Why are the early elementary race/ethnicity test score gaps in science larger than those in reading or mathematics? National evidence on the importance of language and immigration context in explaining the gap-in-gaps.
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) F. Chris Curran, University of Maryland, Baltimore County; James Kitchin, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Version: View help for Version V1
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Project Citation:
Curran, F. Chris, and Kitchin, James. Why are the early elementary race/ethnicity test score gaps in science larger than those in reading or mathematics? National evidence on the importance of language and immigration context in explaining the gap-in-gaps. . Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2019-04-23. https://doi.org/10.3886/E109425V1
Project Description
Summary:
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Abstract:
Citation for Published Paper:
Curran, F. C., & Kitchin, J. (2018). Why are the early elementary race/ethnicity test score gaps in science larger than those in reading or mathematics? National evidence on the importance of language and immigration context in explaining the gap-in-gaps. Science Education. Online First.
Abstract:
Recent work examining science test performance in the earliest grades of
school has demonstrated that science test score gaps by race/ethnicity
are apparent as early as kindergarten and that, in a number of cases,
the racial/ethnic test score gaps in science are significantly larger
than the corresponding gaps in reading or mathematics. This study
explores the factors that explain the differences in the magnitudes of
racial/ethnic disparities in performance on science standardized tests
as compared to those in reading/mathematics. Drawing on nationally
representative data from over 10,000 kindergartners in the 2010–2011
school year, this study employs regression models that examine the
explanatory power of nine conceptual domains for explaining the
“gap‐in‐gaps” or test score gap differences in science relative to
mathematics or reading. Results indicate that the gap‐in‐gaps is
relatively unchanged by the inclusion of many conceptual domains but
that students' language and immigration contexts do explain substantial
portions of the gap‐in‐gaps for Hispanic and Asian students.
Implications for policy and practice are discussed.
Scope of Project
Geographic Coverage:
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United States
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