| Literature DB >> 30189839 |
Katharina Rathmann1,2, Ludwig Bilz3, Klaus Hurrelmann4, Wieland Kiess5,6, Matthias Richter7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Features of schools and classes are closely related to students´ health and wellbeing. However, class composition (e.g. in terms of school performance) has rarely been examined in relation to students´ health and wellbeing. This study focuses on the so called Big-Fish-Little-Pond-Effect (BFLPE), by investigating whether the level of high-performing students in classroom is negatively associated with psychosomatic complaints of students who perceive themselves as poor performers.Entities:
Keywords: BFLPE; HBSC; Health complaints; Multilevel analysis; Reference group effects; School performance
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30189839 PMCID: PMC6128006 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-5977-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1The “Big-Fish-Little-Pond-Effect” (BFLPE) [12]. Modified according to Köller [12]; the size of the fishes represent students’ level of self-concept. Graphics are obtained from http://www.clipartbest.com/clipart-pT5okjabc. The present study used students´ self-reported perceived school performance as data on objective measures of school performance was not available. Thus, the figure only demonstrates the original effect of the Big-Fish-Little-Pond-hypothesis according to previous studies, using test scores or other objective measures of school performance
Descriptive results, HBSC Germany 2013/2014 (n = 5226)
| 2+ psychosomatic health complaints | < 1 psychosomatic health complaints | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| % (n) | % (n) | % (n) | |
| Gender | |||
| Boys | 17.04 (452) | 82.96 (2200) | 50.75 (2652) |
| Girls | 31.35 (807) | 68.65 (1767) | 49.25 (2574) |
| Age (m = 13.56, SD = 1.64) | |||
| < Mean age (10.50–13.56 years) | 19.62 (536) | 80.38 (2196) | 52.28 (2732) |
| > Mean age (13.57–16.33 years) | 28.99 (723) | 71.01 (1771) | 47.72 (2494) |
| Migration background | |||
| No migration background | 22.05 (839) | 77.95 (2966) | 72.81 (3805) |
| One-sided | 30.09 (161) | 69.91 (374) | 10.24 (535) |
| Two-sided | 29.23 (259) | 70.77 (627) | 16.95 (886) |
| Family affluence | |||
| High | 22.87 (496) | 77.13 (1673) | 41.50 (2169) |
| Medium | 23.95 (551) | 76.05 (1750) | 44.03 (2301) |
| Low | 28.04 (212) | 71.96 (544) | 14.47 (756) |
| School type | |||
| High track (“Gymnasium”) | 21.56 (408) | 78.44 (1484) | 36.20 (1892) |
| Other school types | 25.52 (851) | 74.48 (75.91) | 63.80 (3.334) |
| Perceived school performance (PSP) | |||
| Very good/good | 18.95 (497) | 81.05 (2125) | 50.17 (2622) |
| Average/below average | 29.26 (762) | 70.74 (1842) | 49.83 (2604) |
| Proportion of students reporting very good/good PSP in class | |||
| > 50% of students with very good/good PSP | 21.04 (504) | 78.96 (1892) | 45.85 (2396) |
| < 51% of students with very good/good PSP | 26.68 (755) | 73.32 (2075) | 54.15 (2830) |
| Total | 24.09 (1259) | 75.91 (3967) | 100 (5226) |
PSP Perceived School Performance
Fig. 2Prevalence of health complaints between classes (> 50% and < 50% of students with very good/good PSP)
Logistic multilevel results for health complaints
| Model 1: Empty model | Model 2: Individual variables | Model 3: Model 2 + school performance at class-level | Model 4: Cross-level interaction | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | |
| Individual variables | ||||
| Intercept | 0.29*** (0.27–0.33) | 0.11*** (0.09–0.14) | 0.11*** (0.09–0.14) | 0.11*** (0.09–0.14) |
| Gender (Ref.: Boys) | ||||
| Girls | 2.39*** (2.08–2.75) | 2.39*** (2.08–2.75) | 2.39*** (2.08–2.75) | |
| Age (centered) | 1.16*** (1.11–1.22) | 1.17*** (1.11–1.23) | 1.16** (1.10–1.22) | |
| Individual PSP (Ref.: very good/good) average/below average | 1.74*** (1.52–2.00) | 1.75*** (1.51–2.03) | 1.75*** (1.52–2.03) | |
| Family affluence (Ref.: high) | ||||
| medium | 0.96 | 0.96 | 0.96 | |
| low | 1.09 | 1.09 | 1.09 | |
| Migration background (Ref.: no) | ||||
| One-sided | 1.44*** (1.16–1.78) | 1.44*** (1.16–1.78) | 1.44*** (1.16–1.79) | |
| Two-sided | 1.30*** (1.09–1.56) | 1.30*** (1.09–1.56) | 1.31*** (1.09–1.57) | |
| Class-level variable | ||||
| Proportion of students with very good/good school PSP in class (centered) | 1.04 (0.67–1.59) | 1.31 (0.41–1.32) | ||
| Cross-level interaction | ||||
| Proportion of students with very good/good PSP in class (centered) x individual school performance (Ref.: very good/good) | ||||
| x average/below average individual PSP | 1.91* | |||
| School-level variable | ||||
| School type (Ref.: high track) | 1.24** | 1.24** | 1.25** | |
| Other school types | (1.04–1.48) | (1.04–1.48) | (1.05–1.49) | |
| Variance in intercept (between classes) | 0.212*** | 0.110*** | 0.110*** | 0.108*** |
| Variance in intercept (between schools) | 0.037 | 0.050 | 0.050 | 0.049 |
| ICC (Class) | 0.059 = 5.9% | 0.032 = 3.2% | 0.032 = 3.2% | 0.031 = 3.1% |
| ICC (school) | 0.011 = 1.1% | 0.015 = 1.5% | 0.015 = 1.5% | 0.014 = 1.4% |
The class-level variable “proportion of students with very good/good school performance in class” (in %) has been centered around the Grand mean. PSP=Perceived School Performance
*p < 0.050
**p < 0.010
***p < 0.001
Fig. 3Predicted probabilities of health complaints in relation to PSP at the class-level (HBSC 2013/2014, n = 5226)
Practical recommendations for researchers, teachers and school administrators
| Researchers | • To investigate the association between possible mediator or moderator indicators (e.g. school connectedness, school burnout, etc.) |
| Teachers | • Being aware of the role that class composition plays for students´ wellbeing. |
| School administrators | • To focus not only on students´ educational success in school, but also on students´ overall wellbeing. |