The Effects of Retention On Students Achievement
The Effects of Retention On Students Achievement
The Effects of Retention On Students Achievement
Georgia Educational Research Association 2014 GERA Conference (October 17-18, 2014)
Conference
Recommended Citation
Duggan, Kara, "The Effects of Retention on Students Achievement" (2014). Georgia Educational Research
Association Conference. 25.
https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/gera/2014/2014/25
This presentation (open access) is brought to you for free and open access by the Conferences & Events at Digital
Commons@Georgia Southern. It has been accepted for inclusion in Georgia Educational Research Association
Conference by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons@Georgia Southern. For more information, please
contact digitalcommons@georgiasouthern.edu.
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
Kara Duggan
EDCI 7745-Capstone
Dr. Peck
Summer 2014
1
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
Hypothesis: If students are retained then it will affect their academic, social, and psychological
Introduction
One of the most important controversial policies in education today is the decision to
retain students on the basis of their performance on standardized tests (Stone & Engel, 2004).
With the push for high educational standards, more kids are facing the possibility of retention
because they are not achieving test scores required for promotion (Schwab, 2004). There are
arguments against education rules such as the No Child Left Behind Act in the United States
which is meant to end social promotion, the practice of graduating failing students to the next
grade to keep them with their peers. There are disadvantages of holding a child back and there
are a number of states which tie grade promotion to performance on standardization tests
(Goodman, 2004). The stakes are high for both the policy makers, who often champion its
ability to whip low performing schools and students into shape and for the kids themselves,
whose lives can be forever changed by promotion policies and legislation. The implementation
of the No Child Left Behind Act has resulted in an upsurge in the retention of children who score
poorly on achievement tests (Leckron & Griffith, 2006). The practice of making retention
decisions on the basis of the results of a single test — called “high-stakes testing” — is widely
condemned in scientific literature. Test authors generally advise that their tests are not adequate
for high-stakes decisions (Goldberg, 2005). Grade retention has become increasingly
controversial since the early 2000s education initiatives such as No Child Left Behind have
pressed schools to meet certain standards defined by scores on standardize test (Alexander,
2
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
2002). Retention is the practice of requiring a child to repeat a particular grade. It is often
presented as the answer for poor academic or behavior performance in school. Students may be
retained in a grade for a number of reasons including if they are judged not to have the academic
or social skills to advance to the next grade (Bielick & Chapman, 2003). Retention is often used
as a means to raise educational standards. Many believe that repeating a grade is an effective
remedy for students who have failed to master basic skills. Students are taught the same
information, the same kind of way, during their retained year. No modification are made and the
students are expected to learn the skills the second time in a particular grade. However, when we
look at something like retention in grade, there is a major incongruity between purpose and
Thirty years ago first grade was for learning how to read. Now, reading lessons start in
kindergarten and kids who “don’t crack the code” by the middle for the first grade get extra help.
Instead of story time, finger painting, tracing letters and snack, first grades are spending hours
doing math worksheets and sounding out words in reading groups. In some places, recess,
music, and art are being replaced by writing exercises and spelling quizzes. Kids as young as six
years of age are tested and retested again-some every ten days or so to ensure they are making
sufficient progress. After school, there is homework, and for some, educational videos, more
workbooks and tutoring, to help give them an edge (Tyre, 2006). In middle and high school the
same things takes places from no longer have a break and continuing to take standardized test
such as Criterion Referenced Competency Test (CRCT) and End of Course Test (EOCT) and
Georgia High School Graduation Test. These test all play a vital role in each child’s life. The all
3
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
Review of Literature
politicians, and parents. Advocates of retention logically point out that promoting a child
regardless of achievement puts an unprepared child out into the world. They maintain that
holding a child back in the early grades can boost readiness and self-esteem by improving the
child's basic skill foundation. In later grades, some hold that retention can be a consequence for
low achievement, forcing students to be accountable for their academic work (Frey, 2005).
