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-List Of Titles -Behavioural interactions in secondary classrooms between teachers and students: what they say, what they do

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/13114

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Title
Behavioural interactions in secondary classrooms between teachers and students: what they say, what they do
Related
Australasian Digital Theses Program
Publisher
Australia : Macquarie University
Date
2006
Author/Creator
Beaman, Robyn
Description
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Australian Centre for Educational Studies, Special Education Centre, 2006.
Description
Bibliography: leaves 458-476.
Description
Introduction -- Teacher perceptions of troublesome classroom behaviour -- Troublesome classroom behaviour and teacher stress in New South Wales secondary classrooms: Part I -- Troublesome classroom behaviour and teacher stress in New South Wales secondary classrooms: Part II -- Troublesome classroom behaviour and teacher stress in New South Wales secondary classrooms: Part III -- Student perceptions of the classroom environment in New South Wales secondary classrooms -- Natural rates of teacher approval and disapproval in the classroom -- Natural rates of teacher approval and disapproval in secondary classrooms in New South Wales -- Differential teacher attention to boys and girls in the classroom -- Differential teacher attention to boys and girls in New South Wales secondary classrooms -- Perceptions versus reality: behavioural interactions between teachers and students in New South Wales secondary classrooms.
Description
The focus of this thesis is troublesome classroom behaviour and the behavioural interactions between teachers and students in secondary school. Following a review of the extant research literature, Section A of the thesis reports a study examining the perceptions of 145 secondary teachers from New South Wales with regard to behaviours they find troublesome in their classrooms. Talking out of turn was clearly identified as the classroom behaviour of most concern, most frequently occurring and, importantly, the main misbehaviour of the most troublesome individual students. In two studies completed in parallel, it was similarly shown that teachers who identified themselves as having particular difficulties with classroom behaviour, or who had identified ten percent or more of their class as troublesome, experienced higher levels of stress related to classroom behaviour and their students perceived the classroom environment to be characterised by differential treatment of students. Section B of the thesis comprises observational studies of teachers and classroom behaviour with a substantial focus on student and teacher gender. Reviews of the literature on teachers' "natural" use of approval and disapproval and on differential teacher behaviour towards boys and girls were followed by two parallel studies. The first study, involving 79 New South Wales secondary school teachers and their classes, showed that while teachers typically responded to students with more approval than disapproval, almost all approval was reserved for academic behaviour whereas approval for appropriate classroom behaviour was very infrequent. Teachers typically reprimanded students for inappropriate behaviour at a very high rate. The second study showed that boys attracted far more teacher responses than girls but that most of this involved reprimands for inappropriate behaviour. Section C of the thesis relates teacher perceptions to observed classroom behaviour. It was concluded that in classes with larger numbers of troublesome students there was reduced academic feedback to students and where teachers' rates of negative responding were higher there was a reduced perception of participation by students.
Description
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Description
vi, 500 leaves
Subject Keyword
Classroom management
Subject Keyword
Classroom environment
Subject Keyword
Interaction analysis in education
Subject Keyword
Teacher-student relationships
Subject Keyword
Teachers -- Job stress
Subject Keyword
Teacher-student relationships -- New South Wales
Resource Type
Thesis PhD
Organisation
Macquarie University. Macquarie University Special Education Centre (MUSEC)

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/13114
Identifier
1276091
Language
eng
Rights
Copyright disclaimer: http://www.copyright.mq.edu.au
Rights
Copyright Robyn Beaman 2006.
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