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      Promoting Interest and Performance in High School Science Classes

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      Science
      American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

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          Abstract

          We tested whether classroom activities that encourage students to connect course materials to their lives will increase student motivation and learning. We hypothesized that this effect will be stronger for students who have low expectations of success. In a randomized field experiment with high school students, we found that a relevance intervention, which encouraged students to make connections between their lives and what they were learning in their science courses, increased interest in science and course grades for students with low success expectations. The results have implications for the development of science curricula and theories of motivation.

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          Most cited references13

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          Changes in Children's Self-Competence and Values: Gender and Domain Differences across Grades One through Twelve

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            Reducing the racial achievement gap: a social-psychological intervention.

            Two randomized field experiments tested a social-psychological intervention designed to improve minority student performance and increase our understanding of how psychological threat mediates performance in chronically evaluative real-world environments. We expected that the risk of confirming a negative stereotype aimed at one's group could undermine academic performance in minority students by elevating their level of psychological threat. We tested whether such psychological threat could be lessened by having students reaffirm their sense of personal adequacy or "self-integrity." The intervention, a brief in-class writing assignment, significantly improved the grades of African American students and reduced the racial achievement gap by 40%. These results suggest that the racial achievement gap, a major social concern in the United States, could be ameliorated by the use of timely and targeted social-psychological interventions.
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              Motivating the Academically Unmotivated: A Critical Issue for the 21st Century

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Science
                Science
                American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
                0036-8075
                1095-9203
                December 03 2009
                December 04 2009
                December 03 2009
                December 04 2009
                : 326
                : 5958
                : 1410-1412
                Article
                10.1126/science.1177067
                19965759
                77ef0eb2-3f7b-4297-865d-8f8f2523dca3
                © 2009
                History

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