The latest efforts in reform and accountability, most of which are replays of misguided efforts
enacted in the early 1980s, include once again the use of required minimum standardized test
scores to end the practice of social promotion. Greater reliance is being placed on the use of
single test scores in making all or a large part of the retention decision, despite the overwhelming
consensus in the educational literature that retention of elementary and middle school students
Recent research suggests that holding kids back is rarely helpful. In fact, it's often
detrimental. A most recent report found that after one year, third graders who are held back
aren't better off compared with students who squeak by into the next grade. Sixth graders who
repeated the grade fared worse than those barely allowed to advance, and almost 78 percent of
eighth graders who were held back dropped out of school altogether. Young people disengage
from school because they're learning the same thing in the same way over and over again.
Nineteen states currently tie grade promotion to performance on standardized tests, and others
are aggressively pushing to hold back more students despite the growing body of research
showing the practice doesn't work. Policymakers need to find another solution. These are
4
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
students with serious deficits. No one wants to advocate promoting someone who doesn't have
Grade retention is a practice in which a student who has completed a particular grade of
schooling is compelled to remain in that same grade in the subsequent school year. Grade
retention rates in the United States are generally high, and though there are few estimates of
retention for the national population, sources place the figure at somewhere between five and ten
percent of students retained annually. Retention has been promoted by its advocates as the
antidote for "social promotion"-the practice of advancing students even when they do not meet
the required skills of their current grade. Why, proponents argue, let failing students continue to
the next grade where, absent the requisite skills, they will be even more likely to fail? Critics
counter, however, that there is no evidence that grade retention helps students in the long run and
only mixed evidence that it helps even in the short run. Moreover, grade retention is one of the
more expensive educational policies available and may come at significant cost to students' self-
The topic of retention has recently received extensive analysis and research. The results
of this research are unequivocal. These studies find retention to be generally harmful in three
critical domains, notably social adjustment, academic achievement, and avoidance of school
dropout. When statistical procedures are implemented to randomize a control group (not
retained) versus an experimental group (retained), the control group performs better on all the
above categories.
When randomization procedures are used, experimenters can be confident that the two
groups do not experience differences in risk factors and thus the only variable that would account
5
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
for the difference is the experimental condition (that of retention). The following are summary
1) Retention in grade has no academic benefit. At risk students who are promoted achieve
as well or better than those children retained. 2) Retained students are worse off on all
attendance. 3) Retained students are 30 percent more likely to drop out than not retained
students. 4) Self-reports of children indicate that there is lasting hurt from retention no
While Research indicates that while grade retention does not typically increase student
performance, it is widely practiced in schools throughout the country. Arguments for retaining a
child include immaturity, the belief that an extra year of schooling will produce successful
academic outcomes, and the failure to meet criteria for promotion (Bowman, 2005).
strategies or interventions are imposed, the at-risk or academically delayed child is better off
with promotion in respect to the above noted categories. This is why I feel that retention should
not be used as a form of remediation unless schools have the extra support and assistance to help
these students. We as educators cannot expect the parents to assist with helping the students at
home. We have to provide the assistance the child needs at school to help them be successful
Making students repeat a grade has not worked for 100 years, so why is it still happening?
And why do government official, school leaders, and teachers persist in recommending retention
as a remedy for low student achievement-even when researchers call it a failed intervention
(Black, 2004).
6
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
Overall, neither social promotion nor retention leads to high performance. If the goal is to
bring low performing students up to the higher standards now being asserted across the nation,
neither retention nor social promotion is effective. In different studies, one or the other has been
found to offer an advantage, but neither has been found to offer a large, lasting advantage, and
Retention is again on the increase due to the current emphasis on a return to academic
standards and accountability and the use of performance on such standards as indicators for
promotion or retention (Jimerson & Kaufman, 2003). The yearly rate of retention appears to be
rising, perhaps spurred by higher levels of accountability and the proliferation of “zero
tolerance” policies regarding achievement in schools. The Center for Policy Research in
Education reported in 1990 that 6% of schoolchildren were retained each year. In 1992, the
annual rate of retention in the United States had nearly doubled to 11.1%. By 1995, it had risen
to 13.3%. The National Association of School Psychologists reported that grade retention has
United States, with the highest rates found among boys- especially minorities, special education
students and those who come from low-income families and live in the inner city (Black, 2004).
This extra year of schooling is estimated to cost United States taxpayers over 14 billion annually.
15 to 20 percent of all students repeat at least one grade between the ages of six and seventeen.
