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Yu Lei; Xin Fu; Jingjie Zhao; Baolin Yi – Education and Information Technologies, 2025
Grouping students according to their abilities and promoting deeper interaction and moderation are key issues in improving computational thinking in collaborative programming. However, the distribution characteristics and evolving pathways of computational thinking in different groups have not been deeply explored. During the course of a…
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Computation, Programming, Cooperative Learning
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Olivia Johnston; Suzanne Macqueen; Wei Zhang; Nerida Spina; Rebecca Spooner-Lane – Educational Studies, 2025
Many schools choose to organise students into classes according to their perceived "ability", despite evidence that the practice is not beneficial for students, overall. Class grouping by "ability" can exacerbate existing social inequalities by segregating students according to pre-existing educational advantage, which has…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ability Grouping, Student Placement, Secondary Schools
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Davi Bernardo Silva; Deborah Ribeiro Carvalho; Carlos N. Silla – IEEE Transactions on Learning Technologies, 2024
Throughout a programming course, students develop various source code tasks. Using these tasks to track students' progress can provide clues to the strengths and weaknesses found in each learning topic. This practice allows the teacher to intervene in learning in the first few weeks of class and maximize student gains. However, the biggest…
Descriptors: Computation, Models, Ability Grouping, Programming
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Charlene Tan – British Educational Research Journal, 2025
This paper extends the scholarship on attainment grouping by focusing on the policy initiatives of streaming and subject-based banding (SBB) in Singapore. The study is framed by the concept of pragmatic perfectionism, which refers to the continuous and ideals-oriented drive to improve a system through practical, incremental and paradoxical…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Attainment, Ability Grouping, Grouping (Instructional Purposes)
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Shaun D. Wilkinson; Dawn Penney – British Educational Research Journal, 2024
There is an extensive international literature on different forms of ability grouping in schools, much of which describes their impact on students' academic achievement, motivation, self-concept and/or attitudes towards learning. Comparatively little research has focused on students' perspectives of these practices, while the research that has…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Preferences, Ability Grouping, Educational Environment
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Valerie Dunham – Reading Research Quarterly, 2025
Since approximately 1988, the literacy achievement gap has remained stagnant in the United States. Despite data that suggest desegregation efforts have been most impactful on closing this gap, contemporary intervention efforts have often taken the form of homogeneous ability grouping and tracking, practices that lead to segregation along racial,…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Language Arts, Achievement Gap, School Desegregation
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Margo Vandenbroeck; Jonas Dockx; Ellen Claes; Rianne Janssen – Educational Studies, 2024
Educational tracking can lead to different citizenship outcomes. Most studies on the relationship between citizenship and educational track membership applied a variable-centered approach, comparing averages between tracks but not considering differences between students within a track. Person-centered approaches have shown that different…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grade 12, Track System (Education), Ability Grouping
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David Pomeroy; Mahdis Azarmandi; Matiu Tai Ratima; Sara Tolbert; Kay-Lee Jones; Nathan Riki; Te Hurinui Karaka-Clarke – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2024
Decades of research has documented the consequences of allocating school students into a hierarchy of classes with narrow ranges of mathematics attainment, a process known as streaming, tracking, setting, or "ability" grouping. The purported benefits of streaming are inconsistent and disputed, but the harms are clear, in particular, (1)…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Racism, Mathematics Education, Ability Grouping
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Shaun D. Wilkinson; Dawn Penney – British Educational Research Journal, 2025
This study recognised that there is currently limited understanding of the extent and nature of ability grouping practices in subject areas other than mathematics and English in primary schools. Using survey methods, this research sought to generate data of sufficient scale to extend understanding of the use of ability grouping practices in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ability Grouping, Physical Education, Elementary Education
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Papachristou, Efstathios; Flouri, Eirini; Joshi, Heather; Midouhas, Emily; Lewis, Glyn – Child Development, 2022
Ability-grouping has been studied extensively in relation to children's academic, but not emotional and behavioral outcomes. The sample comprised 7259 U.K. children (50% male) with data on between-class and within-class ability-grouping at age 7. Peer, emotional, hyperactivity, and conduct problems were measured at ages 7, 11, and 14 years.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ability Grouping, Behavior Problems, Children
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Gönül Yazgan-Sag – Mathematics Teaching Research Journal, 2024
The aim of this qualitative study was to explore the thoughts of primary and secondary prospective mathematics teachers about educating mathematically gifted students. For this purpose, this research was conducted with 40 prospective mathematics teachers, 17 of whom were secondary mathematics prospective teachers, and 23 were primary mathematics…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Mathematics Teachers, Student Attitudes, Mathematics Instruction
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Maurice J. Elias; Francesco Marsili; Lauren Fullmer; Annalisa Morganti; Erin Bruno – Gifted Education International, 2025
Traditionally, giftedness was perceived as a fixed trait, exclusively evaluated through cognitive testing. However, contemporary perspectives view it as a dynamic and socially constructed attribute reflected in many domains. As this paradigm-shift aligns with global movements emphasizing the importance of avoiding labelling students and enhancing…
Descriptors: Social Emotional Learning, Gifted, Children, Inclusion
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Olivia Johnston; Nerida Spina; Suzanne Macqueen; Rebecca Spooner-Lane – Prospects, 2024
Allocating students into separate classes within a school depending on their "ability" is common in many countries. This paper presents a theoretical discussion of the practice, considering why it persists despite a long history of research emphasizing consequential problems. Our discussion identifies and critiques four possible reasons…
Descriptors: Student Placement, Academic Ability, Teacher Attitudes, Ability Grouping
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Olivia Johnston; Christa Norris; Wei Zhang – Research Papers in Education, 2025
Inequity in education is pronounced when data is used to form rigid class ability groups. Rigid grouping means that students with backgrounds that disadvantage them in education can be locked into low 'ability' class groups. In contrast, informed and flexible use of data can support adaptable and heterogeneous ability grouping, which better…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ability Grouping, Grouping (Instructional Purposes), Secondary School Teachers
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Eikeland, Ingunn; Ohna, Stein Erik – Nordic Journal of Studies in Educational Policy, 2022
Differentiation in education can be seen as a means of responding to student diversity in order to meet the vision of "a school for all." Differentiation has been widely addressed within a western context, and it appears to be a versatile phenomenon as it occurs under various guises and with a variety of terms and modes of…
Descriptors: Individualized Instruction, Ability Grouping, Student Diversity, Systems Approach
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