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www.learning-journal.com
The International
JOURNALof LEARNING
Volume 16
Stereotype Threats and Math Test Performance
Loredana Ruxandra Gherasim and Nicoleta Laura Popa
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THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LEARNINGhttp://www.Learning-Journal.com
First published in 2009 in Champaign, Illinois, USA by Common Ground Publishing LLCwww.CommonGroundPublishing.com.
© 2009 (individual papers), the author(s)© 2009 (selection and editorial matter) Common Ground
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ISSN: 1447-9494Publisher Site: http://www.Learning-Journal.com
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Stereotype Threats and Math Test Performance
Loredana Ruxandra Gherasim, Alexandru Ioan Cuza University,
RomaniaNicoleta Laura Popa, Alexandru Ioan Cuza University, Romania
Abstract: Stereotyping can negatively affect tests performance, along with other factors as cognitive
resources, expectancies and perception on elds’ importance. Some studies suggest that effects of
stereotyping threats on tests performance can be decreased through improved attention and memory
capacities, or positivechanges in social identity. The study aimed to analyse the mediating effect of
ability level and contextual factors on stereotyping threats in solving math tests. A 2 (suggested ability
level: low/high) X 2 (contextual factors: present/absent) X 2 (gender: male/female) design had been
used. The sample included 231 eighthgrade students, aged 13 to 15, 110 boys and 121 girls. We used
a teacher-made math test, with items similar to national math tests. Contextual factors inuenced math
test performance, namely their presence improved the performance e. Study results do not support an
interaction effect of ability level and gender on math test performance. However, boys’ math perform-
ance increased when they could use contextual factors in explaining their performance, while girls’
performances are not signicantly inuenced in the same experimental conditions. Gender had no
signicant effect on math test performance. We assume that the math test has been perceived as very
important - a simulation for the nal national math exam.
Keywords: Stereotype Threats, Gender, Contextual Factors, Ability Level, Math Performance
Introduction
DESPITE THE LARGE amount of research reporting differences between malesand females in math performance and in attitude towards math there are still gaps
in appropriately explaining this phenomenon (Gallagher & Kaufman, 2005). Some
early research on this issue attributes boys’ higher math performance to superior
math ability, specically in solving spatial tasks (e.g. Benbow & Stanley, 1980). Later
studies challenge this conclusion, stating that differences in math performance are rooted in
stereotypic role beliefs, frequently communicated to children by adults. Teachers’ and parents’
beliefs expressed in their relations with children eventually inuence boys’ and girls’ math
self-efcacy, identication with math, expectations, condence and attitudes toward math
(e.g. Eccles & Jacobs, 1986; Eccles et al., 1990). These variables appear to be clearly related
to math performance (Muzzatti & Agnoli, 2007), while emergence, development and complexcausality of gender differences in this specic area are still to be explained.
Gender Differences on Standardized Math Tests
Gender differences in math performance have been largely documented. Women are under-
represented in math, science and related elds at higher education level, even if they are
capable to perform well, and this particular situation is tentatively explained through higher
The International Journal of Learning
Volume 16, 2009, http://www.Learning-Journal.com, ISSN 1447-9494
© Common Ground, LoredanaRuxandra Gherasim, NicoletaLaura Popa, All Rights Reserved, Permissions:[email protected]
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dropout percentages than men (Ben-Zeev, Fein, & Inzlicht, 2005; Keller & Dauenheimer,
2003). Although obvious in higher education, this difference favoring men is not identied
until middle and/or high school, as suggested by a rather large body of research and meta-
analysis. Apparently, there are no signicant gender differences in the understanding of
mathematical concepts per se and, moreover, gender differences favoring males seem to be
more evident in problem solving, whereas females (especially in elementary school) outper-
form males in computation/arithmetic (Hyde, Fennema & Lamon, 1990; Lummis &
Stevenson, 1990). Item difculty or item format seems to have a mediating effect on men
and women math performance. Thus, the male advantage is minimal on easy test items, but
grows as items become more difcult, or as items’ solving implies higher spatial aptitude
(Spencer, Steele, & Quinn, 1999; Huguet & Régner, 2007).
