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On time and off track? Advanced mathematics course -taking among high school student

Posted on:2002-05-01Degree:Ed.DType:Dissertation
University:Harvard UniversityCandidate:Walker, Erica NicoleFull Text:PDF
GTID:1467390014951686Subject:Mathematics Education
Abstract/Summary:
Racial and gender differences in high school mathematics participation are well-documented; however, few researchers have explored the under-representation of black students in advanced mathematics courses. Nor have researchers examined closely intra-ethnic gender differences in advanced mathematics participation. Because completing these courses in high school is important for student success on standardized tests and college admission and completion, I explored advanced mathematics persistence using longitudinal data from participants in the National Education Longitudinal Study of 1988 (NELS 88) who entered Algebra I in 8 th or 9th grade---"on time" to take advanced mathematics courses throughout high school. Using discrete-time survival analysis, I determined whether black boys, black girls, white boys, and white girls were equally likely to persist in advanced mathematics, and when they were most likely to exit the advanced mathematics pipeline (Algebra I, Geometry, Algebra II, Trigonometry, Pre-Calculus, and Calculus).;I found that racial differences in persistence were largely due to black boys' lack of persistence in the advanced mathematics pipeline; they were the least likely to persist. Black girls were more likely to persist in advanced mathematics than black boys, particularly in the early high school years. White students were slightly more likely than black girls to persist in advanced mathematics, and white girls were slightly more likely than white boys to persist until their senior year. These racial and gender differences diminished, but persisted, upon control for important student, school, and "neighborhood" measures.;Further, I discovered that controlling for socioeconomic status, prior mathematics achievement and school demographic characteristics, students with positive attitudes toward education and mathematics were more likely to persist in advanced mathematics than students with negative attitudes. The gender gap among "high" attitude students was negligible, regardless of race. Students who lived in more advantaged residential areas were more likely than their less advantaged counterparts to persist in advanced mathematics. Indeed, the slight persistence gap between black girls and white students nearly disappeared among students who lived in advantaged residential areas. However, black boys were still less likely than other students---regardless of positive attitudes and advantaged residential areas---to persist in advanced mathematics.
Keywords/Search Tags:Mathematics, High school, Black, Persist, Students, Advantaged residential, Among, Gender
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