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An examination of eighth- and twelfth-grade students' mathematics achievement in relation to school locale, county location, looping status, SES, grade and class size, and access to upper-level mathematics courses in Tennessee

Posted on:2004-09-24Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:The University of TennesseeCandidate:Winters, Joseph JeremyFull Text:PDF
GTID:1457390011956698Subject:Education
Abstract/Summary:
The purpose of this study was two-fold. First, this study was conducted to examine the status of mathematics achievement in rural schools in Tennessee. The second purpose of this study was to understand the presence and effects of the educational practice of looping in terms of secondary level mathematics. In order to thoroughly investigate these topics, other potentially confounding variables were examined for their effects on students' mathematics achievement.;Five instruments were used. The Algebra 1 Gateway Test and the Mathematics Section of the TCAP Achievement Test were used for eighth grade students. The ACT Mathematics Test and two surveys developed by the researcher were used for the twelfth grade students. One survey was sent to Mathematics Department Chairpersons, and the other survey was sent to students in upper-level mathematics courses in three rural Appalachian counties.;This study was divided into four parts. Part One investigated the two instruments for eighth grade students mathematics achievement. Part Two investigated the ACT Mathematics Test for twelfth grade students. Part Three examined the Mathematics Department Chairperson survey. Part Four examined the student surveys. Descriptive and inferential statistics were used with school means from the 2001--2002 school year as the unit of analysis.;The findings indicated significant differences between rural and nonrural students on the Mathematics Section of the TCAP Achievement Test with rural schools outperforming nonrural schools (p = .001). Moreover, significant differences were found between Appalachian and non-Appalachian counties on this test with Appalachian schools outperforming non-Appalachian schools (p < .001). The locale-county interaction on the ACT Mathematics Test was significantly different. Rural Appalachian schools, rural non-Appalachian schools, and nonrural Appalachian schools had higher ACT Mathematics Test school means than nonrural non-Appalachian schools ( p = .023, p = .007, and p = .002, respectively).;Although intentional looping does not occur in Tennessee high schools, unintentional looping was present. Looping was found in all school locales and county locations in Tennessee. The greatest percentage of looping occurred in rural Appalachia (62%). Looping and ACT Mathematics Test school means were not significantly related in this study (p = .072).
Keywords/Search Tags:Mathematics, Looping, School, Grade students, Rural, Tennessee
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