A wide range of stereotypes have also been tested in the attempt to explain gender differ-
ences in math performance, from women’s supposed lack of ability in math and science
domains (Ben-Zeev, Fein, & Inzlicht, 2005; O’Brien & Crandall, 2003). Negative gender
stereotyping seems to largely affect female math performance, as they grow older (Brown& Josephs, 1999; Keller & Dauenheimer, 2003; Schmader & Johns, 2003).
Stereotype Threat as an Explanation of Gender Differences
The theory of stereotype threat states that stereotypes concerning the ability of groups can
have an adverse impact on test performance of members of such groups (Steele, 1997; Steele
& Aronson, 1995). Stereotype threat refers to the discomfort that stereotyped targets feel
when they are at risk of fullling the expectation of inferiority contained in a stereotype or
a reputation. According to Steele (1997) this discomfort arises whenever group members
run the risk of substantiating a stereotype that they lack intellectual ability. Researchers (e.g.
Steele, 1997; Spencer, Steele, & Quinn, 1999) asserts that people being members of a group
that can be negatively stereotyped in a social situation, carry an extra burden: their perform-
ance might be interpreted in terms of the stereotype; their performance tends to be consistent
with the stereotype, and this behavior serves to conrm the stereotype in the eyes of the be-
holders or for the members of the outgroups. Stereotype threat has proven to be a robust
phenomenon, applying to diverse groups, including women, ethnic minorities, and members
of groups with low socioeconomic and social status (Aronson et al., 1999; Quinn & Spencer,
2001; Spencer, Steele, & Quinn, 1999; Steele & Aronson, 1995).
Individuals exposed to negative stereotypes (in real settings or through experimental ma-
nipulations) also fail to perform according to their actual level or ability in testing situation.
Different explanations for have been provided for this effect. According to Nguyen & Ryan(2008) when stereotyped group members take standardized ability tests, their performance
may be partially undermined when they encounter cues of a salient negative stereotype in
the testing environment; their performance may be affected equally by situational or contex-
tual factors, which go beyond factors established to be inuential, as poverty, parental style,
socialization etc. Keller (2007) sustains that negative stereotypes undermine subjects’ per-
formance by interfering pressure of being judged or seen as conrming the negative expect-
ancy. Several studies found that rendering the expectations irrelevant to the testing situation
eliminated performance pressure and, in turn, underperformance (Cadinu et al., 2003; Steele,
Spencer & Aronson, 2002). To summarize, there is serious evidence supporting the assump-
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tion that negative stereotype can elicit a threat experience, and subsequently result in poorer
performance of targeted test takers.
Stereotype threat has been manipulated by researchers in experimental settings through
several strategies: participants may be asked to note biographical information of a demo-
graphic questionnaire either prior or after taking the test; they may be introduced into the
testing the situation as diagnosing their ability in certain domains, or their intelligence by
specications introduced via instructional set; alternatively, individuals may be targeted by
allegations of inferiority, and they may be informed that members of the outgroup, outper-
forms the participants’ ingroup (e.g. Cadinu et al, 2003; Abrams, Eller & Bryant, 2006;
Grimm et al., 2009).
Although, the stereotype model is not a general ability theory, it provides an explanation
for situational underperformance in the presence of a stereotype. Research suggests that the
stereotype threat model accounts for at least part of female underperformance in mathematics
tests. Recent work (e.g. Huguet & Régner, 2007; Cadinu et al., 2005) supports this idea:
women performing math problems after being told that gender differences in math do existand report having more negative math-related thoughts than women who did not receive this
information. Researchers have also shown, that women may perform signicantly worse on
a math test when they are told that it measures their abilities (thus making their intellectual
stigma relevant) than when told that it is nondiagnostic of ability (Brown & Day, 2006;
Brown & Josephs, 1999; Spencer, Steele, & Quinn, 1999). Stereotype threat can inuence
behavior even in anticipation of the performance situation - priming stereotype threat can
reduce performance expectancies (Stangor, Carr, & Kiang, 1998). On the other hand, women
who are confronted with negative stereotypes about their group’s math ability may develop
a fear that their own behaviors may substantiate the negative stereotypes about women’s
math abilities in the eyes of others and this situational predicament can interfere with intel-
lectual performance and lead female students to perform below their potential (Aronson et
al., 1999; Inzlicht & Ben-Zeev, 2003).