Nationally it is estimated that 5-10% of students are retained annually, which translates to over
2.4 million children every year that must complete an extra year of schooling. Research
indicates that across the nation, 30% to 50% of students will be retained at least once by the
ninth grade (Jimerson, 2001). This is an important point to me that if we know who are at the
7
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
highest risk for being retained lets help the solution before the problem arises. We need to have
specialized mentoring groups assist in the schools with the students who are at high risk for
retention such as the minority male special education population at an early age.
Each year, five to seven percent of U.S. children are retained at grade level, on the
assumption that retention is helpful for those who are immature and/or failing to achieve.
Proponents also argue that in the long run the rate of dropout will be lower. However, research
shows that none of these assumptions are valid. In fact, students who are retained one grade level
have only one chance in fifty of graduating from high school. Those who are retained twice have
8
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
It is important to investigate how grade retention can affect a retained student’s academic
achievement. In spite of the design problems of many studies examining retention, the
strategy for remediation of academic problems (Jimerson & Kaufman, 2003). Retention is one
of the most influential predictors of school dropout. Proponents of “ending social promotion”
argue that promoting students who have not mastered basic skills sets these students up for
failure later on and sends the message that achievement does not matter. Opponents argue that
avoiding failure by failing students is a misguided approach and point to research evidence that
retaining students does not help their achievement, negatively affects self-esteem, and increase
their risk in dropping out (Stone & Engel, 2004). Being retained one time increases the risk of
dropping out by 40-50% and being two grades behind increases the risk by 90%. The idea of
giving a child another year to “catch-up” and develop needed skills sounds like a positive
alternatives. However, research shows that outcomes for kids who are retained generally are not
Years of research have shown that retention limited academic advantages to students.
According to the National Association of Psychologist (NASP), retention rates have increased
over the last years as pressure to end social promotion as a result for satisfactory performance on
the newly introduced standard-based assessments. This has become a new expectation for
In general, the convergence of research from the past century does not demonstrate
promoted peers. It was reported that 54 studies showed negative achievement effects when
9
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
retained children went on to the next grade level. Of nine studies that reported positive short-
term achievement effects, the benefits were shown to diminish over time and disappear in later
Longitudinal research also has failed to demonstrate an overall effect for grade retention
as an intervention. Short-term mathematics skills have been noted, but high absenteeism and
social-emotional ranking among retained children are a comparable group of promoted children.
Moreover, grade retention is linked to increased risk of dropping out of school to the extent that
grade retention has been “one of the most powerful predictor of school withdrawal” (Silberglitt,
2006).
problem. Research examining the academic achievement of students who have been retained
over time reveals that within two or three years, students’ achievement was not any better than
before retention, and their academic outcomes are poorer than their peers in the general
population who were not retained. Other studies also support this finding. Reports indicate that
retention can have a long lasting negative impact on youth. According to the literature, in most
cases, there is a hefty price to pay for students’ grade retention. This is, it costs most students
academically and affects society as well. For example, students who have been retained have
Retention was once believed to help students gain academic ground, improve maturity,
and build a stronger skill base. Now it is often considered more of a poison than a cure, and
researchers point to the growing body of research supporting this view (Alexander, 2002).
The achievement of retained students, after repeating a grade, still lags behind the
achievement of their peers, and retention also greatly increases the likelihood that a student will
10
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
drop out of school. Being held back twice makes dropping out a virtual certainty. Retention
Taylor, 2006).
Neither grade retention nor social promotion is a recipe for narrowing the achievement
gap or reducing dropouts. It is time for a policy that does not “wait for failure;” it is time for a
policy that does not react in easy that end up being more punitive and corrective. Although it is
unwise to suggest that students should never be retained, it is important for education personnel
to be familiar with the accumulated research on retention and its alternatives (Adelman and
Taylor, 2006).
As schools plan for alternatives to retention and social promotion, there are exciting
possibilities ahead. By keeping abreast of the research on remedial and preventive programs,
educators can offer students a variety of tested ideas that can build academic and social skills.
alternatives, more effective help can be offered to students nationwide. Over time, schools will
be able to employ a variety of methods for preventing failure and offering targeted help before
students become discouraged (Fager and Richen, 1999). There is no simple answer that meets the
needs of each student. However, by modeling a willing effort to help all children reach their
greatest potential, we also model our belief that all children can succeed at learning and at life.
