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Stereotype Threat and Educational Tracking: A Field Experiment in Chinese Vocational High Schools
Author(s) -
James Chu,
Prashant Loyalka,
Guirong Li,
Liya Gao,
Yao Song
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
socius sociological research for a dynamic world
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2378-0231
DOI - 10.1177/2378023118782011
Subject(s) - vocational education , stereotype threat , tracking (education) , psychology , stereotype (uml) , mathematics education , test (biology) , field (mathematics) , raising (metalworking) , priming (agriculture) , academic achievement , social psychology , pedagogy , engineering , mechanical engineering , paleontology , botany , germination , mathematics , pure mathematics , biology
Educational tracks create differential expectations of student ability, raising concerns that the negative stereotypes associated with lower tracks might threaten student performance. The authors test this concern by drawing on a field experiment enrolling 11,624 Chinese vocational high school students, half of whom were randomly primed about their tracks before taking technical skill and math exams. As in almost all countries, Chinese students are sorted between vocational and academic tracks, and vocational students are stereotyped as having poor academic abilities. Priming had no effect on technical skills and, contrary to hypotheses, modestly improved math performance. In exploring multiple interpretations, the authors highlight how vocational tracking may crystallize stereotypes but simultaneously diminishes stereotype threat by removing academic performance as a central measure of merit. Taken together, the study implies that reminding students about their vocational or academic identities is unlikely to further contribute to achievement gaps by educational track.

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