A growth-mindset intervention teaches the belief that intellectual abilities can be developed. Where does the intervention work best? Prior research examined school-level moderators using data from the National Study of Learning Mindsets (NSLM), which delivered a short growth-mindset intervention during the first year of high school. In the present research, we used data from the NSLM to examine moderation by teachers’ mindsets and answer a new question: Can students independently implement their growth mindsets in virtually any classroom culture, or must students’ growth mindsets be supported by their teacher’s own growth mindsets (i.e., the mindset-plus-supportive-context hypothesis)? The present analysis (9,167 student records matched with 223 math teachers) supported the latter hypothesis. This result stood up to potentially confounding teacher factors and to a conservative Bayesian analysis. Thus, sustaining growth-mindset effects may require contextual supports that allow the proffered beliefs to take root and flourish.
Educational gradients in health status, morbidity, and mortality are well established, but which aspects of schooling produce those gradients is only partially understood. We draw on newly available data from the midlife follow-up of the High School and Beyond sophomore cohort to analyze the relationship between students’ level of coursework in high school and their long-term health outcomes. We additionally evaluate the mediating roles of skill development, postsecondary attendance and degree attainment, and occupational characteristics. We find that students who took a medium- to high-level course of study in high school have better self-reported health and physical functioning in midlife, even net of family background, adolescent health, baseline skills, and school characteristics. The association partially operates through pathways into postsecondary education. Our findings have implications for both educational policy and research on the educational gradient in health.
Students with health impairments represent a growing sector of the college population, but health based disparities in bachelor's degree completion persist. The classes students pass and the grades they receive during the first year of college provide signals of degree progress and academic fit that shape educational expectations, potentially subjecting students to a cooling out process (Clark 1960). Using the Beginning Postsecondary Students Longitudinal Study (BPS 04/09), we compare signals of degree progress and academic fit and changes in educational expectations between students with and without health impairments during the first year of college. We find that net of academic preparation, type of institution, enrollment intensity and first year experiences, students with mental impairments are more likely to lower their educational expectations after the first year of college, due partially to negative signals of academic fit. We find limited evidence that gaps in learning are related to the use of academic accommodations for students with health impairments. Our results suggest that students with mental impairments are disadvantaged in reaching first year benchmarks of degree progress and academic fit and are disproportionately cooled out.Bachelor's degrees have become essential for future success in health and the labor market. More people have access to college than ever before, but bachelor's degree completion rates are not equal for all students who hope to complete a degree. College attendance has risen for students with health impairments since the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act [ADA], which supports equal opportunities and combats discrimination, but gaps in degree completion remain. i "We have yet to experience the full impact of [ADA]. The dreams and ambitions of many young people with disabilities have yet to be realized" according to Lex Frieden, a disability rights advocate (Frieden, 2014). Four out of five high i ADA defines a disability as "a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities." Both "disability" and "health impairment" are used in the literature (Wells 2003). We use "health impairment" because it coincides with the ADA definition and the BPS questionnaire. HHS Public AccessAuthor manuscript J Higher Educ. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2017 November 01. Author Manuscript Author ManuscriptAuthor ManuscriptAuthor Manuscript school students with health impairments hope to go to college, but only one third matriculate (Wagner & Blackorby, 1996;Sanford, Newman, Wagner, Cameto, Knokey, & Shaver, 2011). Of the over two million students with health impairments who do enter postsecondary institutions, only 16% receive a bachelor's degree, compared to over half of students without health impairments (Kochhar-Bryant, Bassett, & Webb, 2009). Without successful early college experiences, dreams of receiving a bachelor's degree may go unrealized. Students who pass classes and earn high grades during the first year of coll...
Students with health impairments represent a growing sector of the college population, but health based disparities in bachelor’s degree completion persist. The classes students pass and the grades they receive during the first year of college provide signals of degree progress and academic fit that shape educational expectations, potentially subjecting students to a cooling out process (Clark 1960). Using the Beginning Postsecondary Students Longitudinal Study (BPS 04/09), we compare signals of degree progress and academic fit and changes in educational expectations between students with and without health impairments during the first year of college. We find that net of academic preparation, type of institution, enrollment intensity and first year experiences, students with mental impairments are more likely to lower their educational expectations after the first year of college, due partially to negative signals of academic fit. We find limited evidence that gaps in learning are related to the use of academic accommodations for students with health impairments. Our results suggest that students with mental impairments are disadvantaged in reaching first year benchmarks of degree progress and academic fit and are disproportionately cooled out.
Key Points Question Are unrealized occupational expectations associated with higher risk of suicide? Findings In this cohort study of 11 680 male participants who were high school students in 1980, adult deaths from suicide and drug poisoning were more than 2.5 times higher among those who planned for a working-class job if their expected occupation declined in labor market share between 1980 and 1990 compared with those who planned for professional occupations. Meaning These findings suggest that policies mitigating the risks from labor market changes must account for the gap between expectational ideals and current labor market opportunities.
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