Determinants of underachievement as perceived by gifted, above‐average, and average black students1
- 1 March 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Roeper Review
- Vol. 14 (3) , 130-136
- https://doi.org/10.1080/02783199209553407
Abstract
This study examined determinants of underachievement as perceived by 148 Black fifth‐and sixth‐grade students in an urban school district. Explored were the respective influences of social, psychological, and cultural determinants of underachievement as perceived by Black students in three different academic programs (gifted, above‐average, and average). Students were placed into groups based on profiles of achievement behavior (Types I through V) and compared relative to their perceptions and attitudes. Findings from the statistical analyses (frequency analyses, t‐tests, analyses of variance, and multiple regression) suggest that psychological factors played the greatest role in underachievement or poor achievement motivation, and that underachievement behaviors were noted among all students, irrespective of their academic program. Implications and recommendations are suggested for educators working with gifted, above‐average, and average Black students in urban areas.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Telling Tales: The Pedagogy and Power of African American Literature for Youth.The Journal of Negro Education, 1991
- On discovering the hidden treasure of gifted and talented black childrenRoeper Review, 1990
- The Disappearing Minority Educator-No IllusionUrban Education, 1990
- Educating Poor Minority ChildrenScientific American, 1988
- Variability in Minority School Performance: A Problem in Search of an ExplanationAnthropology & Education Quarterly, 1987
- Underachieving, Gifted Working Class Boys: are they wrongly labelled underachieving?Educational Studies, 1987
- Special Issues in Working with Gifted Minority AdolescentsJournal of Counseling & Development, 1986
- Metacognition: Students in charge of their thinkingRoeper Review, 1985
- Minority Status and Schooling in Plural SocietiesComparative Education Review, 1983
- Pygmalion in the classroomThe Urban Review, 1968