Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

School 'climate' affects teachers' expectations about students

Darpan News Desk IANS, 04 Nov, 2014 09:54 AM
    The school environment in which teachers work affects their expectations about students, says a new study.
     
    "While we know that expectations are primarily determined by the specific characteristics of teachers, we have shown that the school environment also plays a determining role" in what teachers come to expect from their students, said Marie-Christine Brault, researcher at University of Montreal in Canada.
     
    To measure the impact the school environment has in determining these expectations, the researchers conducted a multilevel analysis using data from 2,666 teachers in 71 secondary schools in Quebec.
     
    From these data, the researchers could distinguish between two levels of variables -- the teacher: His/her perception of "school climate", gender, age, courses taught; and the school: its academic, socio-economic, ethnic composition, and the way the entire school community perceived the "school climate".
     
    The socio-economic and ethnic composition of students in the school, as well as the school academic composition defined by student drop-out rates, academic delays, poor student scores on logical reasoning scales, and the number of students designated as being in difficulty according to criteria set by the Ministry of Education, all play a role in determining expectations. 
     
    However, school academic composition is the most influential.
     
    The school composition indirectly affects expectations: academic difficulties and ethnic background of students influence school climate and therefore, indirectly, teacher expectations, noted the study.
     
    The findings suggest that by intervening in the educational climate of schools by ensuring that all teachers are committed to the success of their students, teacher expectations can improve, concluded Brault.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Social media obsession goes up when abroad: Study

    Social media obsession goes up when abroad: Study
    If posting, tweeting to tagging ourselves at different locations has become a trend, latest research says that many Britons become 16 times more...

    Social media obsession goes up when abroad: Study

    Tidal forces gave moon its shape: Study

    Tidal forces gave moon its shape: Study
    They also took into account the large impact basins that have shaped the moon's topography....

    Tidal forces gave moon its shape: Study

    Simple blood test may even predict suicide

    Simple blood test may even predict suicide
    A simple blood test can soon reliably predict a person's risk of attempting suicide, significant research reveals...

    Simple blood test may even predict suicide

    Menu design can spoil diners' mood

    Menu design can spoil diners' mood
    According to an interesting research, what you order may have less to do with what you want and more to do with a menu's layout and descriptions....

    Menu design can spoil diners' mood

    In changing times, women find losing virginity enjoyable

    In changing times, women find losing virginity enjoyable
    Did you feel guilty after having sex for the first time? Take heart as young women today are actually "enjoying losing their virginity" compared to earlier days....

    In changing times, women find losing virginity enjoyable

    Infants smell threats by mother's odour

    Infants smell threats by mother's odour
    Infants can smell fear. They learn to detect threats and remember these for long just by smelling the odour their mother gives off when she feels fear, says a study...

    Infants smell threats by mother's odour