As previously mentioned, task difculty may interfere with the effect of stereotype threat.
Women under stereotype threat performed better on an easy math test and worse on a difcult
math test than women who were not exposed to stereotype threat (O’Brien & Crandall; 2003;
Aronson et al., 1999). However, it seems that a test need not be difcult for stereotype threat
to occur: simply being in a situation where one can conrm a negative stereotype about
one’s group could be enough to cause this self-evaluative threat (Spencer, Steele, & Quinn,
1999). Although it is certainly possible that threat is attenuated once people learn that the
task they are to perform is easy, this knowledge may not completely negate the early effects
of the threat. Stereotype threat theory suggests that members of a stigmatized social groupare most likely to be threatened by a situational stereotype threat cue when a test is challenging
(O’Brien & Crandall, 2003). However, the empirical evidence for the moderating effects of
test difculty is mixed (Nguyen & Ryan, 2008). Contradictory research outcomes do not
undermine the importance of studying this moderator, and of understanding the potential
generalizability of stereotype threat effects from laboratory to real testing contexts.
The theory of stereotype threat states that stereotypes concerning the ability of groups can
have an adverse impact on test performance of members of such groups, particularly in those
who identify strongly with the domain of interest (Steele, 1997). As a consequence, a key
role is attributed to domain identication in stereotype threat theory. Although researchers
seem to agree on stronger effects of stereotype threat in the case of high level of domain
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identication (such as women with special interest or ability in the eld of mathematics),
there are few studies indicating this afrmation (e.g. Aronson et al., 1999; Smith & White,
2001; Cadinu et al., 2003; Keller & Dauenheimer, 2003).
An additional mediator of stereotype threat’s effect on female math performance is the
group composition. Research has found that people are quite sensitive to subtle variations
in the group composition of a room, which often operates to the detriment of those in the
minority; minority situations may be particularly problematic to females because they operate
under the burden of negative stereotypes (e.g. Inzlicht & Ben-Zeev, 2003; Stangor, Carr, &
Kiang, 1998). In math and science classrooms, females have to contend with stereotypes
alleging inferiority to males (Quinn & Spencer, 2001; Spencer, Steele, & Quinn, 1999).
Women anticipating gender solo status during an upcoming group task reported lower ex-
pectations for their performance, greater expectations of being gender stereotyped, and ex-
pressed the desire to change the gender composition of their group more than men (Inzlicht
& Ben-Zeev, 2003; Huguet & Régner, 2007).
Stereotype Threat, Age and Gender
Although less attention has been placed on stereotype threats effects in childhood, there is
also evidence that negative stereotypes operates in children. Children become aware of their
gender identity at a very young age, and they also believe, as early as rst grade, that boys
are better than girls in math-related areas (Lummis & Stevenson, 1990; Eccles et al., 1993;
Wigeld et al., 1997). Their belief is not necessarily erroneous, as differences favoring boys
on standardized math tests have sometimes been found, even among math-talented children
(Mills, Ablard, & Stumpf, 1993; Robinson et al., 1996). The fact that boys’ advantage ex-
presses itself more clearly when highly selective samples are retained is consistent with
stereotype threat theory. Evidence of stereotype threat in girls from the lower and upper
elementary school grades, and middle school facing a math test was found by Ambady et
al. (2001). Their study found stereotype threat effects (due to gender activation) in younger
and older girls (5- to 7-year-olds, 11- to 13-year-olds), but not in intermediate-age girls (8
to 10-year-olds).
A study conducted by Muzzatti and Agnoli (2007) on children showed that, in general,
boys state more strongly than do girls that males are better than females in mathematics,
whereas girls progressively shift their opinion from ingroup favoritism (in second grade) to
more stereotypical positions. In addition, authors reported a shift in both boys’ and girls’
beliefs to a more egalitarian perspective in early adolescence. These patterns of personal
gender stereotyping are reinforced by data about gender stereotyping of mathematics attributedto peers that are almost identical to personal views. Studies on young women and adolescent
girls (Keller, 2002; Keller & Dauenheimer, 2003; Huguet & Régner, 2007) indicated that
they are inuenced by stereotype threat in classroom settings, as in laboratory experiments.
However, in the stereotype threat (vs. control) condition, researchers used an experimental
manipulation which is rather different than teachers’ messages in the classroom, and therefore
results are hardly transferable in real life situations. A study on sixth to seventh grade French
students (ages 10–12) conducted by Huguet & Régner (2007) provide evidence of the impact
of stereotype threat on schoolgirls in quasi-ordinary classroom circumstances: both genders
are represented and the negative gender stereotype is both implicitly and indirectly (rather
than explicitly and directly) activated. Authors identied the presence of the stereotype threat
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effect in both experiments, concluding that girls’ performance (on a broader set of intellec-
tual tasks rather than math tests) was lower in both experimental situations.
The Present StudyThe study reported in the present article aimed to evaluate stereotype threat effects among
middle-school students in Romanian mixed-gender classroom settings, and researchers ex-
pected gender differences in math test performance (girls’ underachievement), and differences
between students in the self-handicapping condition versus those in the control condition.
The stereotype threat was indirectly/implicitly manipulated in the study, in students’ natural
settings (classrooms). The stereotype threat was activated by emphasizing the diagnostic
value of the math test for their high/low domain ability. As showed in previous research,
stereotype threat depress scores on various ability measures in laboratory settings, but fewer
studies address the same effect in test settings high in ecological validity (Wicherts, Dolan
& Hessen, 2005; Huguet & Régner, 2007), and subtle threat cues predict more variations intest scores than explicit manipulation of the stereotype threat condition (Walton & Cohen,
2003; Nguyen & Ryan, 2008). Additionally, self-handicapping was manipulated in the ex-
periment: the experimental group has been provided an external handicap. It was predicted
that the presence of an external handicap (lack of adequate practice) would result in an in-
crease in upward counterfactual thinking, specically about the handicap itself. According
to some recent research ndings, the lack of adequate practice should provide a salient
reason for poor performance, a viable excuse for any subsequent poor performance, and
thus, produces better performance, especially among male subjects (Brown & Josephs, 1999;
McCrea, 2008; Hirt, McCrea & Boris, 2003).
Method
Participants and Design
Two hundreds thirty one eighth-grade students (from two public lower secondary schools
in Romania, county of Iasi) participated in the study (110 boys and 121 girls), aged between
13 and 15 years. No information regarding families’ socioeconomic status or education was
collected. Male and female participants were randomly assigned in a 2 (suggested ability
level: low vs. high) x 2 (contextual factors: external handicap present vs. absent) experimental
design, without previous knowledge on their level of math achievement.
Materials
Test items are similar to the national math test taken by lower secondary school students in
seventh and eight-grade. Two secondary school math teachers have been involved in
designing the test, based on Romanian National Curriculum and evaluation standards. The
resulted math test includes two types of items: nine ll-in items (students receive stem
statements that includes one blank for the result of a math exercise) and three problem-
solving items, involving 2-4 math reasoning and computation tasks. Half of the items include
arithmetic computation, while the other half is represented by geometry problems. Examples
of items are included in the table bellow (Table 1).
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Table 1: Examples of Items
ExampleType of Item
1. Consider the equation 2x + 3y – 8 = 0. If x = 1, then y = ... .
2. If x + 2
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participants were informed by the experimenter that they had to start the test without the
opportunity to practice, and that this will be noted on their response forms. This excuse was
designed to reduce concerns related to assessment among participants, and thus to improve
test performance. Afterwards, participants were given the form with the arithmetic problems.
The other half of the sample received only the math test, without any information about
prior practice (control condition). When participants have nished the test, they were asked
to indicate their expected score on test, and to evaluate their performance on a scale ranging
from 1 (very low) to 6 (very good). After completing the scale participants were debriefed,
thanked and dismissed.
