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Dressed and groomed for success in elementary school: Indicators of social class predict academic adjustment

Fitzpatrick, Caroline; Côté-Lussier, Carolyn ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4475-4926 et Blair, Clancy (2016). Dressed and groomed for success in elementary school: Indicators of social class predict academic adjustment The Elementary School Journal , vol. 117 , nº 1. pp. 30-45. DOI: 10.1086/687753.

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Résumé

Teacher judgments of student competence can influence student achievement. Clothes, behavior, and physical appearance may all be used to infer student competence. We examined how fourth-grade teacher ratings of student physical appearance (e.g., appropriateness of clothing) relate to concurrent academic adjustment in terms of achievement, classroom engagement, teacher-child relations, parent-teacher partnership, and student academic self-concept and motivation, controlling for academic competence, ethnicity, and family characteristics. We followed 1,311 children from birth to grade 4. Children described by teachers more negatively in terms of their appearance had worse academic adjustment. Student physical appearance was also related to self-reported intrinsic motivation and academic self-concept, as well as to directly assessed math scores. Our results are consistent with social psychological and cognitive theories of stereotyping and classroom expectations, and suggest that school disengagement experienced by disadvantaged students may be partially rooted in elementary classroom dynamics.

Type de document: Article
Mots-clés libres: réussite scolaire; classe sociale; ajustement scolaire
Centre: Centre Urbanisation Culture Société
Date de dépôt: 11 déc. 2019 14:45
Dernière modification: 28 janv. 2022 19:38
URI: https://espace.inrs.ca/id/eprint/8811

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