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-List Of Titles -Adjusting to school : children's drawings depict differences in relationships with teachers

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/118498

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Title
Adjusting to school : children's drawings depict differences in relationships with teachers
Related
Biennial Australasian Human Development Association Conference (15th : 2007) (5 - 8 July 2007 : Sydney)
Related
Howie, Pauline and Livesey, David. Australian journal of psychology : the abstracts of the 15th Biennial Australasian Human Development Association Conference, Vol. 59, Suppl., p.174
DOI
10.1080/00049530701658659
Publisher
Australian Psychological Society
Date
2007
Author/Creator
Harrison, L
Author/Creator
Clarke, L
Author/Creator
Ungerer, J
Description
A positive relationship with the classroom teacher is a key predictor of young children’s successful adjustment to school, yet few studies have examined this from the point of view of the child. In this paper, we describe two approaches to including children’s perspectives on relationships with teachers: direct questions to rate feelings about the teacher and indirect representations through drawing. Participants were 114 six-year-old children (58 boys, 56 girls) who were interviewed at the end of their first year of school. Children completed the School Liking and Avoidance Scale, with additional questions about their classroom teacher(s), and drew a picture of themselves and their teacher(s) at school. Drawings were rated on dimensions developed by Fury, Carlson and Sroufe (1997) to assess attachment relationship quality in child-family drawings, including: Pride/Happiness, emotional connectedness to the teacher; Distance/Isolation, negative affect, physical distance from the teacher; Tension/Anger: careless scribbling, constricted figures; Bizarreness/Dissociation: unusual signs or symbols, angry facial features, fantasy themes; Global Pathology: overall rating of the child’s emotional health. Ratings were combined to generate an index of relational negativity. Results were compared with teachers’ ratings of relationship quality and school adjustment. Results confirmed the effectiveness of the child measures. Greater negativity in children’s representations of their relationship with the teacher was associated with less teacher-rated closeness and more conflict. Children with more disturbed relationships were also rated by teachers as showing more problem behaviour in class and less competence in learning and social interactions with peers.
Description
1 page(s)
Resource Type
conference paper abstract
Organisation
Macquarie University. Dept. of Psychology

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/118498
Identifier
ISSN:0004-9530
Identifier
mq-rm-2007004166
Language
eng
Save/E-mail Citation
Citation Format
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Subject
"Australian journal of psychology : the abstracts of the 15th Biennial Australasian Human Development Association Conference"
 
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