When decisions are made to retain students in grade, the primary reason is to remediate
academic difficulties. However retention is not an effective educational strategy for long-tern
improvement. Any small positives that have been seen with the retained students usually have
sustained beyond a few years. In addition, retention has been associated with a variety of
11
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
negative effects, including academic failure, high dropout rates, and lower self-concept.
Repeating a grade has been found to be the third most imagined event in a child’s life, surpassed
The question must be asked, “What are the alternatives?” Early identification for prevention
have been found to be effective in assisting children with educational difficulties (Anderson,
There was a similar issue with retention on students in Chicago and a possible solution to
reduce the retention rate was to adopt a program for lagging students to receive intensive help in
their regular classes during the school year, and in after school and summer programs. Since
research has found mixed benefits for programs aimed at social promotion, the practice of
moving students to the next grade even though they have not achieved up to par.
Jennifer Slifer, an educator, suggests that another approach instead of retaining a student,
why don’t we promote struggling students with an individualized education plan to help them
catch up with their peers. Most struggling students do not meet requirements for special
education but they do need assistance (Slifer, 2005). I completely agree with this research
because if the students who are behind can better benefit from an individualized education plan
even if they are not special education but still need more assistance-why not? The plan would be
With the student’s best interest at heart, the new retention policies have led to better
efforts to work smarter, more strategically, more personally and in greater collaboration with
12
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
colleagues, students, and parents to prevent a child from falling. This will require doing
that we understand how accountability is influencing the ways that educators assist struggling
students. Decision making that considers only grade advancement issues (retention vs. social
to design and evaluate interventions for targeted groups of students, which, if done, will add to
educational outcomes for all students is for educators to use evidence-based instructional options
and implement these options with instructional effectiveness and regularity (Picklo &
Christenson, 2005).
instructional options. With the introduction of No Child Left Behind, many people fear that
retention practices and dropout rates will increase. Thus, it is important that we know whether
student accountability systems provide the academic support that struggling students need. In
future research, it may be particularly helpful to over sample schools that are known to socially
promote students. If a larger number of schools that socially promote students could be
obtained, then researchers may be able to examine the effects of retention practices on the
availability of instructional options inferentially. Further attempts to gather more data will
strengthen this study’s generalizability to the larger population as well (Picklo & Christenson,
2005).
13
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
I feel strongly about revising the retention policy and the different methods the schools can
use to assist all students learn and be successful. According to the research and what I have seen
in my classroom retention usually does not benefit the students but if the students could have
their own Individualized Education Plan (even if they are not special education) to suit their
needs more struggling students would be successful academically, socially, emotionally, and
psychologically. Retention is not the cure for struggling students but personalized assistance and
Research Question
What impacts does grade retention have on students academically, socially, and psychologically?
Theoretical Framework
Albert Bandura, Psychologist is best known for his Social Learning Theory which is a theory
that explains that people learn from one another through observation, imitation, and modeling.
The Social Learning Theory works well with my research due to the fact that children learn from
observing others. Often retained students have learned to model negative behavior that they have
seen before. Bandura also suggests that learning does not lead to a change in behavior. Here are
14
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
15
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
These diagrams show how the interaction between a person and their behavior is influenced
by a person’s thoughts and actions. It also shows how a person is influenced by their
environment/social influence.
As an educator I value and take pride in students leaning and achievements. It is concerning
when students struggle with the learning goals and objectives they are supposed to meet. I am a
white female teacher from a middle class background and data has shown that black male
students from a poverty stricken home struggle the most in school. These are the students that
have a higher retention percentage. This is very concerning to me and has influenced me to
research what is the outcome of student’s success after being retained. My methodology
consisted of interviews with students and parents who have been retained, personal narratives or
collages, and artifacts such as student work and test scores. The research was conducted in my
classroom as well as using the student’s permanent records. The process was conducted during
the 2013-2014 school year. I used the Wheel of Research choices to select the best methods to
Methodology
I conducted this research using 4 volunteer students attending a middle school located in
middle Georgia who have been retained. The participants consisted of 3 black male students and
1 black female student between grades 6th through 8th. I conducted my research and study during
the 2013-2014 school year. I used the Paradigm Constructivism approach throughout my
research. Constructivism is based on observation and scientific study. It is about how people
16
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
learn. People construct their own understanding and knowledge of the world, through
Participants
M.B. is a 6th grade black male student who is repeating the 6th grade. This is the second time
he has been retained. M.B made a collage about how he felt being retained. He used drawings
and pictures that reflected lack of concern for being retained. I also asked him questions from
the questionnaires. He stated, “I did feel a little embarrassed when I failed the 6th grade.” He
also stated, “School is a waste of time for me because I just can’t learn but I do like to talk to my
friends at school.”