Results
A 2 (contextual factor) x 2 (suggested ability level) x 2 (participants’ gender) analysis of
variance (Anova) on math test performance revealed a signicant effect of contextual factor,
F(1,230)=6.35, p=.012, η2
=.028. In the external handicap condition, participants (M=18.37,SD=.90) performed better than in the control condition (M=15.16, SD=.89). The main effect
of ability level and gender was nonsignicant for this measure (F.05). Similarly, no
signicant interaction effects have been found for math test performance (F.05). Be-
sides, there is no interaction effect between gender and contextual factor on math test per-
formance, F(1,230)=2.03, p>.05; boys in the external handicap condition obtained better
test performance (M=19.40, SD=1.30) than boys in the no handicap condition (M=14.36,
SD=1.30), t(113)=2.65, p
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Discussions
Results of the present study indicated that stereotype threat did not affect eight graders’ math
performances; participants obtained comparable test scores in both experimental conditions,
even if students expected better grades in high ability condition than in low ability condition.Additionally, no signicant differences have been computed for the math test scores among
male and female participants in high/low ability conditions.
The lack of signicant inuence of the stereotype threat may be explained by the subtle,
indirect manipulation operated in natural settings, which may have less impact on students’
math performance, although previous studies reported decreased female participants’ per-
formance in similar manipulated conditions, but in laboratory setting (Steele & Aronson,
1995; Muzzatti & Agnoli, 2007). Some studies reviewed in the theoretical background
(Nguyen & Ryan, 2008; Walton & Cohen, 2003) pointed that subtle manipulation has stronger
effects on performance, in groups affected by the stereotype threat activation. However, effects
of stereotype threats have not been systematically studied in quasi-natural settings, and re-
search in real-life conditions produced contradictory outcomes. Some of the studies reported
effects of stereotype threats on young women and adolescent girls’ math performance (Keller,
2002; Keller & Dauenheimer, 2003), and some obtained no signicant effects (Huguet &
Régner, 2007; Muzzatti & Agnoli, 2007).
A different explanation for present results may reside in participants’ age. Although most
of the studies do not prove that negative stereotype operates in children, several studies
question this conclusion, founding stereotype threat effects in younger and older girls, but
not in intermediate-age girls (Ambady et al., 2001), while complementary research suggest
that in early adolescence boys and girls state that the two genders are equally good in math-
ematics (Muzzatti & Agnoli, 2007).
Present ndings suggest that this phenomenon is even more problematic than once assumed.They are in line with Huguet & Régner’s (2007) study previously discussed in this article,
although the age of the female participants is slightly higher in the present experiment (14
to 15). A parallel explanation may rest on social desirability that could induce students to
answer an explicit question with a socially acceptable answer. It is also possible that the
gender stereotype is internalized at this age and that, consequently, it exercises its effects in
the way that stereotype threat does. In other words, participants are not aware of (or deny)
the stereotype, but it is present implicitly. Obviously, this explanation may be that this cor-
rectly reects the belief that the two genders are equally capable in mathematics.
The lack of gender differences on math test may also be explained in relation with item
difculty and group composition. Previous studies suggest that stereotype threat effect is
powerful for difcult items (e.g. Spencer, Steele, & Quinn, 1999; O’Brien & Crandall, 2003),
while most of the items included in the test applied within the present study are of low and
average difculty. Mixed-gender settings may also reduce the stereotype threat effects on
female participants, as previously proved (Inzlicht & Ben-Zeev, 2003; Huguet & Régner,
2007), although our research choice enhances the ecological validity of past laboratory
ndings and provides incentive for further investigation in the schools.
Research results suggest negative stereotype effects only for male participants, similar to
ndings illustrating boys’ tendency to use more intensively external handicaps for reducing
stereotype threat inuence (Brown & Josephs, 1999; McCrea, 2008). Some explanations
could be that women may be less threatened by task failure, or that men are less likely to
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ascribe negative motivations to individuals who engage in self-handicapping behavior,
whereas women have little respect for individuals who lack motivation and fail to put forth
effort in important performance settings (Hirt, McCrea & Boris, 2003; McCrea, 2008).
