Successive teacher expectation effects across the early school years

May 1, 2014·
Christine M. Rubie-Davies
,
Rhona S. Weinstein
Francis L. Huang
Francis L. Huang
,
Anne Gregory
,
Philip A. Cowan
,
Carolyn P. Cowan
· 0 min read
Abstract
The capacity for teacher expectation effects to interact and compound across a child’s schooling offers a largely untested mechanism for magnifying or minimizing effects. This study examined four types of long-term teacher expectation effects: within-year effects of single teachers, cross-year effects of single teachers, mediated effects of single and multiple teachers, and compounded effects of multiple teachers. Participants were 110 students tracked from preschool through Grade 4 on measures of achievement and teacher expectations. Evidence was found for within-year but not direct cross-year effects. However, path models demonstrated enduring indirect effects of teacher expectations on cross-year achievement. Multiple years of teacher expectation effects were additive in predicting student achievement at fourth grade, with similar effects for teachers’ over- and underestimates of student ability. The study extends understanding of longer-term teacher expectation effects.
Type
Publication
Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology