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Articles

What contributes to low achievement of middle school students: Evidence from multigroup structural equation modeling

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Pages 404-416 | Received 04 Oct 2016, Accepted 06 Jan 2017, Published online: 02 Mar 2017
 

ABSTRACT

The authors' purpose was to examine the degree to which low achievement is related to ontogenetic factors (i.e., personal psychological traits expressed as attention and depression) or microsystemic factors (i.e., socioeconomic status, parenting, relationship with peers and teachers), using a total of 721 middle school students in South Korea. Based on the percentile rank, low-achieving students (bottom 15%; n = 323) and high-achieving students (top 15%; n = 398) were grouped, and a multigroup structural equation modeling was employed to determine which ecological factor(s) contribute to predict low achievement of middle school students. Results from multigroup structural equation modeling showed that 3 of the 6 ecological and ontological factors had significant direct or indirect effect on low achievement: socioeconomic status (direct effect), attention (direct effect), parenting (indirect effect). The findings are discussed in terms of the intertwined influences of ecological factors on low achievement, finally leading to the discussion on the limitations and future directions for research.

Acknowledgment

The first and second authors contributed equally to this article.

Funding

This study was supported through internal grants by the University of Tennessee Knoxville and Hallym University Research Fund, 2016 (HRF-201610-004).

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