2022
DOI: 10.1111/bjep.12541
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Roles of socioeconomic status, ethnicity and teacher beliefs in academic grading

Abstract: Background: Educational outcomes in the United Kingdom vary as a function of students' family background, with those of lower socioeconomic status (SES) and certain ethnic minority groups among the worst affected. Aims: This pre-registered study investigates: (i) whether knowledge about students' socioeconomic and ethnic background influences teachers' judgements about the quality of their work and potential for the future, and (ii) the role of teachers' beliefs-most notably about meritocracy-in their practice… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…Adopting a strength-based lens highlights the need for solutions that focus on larger, systemic factors that give rise to educational inequity, including important biases embedded across schools’ policies and practices (e.g., Autin et al, 2019 ; Doyle et al, 2023 ; Goudeau et al, 2023 , Goudeau et al, 2024 ; Stephens et al, 2014 , see also Destin, 2020 ). Critically, such biases influence children’s own biases of themselves, as one recent qualitative study noted ( Heberle et al, 2018 ).…”
Section: Maximizing Insights For Educational and Social Policymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Adopting a strength-based lens highlights the need for solutions that focus on larger, systemic factors that give rise to educational inequity, including important biases embedded across schools’ policies and practices (e.g., Autin et al, 2019 ; Doyle et al, 2023 ; Goudeau et al, 2023 , Goudeau et al, 2024 ; Stephens et al, 2014 , see also Destin, 2020 ). Critically, such biases influence children’s own biases of themselves, as one recent qualitative study noted ( Heberle et al, 2018 ).…”
Section: Maximizing Insights For Educational and Social Policymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The children's teachers answered this inventory, and only the first three subscales were applied for this study. However, the previous literature showed negative biases in the perception of teachers of students who belonged to a more disadvantaged SES in terms of lower expectations about their performance (Doyle et al 2023;Filp 1995;Sneyers and Mahieu 2020). Therefore, the CDI was applied in two moments: at the beginning and when the children were 18 months of age, and the growth delta was calculated for each child to control this bias (growth delta = 18-month score − initial score).…”
Section: Instrumentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Negative stereotypes about children from low-SES backgrounds can also be expressed through teachers’ grading practices. In an experiment with teachers from England and Wales (Doyle et al, 2023), teachers read the student record of a 10–11-year-old child, who allegedly was from a high- or a low-SES background. Teachers then evaluated the child’s work.…”
Section: Origins Of Socioeconomic Disparities In Children’s Self-viewsmentioning
confidence: 99%