Date of Award

6-26-2024

Document Type

Dissertation

Degree Name

Educational Leadership, Ed.D.

First Advisor

Amany Saleh

Committee Members

David Stevens; Jeonghee Choi

Call Number

LD 251 .A566d 2024 R35

Abstract

Stereotype threat effect (STE) is a psychosocial phenomenon that can cause performance decrements on standardized tests. The purpose of this quantitative study was to explore standardized test construct through the lens of intelligence theories as a potential mediator for STE for low socioeconomic status (LSES) students in rural Arkansas schools. The theory of STE will be used to explain why LSES are susceptible to STE. The researcher collected quantitative data through an experimental design; participants took either a performance-based or a traditionally formatted math and literacy test to determine if scores (dependent variable) were significantly impacted by test construct within one of five treatments: 1) control, 2) salient-nonthreat, 3) salient-threat, 4) non-salient-nonthreat, and 5) non-salient-threat. Information about the internal conflict, investment in schooling, investment in testing, and self-reported SES was collected via a posttest questionnaire, and the subjective SES was compared to the objective SES that the researcher collected. The findings indicated that participants did not experience STE in any treatment group; however, there was a statistically significant difference between subjective and objective SES – participants overidentified as high socioeconomic status. These findings may support previous research that indicates that identification with the negatively stereotyped group may be necessary to elicit STE. Since the researcher’s sample population was predominantly LSES, the results may also indicate that susceptibility to STE may be lowered in homogenous environments – a finding that may support role model interventions for STE. Keywords: Stereotype threat effect, Arkansas, stereotype threat intervention, standardized tests, low socioeconomic status

Rights Management

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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