Abstract

Academic resilience refers to students’ capacity to perform highly despite a disadvantaged background. Although most studies using international large-scale assessment (ILSA) data defined academic resilience with two criteria, student background and achievement, their conceptualizations and operationalizations varied substantially. In a systematic review, we identified 20 ILSA studies applying different criteria, different approaches to setting thresholds (the same fixed ones across countries or relative country-specific ones), and different threshold levels. Our study on the validity of these differences and how they affected the composition of academically resilient students revealed that the classification depended heavily on the threshold applied. When a fixed background threshold was applied, the classification was likely to be affected by the developmental state of a country. This could result in an overestimation of the proportions of academically resilient students in some countries while an underestimation in others. Furthermore, compared to the application of a social or economic capital indication, applying a cultural capital indicator may lead to lower shares of disadvantaged students classified as academically resilient. The composition of academically resilient students varied significantly by gender and language depending on which indicator of human capital or which thresholds were applied reflecting underlying societal characteristics. Conclusions drawn from such different results depending on the specific conceptualizations and operationalizations would vary greatly. Finally, our study utilizing PISA 2015 data from three countries representing diverse cultures and performance levels revealed that a stronger sense of belonging to a school significantly increased the chances to be classified as academically resilient in Peru, but not in Norway or Hong Kong. In contrast, absence from school was significantly associated with academic resilience in Norway and Hong Kong, but not in Peru.

Highlights

  • Resilience refers to successful adaption to situations despite risks that put someone at a disadvantage or adversity (Ungar 2005; Windle et al 2011)

  • Studies on academic resilience typically employ some operationalization of socioeconomic status (SES) as an indicator of students’ risk or adversity, and they use some type of educational outcome as an indicator of positive adaptation (Tudor and Spray 2017)

  • By implication, when relative thresholds for students’ background indicators were applied, one out of three students in each country were classified as a disadvantaged student

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Summary

Introduction

Resilience refers to successful adaption to situations despite risks that put someone at a disadvantage or adversity (Ungar 2005; Windle et al 2011). In line with this general definition, academic resilience refers to the capacity of students to perform well in Educational Assessment, Evaluation and Accountability (2021) 33:169–202 school despite a disadvantaged background (OECD 2011) or more precisely the heightened likelihood of success in school despite environmental adversities brought about by early traits, conditions, and experiences (Wang et al 1994). Thresholds are usually used to combine continuous SES and outcome measures into a binary variable that indicates academic resilience or non-resilience

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