic and Social Research Institute, Dublin, Ireland.
Background: Low socio-economic status (SES) is a persistent risk factor for educational attainment. Parent expectations and student's academic self-concepts contribute to this link; however, few studies have examined how changes in these constructs over time contribute to SES gaps in attainment and how teachers may buffer against the consequences of these changes.
Aims: We examine SES differences in (a) changes in parent expectations and academic self-concepts from primary to secondary school and (b) interactions between teacher-student interaction quality and parent expectations to uncover the role these processes play in SES differences in attainment.
Front Psychol
February 2025
School of Humanities and International Studies, Zhejiang University of Water Resources and Electric Power, Hangzhou, China.
Novice English teachers at China's private universities are easily confronted with tensions when they constructed the professional identity in the early career stage. Drawing on a theoretical framework of social identity theory, self-discrepancy theory and situated learning theory, this narrative inquiry study explored the causes, manifestations, and solutions to teachers' professional identity tensions through in-depth interviews. Data were interpreted through metaphorical biographies and thematic analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
February 2025
Division of Early Childhood Pedagogy, Faculty of Education, Leipzig University, Leipzig, Germany.
The present study investigated the longitudinal direct and indirect relations between mothers' and fathers' math ability self-concept, their child-specific math performance expectations and encouragement of math and science-related activities at home, and girls' and boys' math ability self-concept. Structural equation models were performed with longitudinal data from three waves of the Childhood and Beyond Study (CAB). The final sample consisted of 517 children and their mothers and fathers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Hosp Palliat Care
January 2025
Division of Supportive and Palliative Care, National Cancer Centre Singapore, Singapore.
Background: In their care of terminally ill patients, palliative care physicians and oncologists are increasingly predisposed to physical and emotional exhaustion, or compassion fatigue (CF). Challenges faced by physicians include complex care needs; changing practice demands, and sociocultural contextual factors. Efforts to better understand CF have, however, been limited.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Educ Psychol
June 2025
Centre for Educational Neuroscience, University of London, London, UK.
Background: The present special issue on mind, brain and education (educational neuroscience) contains four papers that employ a neuroscience-informed approach to educational phenomena, including dyslexia, academic self-concepts, bullying and the effect of mindset on learning.
Aim: This commentary positions the papers with respect to the goals and methods of educational neuroscience, placing them on a continuum of approaches from basic research to applied intervention.
Procedure: We argue that a focus on the brain matters for teachers because it increases understanding of how learning works and the factors that influence learning outcomes and student well-being without being reductionist.