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      Belonging and Academic Engagement Among Undergraduate STEM Students: A Multi-institutional Study

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          Most cited references32

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          Reliability and Predictive Validity of the Motivated Strategies for Learning Questionnaire (Mslq)

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            A brief social-belonging intervention improves academic and health outcomes of minority students.

            A brief intervention aimed at buttressing college freshmen's sense of social belonging in school was tested in a randomized controlled trial (N = 92), and its academic and health-related consequences over 3 years are reported. The intervention aimed to lessen psychological perceptions of threat on campus by framing social adversity as common and transient. It used subtle attitude-change strategies to lead participants to self-generate the intervention message. The intervention was expected to be particularly beneficial to African-American students (N = 49), a stereotyped and socially marginalized group in academics, and less so to European-American students (N = 43). Consistent with these expectations, over the 3-year observation period the intervention raised African Americans' grade-point average (GPA) relative to multiple control groups and halved the minority achievement gap. This performance boost was mediated by the effect of the intervention on subjective construal: It prevented students from seeing adversity on campus as an indictment of their belonging. Additionally, the intervention improved African Americans' self-reported health and well-being and reduced their reported number of doctor visits 3 years postintervention. Senior-year surveys indicated no awareness among participants of the intervention's impact. The results suggest that social belonging is a psychological lever where targeted intervention can have broad consequences that lessen inequalities in achievement and health.
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              The psychological sense of school membership among adolescents: Scale development and educational correlates

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Research in Higher Education
                Res High Educ
                Springer Nature America, Inc
                0361-0365
                1573-188X
                November 2015
                March 6 2015
                November 2015
                : 56
                : 7
                : 750-776
                Article
                10.1007/s11162-015-9367-x
                4c04f78d-3104-4120-997a-6cfa640170f5
                © 2015
                History

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