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      Factors affecting Mathematics achievement of first-year secondary school students in Central Uganda

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          Abstract

          This study explores the sources of variability in Mathematics achievement of Ugandan students at the student, classroom and school level. The Mathematics score and questionnaire responses of 4,819 first-year secondary school students (Grade Seven, about 14-15 years old) from 78 classrooms of 49 schools were analysed. A three-level linear model was used. The results indicate that out of the total variance in Mathematics achievement 68.8%, 14.2% and 17.0% are situated at student, classroom and school level, respectively. Of all the considered explanatory variables at the three levels, i.e. socio-economic status, gender, prior Mathematics achievement, parental support, peer influence, class mean of prior Mathematics achievement and of students' perception of good classroom assessment, school mean of class climate (class mean of attitude toward mathematics) and of parental support were significant predictors of Mathematics achievement. The relevant factors could explain 7.6%, 73.1% and 84.3%, respectively, of student-, classroom- and school-level differences. Implications of our study are considered.

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          Gender differences in mathematics performance: a meta-analysis.

          Reviewers have consistently concluded that males perform better on mathematics tests than females do. To make a refined assessment of the magnitude of gender differences in mathematics performance, we performed a meta-analysis of 100 studies. They yielded 254 independent effect sizes, representing the testing of 3,175,188 Ss. Averaged over all effect sizes based on samples of the general population, d was -0.05, indicating that females outperformed males by only a negligible amount. For computation, d was -0.14 (the negative value indicating superior performance by females). For understanding of mathematical concepts, d was -0.03; for complex problem solving, d was 0.08. An examination of age trends indicated that girls showed a slight superiority in computation in elementary school and middle school. There were no gender differences in problem solving in elementary or middle school; differences favoring men emerged in high school (d = 0.29) and in college (d = 0.32). Gender differences were smallest and actually favored females in samples of the general population, grew larger with increasingly selective samples, and were largest for highly selected samples and samples of highly precocious persons. The magnitude of the gender difference has declined over the years; for studies published in 1973 or earlier d was 0.31, whereas it was 0.14 for studies published in 1974 or later. We conclude that gender differences in mathematics performance are small. Nonetheless, the lower performance of women in problem solving that is evident in high school requires attention.
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            The Effect of Primary-School Quality on Academic Achievement Across Twenty-nine High- and Low-Income Countries

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              School Effectiveness Research and the Development of Process Indicators of School Functioning

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Journal
                saje
                South African Journal of Education
                S. Afr. j. educ.
                Education Association of South Africa (EASA) (Pretoria )
                2076-3433
                August 2015
                : 35
                : 3
                : 1-16
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Centre for Educational Effectiveness and Evaluation Belgium
                [2 ] Centre for Educational Effectiveness and Evaluation Belgium
                [3 ] Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences Belgium
                [4 ] Centre for Educational Effectiveness and Evaluation Belgium
                [5 ] Uganda Martyrs University
                Article
                S0256-01002015000300008
                10.15700/SAJE.V35N3A1106
                a6494d2b-19a3-4179-88bd-00353390c5e2

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

                History
                Product

                SciELO South Africa

                Self URI (journal page): http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_serial&pid=0256-0100&lng=en
                Categories
                Education & Educational Research
                Education, Scientific Disciplines

                Educational research & Statistics,General education
                mathematics achievement,multilevel analysis,secondary school,Uganda

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