TL;DR: In this article, the Ice Ages and the Sino-Japanese Brain are discussed and the gap between IQ and achievement between the two factors of overachievement is measured. And the Probable and the Tentative.
Abstract: Contents: The Ice Ages and the Sino-Japanese Brain. The Three Great National Surveys. Eleven Studies From Various Locales. Measuring the Gap Between IQ and Achievement. The Two Factors of Overachievement. The Probable and the Tentative. Beyond Genes and IQ. Epilogue: Setting the Record Straight.
TL;DR: For example, this paper found that students at colleges with high scores on the Faculty-Student Interaction scale more often overachieved on two criteria tests, while students with low scores on this scale underachieved in all three of the tests.
Abstract: In this study, selected aspects of the college environment were related to student academic achievement at 27 small liberal arts colleges. Academic achievement was measured by senior students' scores on the Area Tests of the Graduate Record Examination; the Scholastic Aptitude Test (Verbal and Mathematics) scores of these same students prior to college entrance were used as a control measure for differences in initial aptitude. The colleges' social and academic environment were assessed through students' perceptions and included five scales describing the extent of faculty-student interaction, student activism, curriculum flexibility, academic challenge, and the colleges' cultural facilities. All but the Activism scale were related to student over or underachievement on one or more of the three Area Tests (Humanities, Natural Science, Social Science). In particular, students at colleges with high scores on the Faculty-Student Interaction scale more often overachieved on two of the criteria tests, while students at colleges with low scores on this scale underachieved on all three of the tests. The results suggest that certain student-described college environmental features are related to academic achievement, although replication with another group of colleges would be desirable.
TL;DR: Overachievement may be better regarded as approaching one's full potential by the use of optimal coping strategies and avoidance of alternative responses to stress which appear to be non-productive.
Abstract: How to assist young people to achieve to their potential is a universal concern of educators. The relationship between achievement above that expected on the basis of IQ alone (often referred to as overachievement) in school assessment and preferred coping style, as assessed by the Adolescent Coping Scale (ACS, Frydenberg & Lewis, 1993a), was investigated in a group of 374 boys in Grades 9, 10 and 11 at an independent boys' school in metropolitan Melbourne. Separate partial correlation analyses for each of the three year levels showed that three of the coping strategies, Work and Achieve, Solve the Problem, and Social Support positively correlated with overachievement at all three levels. Other subscales also correlated significantly at one or other of the grade levels. It was concluded that overachievement may be better regarded as approaching one's full potential by the use of optimal coping strategies and avoidance of alternative responses to stress which appear to be non-productive.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors summarized recent schooling investment experience in developing countries using expected schooling for synthetic cohorts in 1960 and 1981 and the difference between these two years, and selected innovative recent studies on the impact of schooling are reviewed and new cross-country estimates presented.