Teacher (Mis)Perceptions of Preschoolers' Academic Skills: Predictors and Associations With Longitudinal Outcomes

Preschool teachers have important impacts on children's academic outcomes, and teachers' misperceptions of children's academic skills could have negative consequences, particularly for low-income preschoolers. This study utilized data gathered from 123 preschool teachers and their 760...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of educational psychology 2015-08, Vol.107 (3), p.805-820
Hauptverfasser: Baker, Courtney N., Tichovolsky, Marianne H., Kupersmidt, Janis B., Voegler-Lee, Mary Ellen, Arnold, David H.
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container_end_page 820
container_issue 3
container_start_page 805
container_title Journal of educational psychology
container_volume 107
creator Baker, Courtney N.
Tichovolsky, Marianne H.
Kupersmidt, Janis B.
Voegler-Lee, Mary Ellen
Arnold, David H.
description Preschool teachers have important impacts on children's academic outcomes, and teachers' misperceptions of children's academic skills could have negative consequences, particularly for low-income preschoolers. This study utilized data gathered from 123 preschool teachers and their 760 preschoolers from 70 low-income, racially diverse centers. Hierarchical linear modeling was utilized to account for the nested data structure. Even after controlling for children's actual academic skill, older children, children with stronger social skills, and children with fewer inattentive symptoms were perceived to have stronger academic abilities. Contrary to hypotheses, preschoolers with more behavior problems were perceived by teachers to have significantly better pre-academic abilities than they actually had. Teachers' perceptions were not associated with child gender or child race/ethnicity. Although considerable variability was due to teacher-level characteristics, child characteristics explained 42% of the variability in teachers' perceptions about children's language and preliteracy ability and 41% of the variability in teachers' perceptions about math ability. Notably, these perceptions appear to have important impacts over time. Controlling for child baseline academic skill and child characteristics, teacher perceptions early in the preschool year were significantly associated with child academic outcomes during the spring both for language and preliteracy and for math. Study implications with regard to the achievement gap are discussed.
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source EBSCOhost APA PsycARTICLES
subjects Academic Ability
Academic Achievement
Age Differences
Behavior Problems
Conners Teacher Rating Scale
Female
Hierarchical Linear Modeling
Human
Interpersonal Competence
Language Development
Literacy
Low Income Groups
Male
Mathematics Education
Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test
Perceptions
Preschool Children
Preschool Students
Preschool Teachers
Social skills
Social Skills Rating System
Teacher Attitudes
title Teacher (Mis)Perceptions of Preschoolers' Academic Skills: Predictors and Associations With Longitudinal Outcomes
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