Affiliation:
1. School of Education, Bar-Ilan University
Abstract
To examine the relationship between differential levels of school prestige and social, religious, and demographic characteristics of students of the Israeli national-religious high school system, 221 students in Grade 11 of a boys' theological academic high school, a girls' theological academic high school, a coeducational academic high school, a coeducational comprehensive high school, and a coeducational vocational high school were administered the Student Religiosity Questionnaire, the Student Social Orientations Questionnaire, and the Conservatism Scale. Also, the School Prestige Questionnaire was given to the 5 headmasters of the schools. Statistical analyses indicated that the schools were characterized by two different levels of prestige based upon academic and social clusters of institutional variables. A differential relationship between school prestige and students' demographic backgrounds and some of their attitudinal attributes was noted. Students with more liberal orientations attended the higher prestige schools; those students with less liberal attributes attended lower prestige schools. The results were explained according to the process-approach model.