Login / Signup

Are teachers meeting students' needs in untracked science classrooms? Evidence based on a causal inferential approach.

Eric HoMichael SeltzerMinjeong Jeon
Published in: PloS one (2024)
Tracking has been criticized for relegating disadvantaged students to lower track courses in which students encounter a greater lack of instructional support. While an end to tracks through detracking is a possible solution, there are concerns that detracking will create more heterogeneous classrooms, making it harder for teachers to provide adequate support to their students. Using the 2015 PISA dataset, this study conducts a causal inferential analysis to understand the differences in student perceptions of teaching in tracked and untracked environments. The results provide evidence that students' needs, with respect to adaptation of instruction and provision of individualized feedback and support, are being met to the same extent on average in tracked and untracked science classes, suggesting that teachers may not necessarily have a harder time meeting the needs of students in untracked classes.
Keyphrases
  • high school
  • public health
  • healthcare
  • primary care
  • palliative care
  • medical students