Catching the big fish in the little pond effect

Periodical
Comparative Education Review
Volume
62
Year
2018
Issue number
4
Page range
542-564
Relates to study/studies
TIMSS 2011

Catching the big fish in the little pond effect

Evidence from 33 countries and regions

Abstract

Researchers have long postulated the existence of a big-fish-little-pond effect (BFLPE) in which a student’s relative academic standing in class or school affects his or her academic self-concept. Few studies, however, use causal research designs to identify whether the BFLPE exists and whether it is generalizable across a wide variety of contexts. The goal of our study is to provide causal estimates of the BFLPE and examine whether the estimates differ by gender and national context. To fulfill our goal, we analyze cross-national TIMSS 2011 data using a cross-subject student-fixed effects model. Our results provide the strongest evidence to date that a sizeable BFLPE exists in STEM subjects regardless of gender and national context.