Peer effects on academic self-concept: a large randomized field experiment

Author:

Keller Tamás123ORCID,Kim Jinho45ORCID,Elwert Felix67

Affiliation:

1. Computational Social Science, Research Center for Educational and Network Studies, Centre for Social Sciences , Budapest , Hungary

2. Institute of Economics, Centre for Economic and Regional Studies , Budapest , Hungary

3. TÁRKI Social Research Institute , Budapest , Hungary

4. Department of Health Policy and Management, Korea University , Seoul , Republic of Korea

5. Interdisciplinary Program in Precision Public Health, Korea University , Seoul , Republic of Korea

6. Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin-Madison , Madison, WI , USA

7. Department of Biostatistics and Medical Informatics, University of Wisconsin-Madison , Madison, WI , USA

Abstract

Abstract Social theories posit that peers affect students’ academic self-concept (ASC). Most prominently, Big-Fish-Little-Pond, invidious comparison, and relative deprivation theories predict that exposure to academically stronger peers decreases students’ ASC, and exposure to academically weaker peers increases students’ ASC. These propositions have not yet been tested experimentally. We executed a large and pre-registered field experiment that randomized students to deskmates within 195 classrooms of 41 schools (N = 3,022). Our primary experimental analysis found no evidence of an effect of peer achievement on ASC in either direction. Exploratory analyses hinted at a subject-specific deskmate effect on ASC in verbal skills, and that sitting next to a lower-achieving boy increased girls’ ASC (but not that sitting next to a higher-achieving boy decreased girls’ ASC). Critically, however, none of these group-specific results held up to even modest corrections for multiple hypothesis testing. Contrary to theory, our randomized field experiment thus provides no evidence for an effect of peer achievement on students’ ASC.

Funder

Hungarian National Research, Development, and Innovation Office

János Bolyai Research Scholarship

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

New National Excellence Program

Ministry for Innovation and Technology

Romnes Fellowship

University of Wisconsin-Madison

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

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