Mental abilities and school achievement: A test of a mediation hypothesis |
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Authors: | Miriam Vock Franzis Preckel |
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Affiliation: | a University of Potsdam, Department of Education, Germanyb University of Trier, Department of Psychology, Germanyc University of Münster, Department of Psychology, Germany |
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Abstract: | This study analyzes the interplay of four cognitive abilities - reasoning, divergent thinking, mental speed, and short-term memory - and their impact on academic achievement in school in a sample of adolescents in grades seven to 10 (N = 1135). Based on information processing approaches to intelligence, we tested a mediation hypothesis, which states that the complex cognitive abilities of reasoning and divergent thinking mediate the influence of the basic cognitive abilities of mental speed and short-term memory on achievement. We administered a comprehensive test battery and analyzed the data through structural equation modeling while controlling for the cluster structure of the data. Our findings support the notion that mental speed and short-term memory, as ability factors reflecting basic cognitive processes, exert an indirect influence on academic achievement by affecting reasoning and divergent thinking (total indirect effects: β = .22 and .24, respectively). Short-term memory also directly affects achievement (β = .22). |
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Keywords: | Academic achievement Mental speed Short-term memory Reasoning Divergent thinking Grades Prediction |
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