Teachers' Perceptions of Students' Reading Abilities: An Examination of the Relationship Between Teachers' Judgments and Students' Performance Across a Continuum of Rating Methods

Teacher perceptions about students' academic abilities are important for several reasons (e.g., instructional decision making, special education entitlement decisions). Not surprisingly, researchers have investigated the accuracy of teachers' decisions. Although some data reveal that teach...

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Veröffentlicht in:School psychology quarterly 2008-03, Vol.23 (1), p.43-55
Hauptverfasser: Begeny, John C, Eckert, Tanya L, Montarello, Staci A, Storie, Michelle S
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container_title School psychology quarterly
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creator Begeny, John C
Eckert, Tanya L
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Storie, Michelle S
description Teacher perceptions about students' academic abilities are important for several reasons (e.g., instructional decision making, special education entitlement decisions). Not surprisingly, researchers have investigated the accuracy of teachers' decisions. Although some data reveal that teachers are relatively good judges of academic performance, other findings have suggested otherwise. A likely explanation for conflicting findings is the varying assessment methods (e.g., direct vs. indirect, norm-referenced vs. peer-independent) and different data analysis procedures that have been used across studies. The purpose of this study was to investigate a continuum of teacher-perception assessment methods as they corresponded to students' oral reading fluency performance. Participants included 10 teachers and 87 first, second, and third grade students from a suburban school in the northeast. Overall results suggested that teachers were generally accurate when estimating students' performance when students had strong oral reading fluency skills, but teachers had more difficulty judging students with average to low oral reading fluency. Further, data interpretation of teachers' judgment accuracy differed somewhat depending upon the statistical method employed. Implications, limitations, and suggestions for future research related to this study are discussed.
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ispartof School psychology quarterly, 2008-03, Vol.23 (1), p.43-55
issn 1045-3830
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2578-4226
language eng
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source APA PsycARTICLES
subjects Academic Ability
Academic Aptitude
Accuracy
Curriculum Based Assessment
Data Interpretation
Educational Measures
Elementary School Teachers
Elementary Schools
Female
Grade 3
Human
Judgment
Male
Mathematics
Oral Reading
Perceptions
Performance evaluation
Program Effectiveness
Reading
Reading Ability
Reading comprehension
Reading Fluency
Statistical Analysis
Student Attitudes
Students
Studies
Suburban Schools
Teacher Attitudes
Teachers
Verbal Fluency
title Teachers' Perceptions of Students' Reading Abilities: An Examination of the Relationship Between Teachers' Judgments and Students' Performance Across a Continuum of Rating Methods
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