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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Keeping students back in the same grade – retention – has always been a controversial
issue in Education, with some defending it as a beneficial remedial practice and others
arguing against its detrimental effects. This paper undertakes an analysis of this issue,
focusing on the differences in student motivation and self-related variables according
to their retention related status, and the interrelationship between retention and these
variables. The participants were 695 students selected from two cohorts (5th and 7th
graders) of a larger group of students followed over a 3-year project. The students were
assigned to four groups according to their retention-related status over time: (1) students
with past and recent retention; (2) students with past but no recent retention; (3) students
with no past but recent retention; (4) students with no past or recent retention. Measures
of achievement goal orientations, self-concept, self-esteem, importance given to school
subjects and Grade Point Average (GPA) were collected for all students. Repeated
measures MANCOVA analyses were carried out showing group differences in selfesteem,
academic self-concept, importance attributed to academic competencies, task
and avoidance orientation and academic achievement. To attain a deeper understanding
of these results and to identify profiles across variables, a cluster analysis based on
achievement goals was conducted and four clusters were identified. Students who
were retained at the end of the school year are mainly represented in clusters with less
adaptive motivational profiles and almost absent from clusters exhibiting more adaptive
ones. Findings highlight that retention leaves a significant mark that remains even when
students recover academic achievement and retention is in the distant past. This is
reflected in the low academic self-concept as well as in the devaluation of academic
competencies and in the avoidance orientation which, taken together, can undermine
students’ academic adjustment and turn retention into a risk factor.
Description
This Document is Protected by copyright and was first published by Frontiers. All rights reserved. It is reproduced with permission.
Keywords
Retention Self-esteem Self-concept Achievement goals Academic achievement
Citation
Frontiers in Psychology, 7, 1-13. Doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01550