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Assessing the instructional quality of private tutoring and its effects on student outcomes: Analyses from the German National Educational Panel Study
Author(s) -
Guill Karin,
Lüdtke Oliver,
Köller Olaf
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
british journal of educational psychology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.557
H-Index - 95
eISSN - 2044-8279
pISSN - 0007-0998
DOI - 10.1111/bjep.12281
Subject(s) - german , quality (philosophy) , psychology , mathematics education , academic achievement , confirmatory factor analysis , sample (material) , dimension (graph theory) , structural equation modeling , mathematics , statistics , philosophy , chemistry , archaeology , epistemology , chromatography , pure mathematics , history
Background A considerable proportion of secondary school students gets additional support from private tutoring lessons. Empirical findings on the effectiveness of private tutoring are inconclusive. The instructional quality of the tutoring lessons might influence their effectiveness. Aims We analysed (1) whether students privately tutored in the subjects German or mathematics outperformed their non‐tutored counterparts; (2) whether the instructional quality of the tutoring lessons can be described with the three dimensions, structure, challenge, and support; and (3) the effects of these quality dimensions on the students’ academic achievement and their global satisfaction with their school and family situation. Sample We used data from the German National Educational Panel Study ( NEPS ). From a total sample of N  = 11,358 10th‐grade secondary school students, subsamples provided information about tutoring quality in mathematics ( n M  = 1,714), German ( n G  = 148), and English ( n E  = 490). Methods The model of three correlated dimensions of tutoring quality was evaluated with confirmatory factor analyses, and the effects on student outcomes were tested in a structural equation modelling framework. Results Analyses revealed neither global effects of private tutoring nor effects of its instructional quality on students’ grades in mathematics or German. However, the support dimension was positively related to students’ satisfaction with their school situation. Conclusions Private tutoring cannot be recommended as a generally effective strategy to improve academic achievement in school, but might be helpful to relieve the stress level induced by insufficient achievement in school.

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