J.D. is a 6th grade black male student who is repeating the 6th grade. This is the only grade
that he has had to repeat. He wrote me a paragraph explaining how he feels about repeating the
6th grade. He said, “I did get picked on and I was embarrassed by it.” He explains that he likes
school because he can see his friends but he doesn’t like to do any work. He stated, “I cannot get
motivated to do my work.”
C.W is a black male who is in the 7th grade. He was retained only in the 3rd grade. C.W.
wrote me a letter sharing his feelings about being retained in the 3th grade. He stated, “I am a
little embarrassed now but back when I failed I didn’t care.” He shared that he loves to see his
friends at school and has a hard time being motivated in completing his assignments because he
D.C is a black female student who was retained in the 5th grade. She wrote me a paragraph
explaining how she was embarrassed and sad when she failed the 5th grade. She had different
teachers her second time in the 5th grade but doesn’t feel she learned anything more than before.
17
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
She told me she likes school and has learned to pay attention in class and try her best on her
assignments.
Data Analysis
There are several themes to which these students have in common. There are several
characteristics that the repeaters share. The first theme is that they came to school to socialize.
They second theme the participants felt that school work was not that important. The third
common theme that the male students had in common was the lack of motivation. Either they
would complete their assignments half way or not complete their work at all.
Conclusion
Based on my data it appears that grade retention doesn’t help in academic growth and could
possibly hurt a child because they could be labeled as stupid which could hurt emotionally.
Why is retention a failed intervention? There are several explanation for the negative effects
• failure to address the risk factors associated with retention (short tern gains following
• retained children are subsequently average for grade, which is associated with
puberty
The question must be asked, “What are the alternatives?” Early identification for prevention
and intervention is essential, whenever a student is struggling. Early evaluation for learning
18
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
instruction. It is encouraging to note that there are many alternatives to help with grade
retention. Several school-based supports have been found to be effective in assisting children
with educational difficulties (Anderson, Jimerson, and Whipple, 2002). These include various
reading programs, summer school and more direct instruction. Some administrators have
suggested the transfer of students to alternative schools. Tutoring and after-school programs
have also been demonstrated to be beneficial. Other strategies include encouraging parents to
communicate and be involved regularly with the school. Programs have been developed to
their children well and can interact with the teacher, there are many things that parents can do to
help. It is important for parents, teachers, and other educational professionals to work together.
For instance, parents may emphasize the importance of education and provide a designated space
at home for completing assignments. Parental monitoring of activities may be valuable in helping
students focus on their schoolwork. Teachers and parents can be collaborative allies in educating
Recommendations
How can school leaders halt runaway retention? There are four strategies recommended
(Black, 2004):
1. Teach teachers how to instruct all students according to the ways they learn.
3. Give struggling students support and services as soon as they are needed.
4. Use student assessment to monitor and adjust teaching content and strategies.
19
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
With the student’s best interest at heart, the new retention policies have lead to better
efforts to work smarter, more strategically, more personally and in greater collaboration with
colleagues, students, and parents to prevent a child from falling. This will require doing
Preschool intervention programs are the first steps in possibly solving the retention
problem. These programs strengthen basic skills necessary for subsequent academic success.
"Head Start” is an example of early childhood intervention programs that provide comprehensive
educational and family support services to children from economically disadvantaged families to
increase school readiness. By enhancing skills for academic success through preschool
Educators need to vary instructional skills. Offering children different ways of learning
is critical in addressing unique learning styles and needs. Individualized instruction, mixed age
classes, creative grouping, reduced class size, scheduling modifications, and the use of volunteer
aides are just a few strategies that can provide instructional variety.
