TY - JOUR
T1 - The Nature and Correlates of Underachievement among Elementary Schoolchildren in Hong Kong
AU - McCall, Robert B.
AU - Beach, Scott R.
AU - Lau, Sing
N1 - The original data collection was supported by a grant (RGC/90-91) from the Research Grants Council of the University Grants Committee, Hong Kong Government, Hong Kong to Lau Sing. The secondary analyses reported here were supported by the University Center for Social and Urban Research and the Asian Studies Program of the University Center for International Studies, both at the University of Pittsburgh.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2000 by the Society for Research in Child Development, Inc. All rights reserved.
PY - 2000/5
Y1 - 2000/5
N2 - This study investigated for the first time several characteristics of
underachievement in a large sample of Hong Kong elementary
schoolchildren. More males were identified as underachievers than
females, but the ratio was substantially less than the two-to-one rate
typically found in the American literature. The stability and
persistence of underachievement increased during the elementary school
years, and the stability of underachievement tended to be higher in
subject matter that was relatively more difficult, which varied wth
gender. Underachievement became more specific to particular academic
subjects rather than more general across the elementary grades. Parents
and teachers, but not the children themselves, perceived that
underachievers were more capable than same-grade nonunderachievers (who
score lower on ability tests), although this awareness is more likely
directed at male than female underachievers, which has been observed in
other samples. In grades 1–4, teachers provided extra mentoring,
communications, and support to underachievers. Thereafter,
underachievers became more disruptive, impatient, and aggressive in
school and perhaps at home. At that point, teachers became less
supportive, offered less extra mentoring, and applied greater behavioral
control over underachievers. Underachieving children also perceived
that their parents became less supportive and used more discipline in
grades 5–6 relative to grades 3–4. These correlates of underachievement
suggests the existence of a syndrome of underachievement that separates
underachievers from children who have the same grades but lower mental
ability.
AB - This study investigated for the first time several characteristics of
underachievement in a large sample of Hong Kong elementary
schoolchildren. More males were identified as underachievers than
females, but the ratio was substantially less than the two-to-one rate
typically found in the American literature. The stability and
persistence of underachievement increased during the elementary school
years, and the stability of underachievement tended to be higher in
subject matter that was relatively more difficult, which varied wth
gender. Underachievement became more specific to particular academic
subjects rather than more general across the elementary grades. Parents
and teachers, but not the children themselves, perceived that
underachievers were more capable than same-grade nonunderachievers (who
score lower on ability tests), although this awareness is more likely
directed at male than female underachievers, which has been observed in
other samples. In grades 1–4, teachers provided extra mentoring,
communications, and support to underachievers. Thereafter,
underachievers became more disruptive, impatient, and aggressive in
school and perhaps at home. At that point, teachers became less
supportive, offered less extra mentoring, and applied greater behavioral
control over underachievers. Underachieving children also perceived
that their parents became less supportive and used more discipline in
grades 5–6 relative to grades 3–4. These correlates of underachievement
suggests the existence of a syndrome of underachievement that separates
underachievers from children who have the same grades but lower mental
ability.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0034186430&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/1467-8624.00185
DO - 10.1111/1467-8624.00185
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 10953943
AN - SCOPUS:0034186430
SN - 0009-3920
VL - 71
SP - 785
EP - 801
JO - Child Development
JF - Child Development
IS - 3
ER -