Reading view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.

Clinical Teaching Learning Trajectory: Exploring Field Supervisor Written Feedback on Clinical Teacher Pedagogy

American Educational Research Journal, Volume 62, Issue 1, Page 214-257, February 2025.
Field supervisors are central to clinical teaching, but little is known about how their feedback informs preservice teachers’ (PSTs) development. This sequential mixed methods study examines over 3,000 supervisor observation evaluations. We qualitatively ...

Opening the Gateway to Oral Participation: Exploring Facilitative Contextual Factors in the Association Between Student Shyness and Hand Raising

American Educational Research Journal, Volume 62, Issue 1, Page 53-91, February 2025.
This field study examined factors that might influence hand raising in students with high levels of shyness. Data were assessed using student self-reports of shyness and social relatedness factors (student-teacher relationship and peer relationship), ...

Do the Effects Persist? An Examination of Long-Term Effects After Students Leave Turnaround Schools

American Educational Research Journal, Volume 62, Issue 1, Page 180-213, February 2025.
Whole-school reforms have received widespread attention, but a critical limitation of the current literature is the lack of evidence around whether these extensive and costly interventions improve students’ long-term outcomes after they leave reform ...

Effect of Science Teachers’ Pedagogical Content Knowledge on Student Achievement: Evidence From Both Text- and Video-Based Pedagogical Content Knowledge Tests

American Educational Research Journal, Volume 62, Issue 1, Page 92-135, February 2025.
This article provides robust empirical evidence for the association between science teachers’ pedagogical content knowledge (PCK) and student achievement. Unlike previous studies, we employed two approaches (text-based vs. video-based tests) to assess if, ...

Leveling Up: An Academic Acceleration Policy to Increase Equity in Advanced High School Course Taking

American Educational Research Journal, Volume 62, Issue 1, Page 136-179, February 2025.
Taking advanced courses in high school predicts many positive outcomes, yet low-income students and students who identify as Black and Hispanic are underrepresented. Policies such as “algebra for all” that accelerate middle school students into advanced ...

“Sometimes It’s Hard to Do the Right Thing”: The Gender-Inclusivity Leadership Spectrum of How PK–12 Administrators Understand Gender Diversity Laws, Policies, and Implementation

American Educational Research Journal, Volume 62, Issue 1, Page 14-52, February 2025.
PK–12 district-level administrators have been asked to navigate an increasingly complex policy landscape concerning gender-diversity reforms. We apply sensemaking theory to examine administrators’ understanding of legal and policy protections for trans ...

Inequality Beyond Standardized Tests: Trends in Extracurricular Activity Reporting in College Applications Across Race and Class

American Educational Research Journal, Ahead of Print.
For years, discussions on inequality in college admissions have addressed standardized tests, but less is known about inequality in nonstandardized components of applications. We analyzed extracurricular activity descriptions in 6,054,104 applications ...

Disempowering Marketplaces: How School Choice Enrollment Routines Legitimize Educational Inequality

American Educational Research Journal, Ahead of Print.
As school choice increases, parents are expected to act like consumers choosing from a school marketplace. However, to what extent do parents understand and enact this new role? Drawing on organizational theory, we examine the mismatch between the ...

Tracking Procedures and Criteria and the SES Bias in Teacher Track Recommendations

American Educational Research Journal, Ahead of Print.
The allocation of students to ability tracks is often based on teacher recommendations. These recommendations tend to be biased in favor of students from higher socioeconomic status (SES) backgrounds. While tracking procedures and criteria have been ...

Improving Ninth Graders’ Academic Outcomes Through Personalization for Academic and Social-Emotional Learning (PASL)

American Educational Research Journal, Ahead of Print.
Personalization for academic and social-emotional learning (PASL) is a systemic approach to high school reform that works to strengthen and bridge preexisting academic and social-emotional systems within schools and classrooms. Analyzing student ...

Teacher Self-Efficacy, Instructional Practice, and Student Outcomes: Evidence from the TALIS Video Study

American Educational Research Journal, Ahead of Print.
In this paper we use novel data to test the direct and indirect paths between teacher self-efficacy and student outcomes. This includes how teacher self-efficacy is linked to student, teacher, and expert rater views of lesson quality. Our results ...

Performance-Based Compensation Systems and Principal Job Performance

American Educational Research Journal, Ahead of Print.
The inequitable distribution of principal effectiveness raises concern among policymakers. Principal sorting likely contributes to wider achievement and opportunity gaps between low- and high-need schools. As a possible policy tool, policymakers proposed ...

The Tension between Money and Culture: Inequality, Economic Capital, Cultural Capital, and High School Students’ Educational Achievements from a Comparative Perspective

American Educational Research Journal, Ahead of Print.
This study investigated how income inequality shapes the role of economic and cultural capital in students’ academic performance. By analyzing a multilevel dataset of 72 countries (economies), we found that (1) the associations between economic capital ...

The Tension between Money and Culture: Inequality, Economic Capital, Cultural Capital, and High School Students’ Educational Achievements from a Comparative Perspective

American Educational Research Journal, Ahead of Print.
This study investigated how income inequality shapes the role of economic and cultural capital in students’ academic performance. By analyzing a multilevel dataset of 72 countries (economies), we found that (1) the associations between economic capital and academic achievements are stronger in unequal societies than in equal ones, whereas the associations between cultural capital and students’ achievements are stronger in equal societies than in unequal ones, and (2) in more equal societies, the associations between cultural capital and students’ achievements are stronger for students with lower economic capital, whereas the associations between cultural capital and students’ achievements are stronger for students with higher stocks of economic capital in unequal societies. The findings contribute to understanding how social context shapes the processes of intergenerational reproduction from a comparative perspective.
❌