Manipulation of an external handicap affect math test performance only in low ability
condition, but had no signicant impact in high ability condition. Participants in low ability
condition could have experienced a stronger stereotype threat before taking the test and thus,
the possibility of using the excuse contributed to better math performance than those obtained
by children in the control condition. The lack of adequate practice could provide a salient
reason for poor performance, and also could be self-protective, because a poor performance
could be attributed to the external factor and not one’s ability (Grimm et al, 2009; Brown &
Josephs, 1999; McCrea, 2008).
Further research in similar experimental conditions would be advisable, for providing
more detailed insights into the stereotype threat effects on both male and female participants,
and a longitudinal research design may uncover critical stages/ages in experiencing the
phenomenon and using external handicaps for decreasing its inuence. There is also a needfor more studies in natural settings, for assessing the scope of the phenomenon and its per-
vasive outcomes in students taking high importance tests/evaluations, which may decide
their future educational tracks.
References
Abrams, D., Eller, A., Bryant, J. (2006). An Age Apart: The Effects of Intergenerational Contact and
Stereotype Threat on Performance and Intergroup Bias. Psychology and Aging , 21 (4),
691–702.
Ambady, N., Shih, M., Kim, A., Pittinsky, T. L. (2001). Stereotype susceptibility in children: Effects
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About the Authors
Dr. Loredana Ruxandra Gherasim
Her teaching and research interests include psychological research methodology, social and
educational psychology. She published several articles in national and international peer-
reviewed journals and one book.
Dr. Nicoleta Laura Popa
Nicoleta L. Popa is a lecturer at the Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, “Alex-
andru Ioan Cuza” University of Iasi, Romania. Her teaching and research interests include
educational research methodology, intercultural education and gifted education. She published
several articles in national and international peer-reviewed journals and two books (one co-
authored).
LOREDANA RUXANDRA GHERASIM, NICOLETA LAURA POPA
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EDITORSMary Kalantzis, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA.Bill Cope, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA.
EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARDMichael Apple, University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA.David Barton, Lancaster University, Milton Keynes, UK.Mario Bello, University of Science, Cuba.Manuela du Bois-Reymond, Universiteit Leiden, Leiden, The Netherlands.Robert Devillar , Kennesaw State University, Kennesaw, USA.
Daniel Madrid Fernandez, University of Granada, Spain.Ruth Finnegan, Open University, Milton Keynes, UK.James Paul Gee, University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA.Juana M. Sancho Gil, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.Kris Gutierrez, University of California, Los Angeles, USA.Anne Hickling-Hudson, Queensland University of Technology, Kelvin Grove, Australia.Roz Ivanic, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK.Paul James, RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia.Carey Jewitt, Institute of Education, University of London, London, UK.Andeas Kazamias, University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA.Peter Kell, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia.Michele Knobel, Montclair State University, Montclair, USA.Gunther Kress, Institute of Education, University of London, London, UK.Colin Lankshear , James Cook University, Cairns, Australia.Kimberly Lawless, University of Illinois, Chicago, USA.Sarah Michaels, Clark University, Worcester, USA.Jeffrey Mok, Miyazaki International College, Miyazaki, Japan.Denise Newfield, University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.Ernest O’Neil, Ministry of Education, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.José-Luis Ortega, University of Granada, Granada, Spain.Francisco Fernandez Palomares, University of Granada, Granada, Spain.Ambigapathy Pandian, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Penang, Malaysia.Miguel A. Pereyra, University of Granada, Granada, Spain.Scott Poynting, Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester, UK.Angela Samuels, Montego Bay Community College, Montego Bay, Jamaica.
Michel Singh, University of Western Sydney, Sydney, Australia.Helen Smith, RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia.Richard Sohmer , Clark University, Worcester, USA.Brian Street, University of London, London, UK.Giorgos Tsiakalos, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece.Salim Vally, University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South AfricaGella Varnava-Skoura, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece.Cecile Walden, Sam Sharpe Teachers College, Montego Bay, Jamaica.Nicola Yelland, Victoria University, Melbourne, Australia.Wang Yingjie, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China.Zhou Zuoyu, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China.
Please visit the Journal website at http://www.Learning-Journal.com for further information about the Journal or to subscribe.
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