Retention

views updated Jun 27 2018

RETENTION

Retention, sometimes called flunking, is the practice of having a child repeat a grade in school to help the child acquire the academic and social skills needed for success in later grades. Most research, however, has found that simply repeating the same grade is not very effective. Although children who are retained often perform better during their second year in the same grade, their gains usually shrink or disappear in subsequent years. Moreover, children who are retained are more likely to develop a bad attitude toward school and are more likely to drop out of school than nonretained children with similar levels of poor achievement.

Since the mid-1990s, public policies against social promotion (i.e., advancing children to the next grade despite poor achievement, to keep them with children of the same age) have spurred the development of programs to help struggling children avoid retention. The same programs, such as extra tutoring, summer school, and increased use of classroom aides, could also help retained children gain more from their experience.

See also:MILESTONES OF DEVELOPMENT

Bibliography

Karweit, Nancy L. "Grade Retention: Prevalence, Timing, and Effects." In the Johns Hopkins University CRESPAR [web site]. Baltimore, Maryland, 1998. Available from http://www.csos.jhu.edu/crespar/reports/report33chapt1.htm; INTERNET.

Riley, Richard W., Marshall S. Smith, and Terry K. Peterson. "Taking Responsibility for Ending Social Promotion: A Guide for Educators and State and Local Leaders." In the U.S. Department of Education [web site]. Washington, DC, 1999. Available from http://www.ed.gov/pubs/socialpromotion/title.html; INTERNET.

Shepard, Lorrie A., and Mary L. Smith. Flunking Grades: Research and Policies on Retention. London: Falmer Press, 1989.

Pamela P.Hufnagel

retention

views updated Jun 11 2018

re·ten·tion / riˈtenchən/ • n. the continued possession, use, or control of something: the retention of direct control by central government. ∎  the fact of keeping something in one's memory: the children's retention of facts. ∎  the action of absorbing and continuing to hold a substance: the soil's retention of moisture. ∎  failure to eliminate a substance from the body: eating too much salt can lead to fluid retention.

retention

views updated May 09 2018

retention (ri-ten-shŏn) n. inability to pass urine, which is retained in the bladder. The condition may be acute and painful or chronic and painless. The commonest cause of spontaneous acute urinary r. (AUR) is enlargement of the prostate gland in men.

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