Comunicação em evento científico
Improving odds for immigrant students best performance: understanding school ethnic composition effect in the Portuguese primary schools using multilevel analysis
Helena Carvalho (Carvalho, H.); Teresa Seabra (Seabra, T.); Patrícia Ávila (Ávila, P.);
Título Evento
ECER 2017 – Reforming Education and the Imperative of Constant Change: Ambivalent roles of policy and educational research
Ano (publicação definitiva)
2017
Língua
Inglês
País
Dinamarca
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Abstract/Resumo
Scientific interest concerning the impact of social and ethnic composition of schools – in other words, the school’s compositional effect – on student performance has intensified throughout the current century, as the subject has been vastly explored by researchers in various national contexts. These effects have usually been studied taking student outcomes as measured by standardized tests on different school subjects and levels of education. Schnepf (2007) uses PISA results to compare the impact of immigrant concentration in schools on student outcomes in ten countries, finding that both the direction and the effect size differ across national contexts. In some countries (Australia and Canada), immigrant concentration has a positive effect on student outcomes; in other countries (Switzerland, Germany, New Zealand and France) the effect is negative; and in some other countries (Netherlands, Sweden, United Kingdom and United States of America) the effect is not statistically significant. The cross-country variation is evident in research, according to the national context on which the study was developed but also to the ethnic groups involved, as the effect may differ for native students and for those with an immigrant background. In most research, high immigrant concentration in schools has negative effects on the outcomes of all students, regardless of their status as immigrants or their social class (Agirdag, Van Houtte & Van Avermaet, 2012; Jensen & Rasmussen, 2011; Van der Slik, Driessen & De Bot, 2006). Despite this, the effects are particularly negative for students of immigrant origins, and within these, for those who are black (Lleras, 2008). Another study also concerning the United States of America (Goldsmith, 2003) had previously pointed towards the lack of benefits from concentrating black students in certain schools, while curiously noting that the results of Hispanic and Latino students are higher in schools where they are the majority. Similarly, Fekjaer and Birkelund (2007) disagree that the impact of ethnic composition in schools is consistently negative for student outcomes. They analyse higher education results of students who attended secondary education in schools with different degrees of ethnic diversity, and find that the effect of diversity is small but positive when parents’ educational background is controlled. In Portugal we conducted a research using an extensive database with the results of fourth grade students in the Mathematics national standardized tests in the Lisbon Metropolitan Area (LMA) for the school year 2009/10. We intent to reveal what are the main factors behind students results in LMA public schools giving special attention to the effect of ethnicity, considered both at the student level (its national origin) and at the school level (the schools ethnic composition). Research questions: Does the schools’ ethnic composition have an effect on students’ Mathematics scores? Does the schools’ ethnic composition effect on Mathematics scores stand when students’ gender, social and ethnic origins are taken into account? Does this effect stand when the schools’ social composition is taken into account? How does the schools’ ethnic composition moderate the relation between having/not having an immigrant background and students’ Mathematics scores, when the socio-economic status (SES) of both students and schools is controlled?
Agradecimentos/Acknowledgements
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