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High Educational Expectations and Low Achievement: Stability of Educational Goals Across Adolescence
128
Citations
37
References
2000
Year
Educational AttainmentEducational PsychologyHigh SchoolEducationMathematics Test ScoresStudent OutcomeElementary EducationPsychologyLow AchievementEarly ExpectationsEducational DisadvantageSchool FunctioningAchievement GoalStudent SuccessAdolescent DevelopmentAdolescent LearningHigher EducationHigh Educational ExpectationsAdolescent CognitionSecondary EducationAchievement Motivation
Abstract Data from the National Education Longitudinal Study of 1988 were used to investigate variables that predicted stability of adolescents' postsecondary educational expectations from Grade 8 to 2 years after high school. The study included students who had early expectations for at least a bachelor's degree as well as 8th-grade reading or mathematics test scores that were below the median. All participants had high early expectations and comparatively low early achievement. Six years later, approximately 76% of the participants still had high expectations, whereas 24% of them no longer expected to earn a bachelor's degree. Results provide support for the addition of variables to the social cognitive model of educational achievement when predicting long-term educational expectations and attainment.
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