2023
DOI: 10.1080/02103702.2023.2230042
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Does shadow education discourage or encourage creative thinking? Evidence from South Korea (La educación en la sombra, ¿fomenta o desincentiva el pensamiento creativo? Evidencia de Corea del Sur)

Abstract: Using longitudinal data for a nationally representative sample of fifth-graders from the Korean Educational Longitudinal Study of 2013, this study examined the effect of shadow educationreferred to as academically oriented extracurricular activities mainly aimed to prepare for examinations -on students' creative thinking. To estimate the effect of shadow education, we used propensity score matching approaches. We found no significant shadow education effect on gains (or losses) in students' creative thinking b… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Such a finding connects with the body of literature on 'concerted cultivation' (Matsuoka, 2019). The authors conclude that the results are a promising start and call for further research in other locations as well as comparative research (Byun et al, 2023).…”
Section: Structure and Content Of The Special Issuesupporting
confidence: 78%
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“…Such a finding connects with the body of literature on 'concerted cultivation' (Matsuoka, 2019). The authors conclude that the results are a promising start and call for further research in other locations as well as comparative research (Byun et al, 2023).…”
Section: Structure and Content Of The Special Issuesupporting
confidence: 78%
“…For example, in many societies (both Eastern and Western ones, for that matter), shadow education is seen as a by-product of exam culture rooted in Asia and believed to oppress the development of creativity, negatively affect students' health and well-being and foster educational and social inequalities (Kim & Jung, 2021;Yung, 2021b; as evident from major political discourses in these societies, see Bjork, 2015). However, the article by Byun et al (2023) in this issue and some recent studies in the field (e.g., Entrich, 2021) indicate that these negative perceptions of the consequences of shadow education may not necessarily be accurate. There exists great yet unaccounted diversity in educational practices outside formal schooling (Bhorkar, 2023) and constant transformation in response to social and educational change at the national level, for example, in response to policies regulating private tutoring such as the double reduction policy in China (Kwok & Wang, 2023), or in response to global developments such as the COVID-19 pandemic (Tsaloukidis & Kobakhidze, 2023).…”
Section: Final Remarksmentioning
confidence: 92%
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