The relationship between a student and a counselor, teacher, or other mentor can offer the
individualized attention many students need to succeed. Together they can design a personal
education plan that will help the student set learning goals, break tasks down into manageable
Clearly, grade retention is not a solution to the problem of ensuring all students have an equal
opportunity to succeed at school. What is needed are policies and practices that stress addressing
barriers to learning and teaching as an essential and high level focus in every school
improvement planning guide. The intent must be to develop a comprehensive, multifaceted, and
20
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
cohesive approach. This, of course, represents a major systemic change and requires shifts in
prevailing policy, new frameworks for practice, sufficient resources to develop an effective
structural foundation, and ongoing capacity building for such changes (Adelman & Taylor,
2006).
21
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
Reference
Adelman, H, & Taylor, L (2006). Grade retention: what's the prevailing policy and what needs to
be done?. Center for Mental Health in Schools, Retrieved June 15, 2007, from
http://smhp.psych.ucla.edu.
retention in the primary school grades. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Anderson, G, Jimerson, ., & Whipple A (2002). Grade retention: achievement and mental
Bielick, S, & Chapman, C (2003). Trends in use of school choice. National Center for Education
Black, S (2004).Second time around. American School Board Journal. 191, 40-42
Brulle, A (2005).What can you say when research and policy collide?. Phi Delta Kappan. 86,
433-437.
Fager, J, & Richen, R (1999). When students don’t succeed: shedding light on grade retention.
Falk, Beverly, Blumenreich, M. The Power of Question: A Guide to Teacher and Student
Frey, N (2005). Retention, social promotion, and academic redshirting: what do we know and
Goldberg, M (2005).Losing students to high-stakes testing. Phi Delta Kappan. 86, 389-395.
22
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
Goodman, B (2004). When pass is a four letter word. Psychology Today, 37, Retrieved June 30,
Hill, J, & Weiss, C (2005). Grade retention: a solution for turning failure into success. Institute of
Social and Economic Research and Policy, Retrieved July1, 2007, from
http://www.iserp.columbia.edu/research/seed_grants/grade_retention.html.
Jimerson, S (2001). A synthesis of grade retention research: looking backward and moving
Jimerson, S, & Kaufman, M (2003). Reading, writing, and retention: a primer on grade retention
Leckrone, M, & Griffith, B (2006). Retention realities and educational standards. Children &
bandura.html
Picklo, D, and Christenson, S (2005). Alternatives to retention and social promotion: the
availability of instructional options. Remedial & Special Education, 26, Retrieved July 1,
2007,
fromhttp://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/proedcw/rase/2005/00000026/00000005/art
0000
Savin-Baden, Maggie, Major, C. Qualitative Research: The Essential Guide to Theory and
Schwab, C (2004). Grade retention: the great debate. Retrieved Oct.4, 2006,
http://www.schwablearning.org/print_resourses.asp?type=article&r=
315&popref=http%3.
23
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
Silberglitt, B (2006). Does the timing of grade retention make a difference? examining the
effects of early versus later retention. Retrieved June 11 2007, from EBSCO Host
Slifer, J (2005).Is retention better than social promotion?. NEA Today. 23, 48.
Stone, S, & Engel, M (2007). Same old, same old? students' experiences of grade retention under
ending social promotion. American Journal of Education, 113, Retrieved July 9, 2007,
from
http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/AJE/journal/issues/v113n4/113404/brief/113404.abstra
ct.html.
Student Effort and Educational Progress. National Center for Educational Statistics, 2006. 25,
http://nces.ed.gov/programs/coe/2006/section3/indictor25.asp
Tyre, P (2006). The new first grade: too much too soon kids as young as 6 are tested, and tested
again, to ensure they’re making sufficient progress. Retrieved Sept. 8, 2006, from
http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=1123187521&sid=1&Fmt=3&clientld=30242&RQ
T=309&VName=PQD.
Witmer, M (2004). Elementary teachers' belief and knowledge about grade retention: how do we
know what they know. Retrieved June 11, 2007, from EBSCO Host Research Databases
24
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
Appendix
25
The Effects of Grade on Retention Student Achievement
Appendix
a. Grades
b. Test scores
d. Parent decision
Yes or No or sometimes
Yes or No
7. Did you have the same teacher or a different teacher after you were retained?
26