Modifying Harmful Beliefs About Academic Setbacks: An Attribution Retraining Intervention for African-American Middle School Students at Risk for Academic Failure

Authors

  • Erin Cue Santa Monica College Author
  • April Taylor California State University, Northridge Author

Abstract

Ongoing reports of the achievement gap suggest the need for effective interventions that can increase motivation and academic outcomes for African-American youth. This study describes a 3-week evidence-based attribution retraining intervention designed to alter harmful beliefs associated with academic failure among African-American middle school students. Guided by attribution theory, the lessons in the intervention were designed to help students modify maladaptive attributions for academic failure and understand that positive academic outcomes could be obtained through increased preparation and effort. Participants included 64 6th graders identified as low achieving who were randomly assigned to either a treatment or wait-list control group. Results showed significant increases in adaptive attributions and decreases in maladaptive attributions for the treatment group compared to the control group. Implications for policy and practice are discussed.

Author Biographies

  • Erin Cue, Santa Monica College
    NULL
  • April Taylor, California State University, Northridge
    NULL

Published

2020-09-23

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Modifying Harmful Beliefs About Academic Setbacks: An Attribution Retraining Intervention for African-American Middle School Students at Risk for Academic Failure. (2020). International Research in Economics and Finance. https://journal.chapjulypress.org/index.php/iref/article/view/1052