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An Investigation of the Student-Teacher Relationship for Children with Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: A Developmental Systems Theory PerspectiveMeek, Fiona 24 October 2019 (has links)
The student-teacher relationship quality has shown to predict academic and social outcomes (Crosnoe, Johnson, & Elder, 2004), and relatively recent research suggests its protective nature for children who are academically at-risk, such as those with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD; Ewe, 2019). Unfortunately, children with ADHD often have strained relationships with their teachers (Rogers & Tannock, 2013). Aside from our understanding of this association, little is known about the developmental trajectory of the association, nor other systemic mechanisms that could be contributing to it. Therefore, three related studies were executed to enhance our understanding of the complexities of the student-teacher relationship for children with ADHD. The first study of the three targeted preschool children in the community (n=113) and their daycare providers (n=55), and assessed the association between early ADHD symptoms and concurrent and later student-teacher relationships in kindergarten (n=67). Findings revealed that higher inattention in preschool was associated with more conflict with daycare providers/educators, whereas higher hyperactivity/impulsivity symptoms in kindergarten children were associated with higher student-teacher conflict. The second study compared the student-teacher relationship of children with clinical diagnoses of ADHD and typically developing peers (n=76). Additionally, family-school relations and communication were investigated as a potential contribution to the student-teacher relationship quality. Non-significant differences of the parent-teacher relationship for children with ADHD versus those without the disorder were identified. However, home-school communication was established as a mediator between both inattention and hyperactivity/impulsivity symptoms and student-teacher conflict. Utilizing the same research methods as study two, study three evaluated the contribution of teacher-level characteristics on the student-teacher relationship for children with clinical diagnoses of ADHD. Teacher stress, self-efficacy, and knowledge of ADHD were assessed as mediators between ADHD symptoms and the student-teacher relationship quality. Significant main findings revealed that teacher stress significantly mediated the relationship between children’s ADHD symptoms and student-teacher conflict, whereas teacher efficacy and knowledge of ADHD did not. As a whole, this dissertation research project established and enhanced our understanding of developmental and systemic mechanisms contributing to the student-teacher relationship quality for children exhibiting ADHD symptomology. Future research directives and practical implications are reviewed.
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What happens when "we" forget about authority?: Legitimating student-held authorityJacklin, Nathan 30 August 2018 (has links)
It is undeniable that schools and classrooms must function according to some conception of authority, but contemporary educational theory often overlooks this concept. This ‘forgetting’ of authority can lead to misconceptions about the concept itself or to conflating it with other concepts such as autonomy, agency, self-regulation, or power. In turn, these misconceptions can then diminish the role that students play in education by ignoring or overlooking any authoritative aspect of it. The authority relationship between student and teacher in educational theory—and in classrooms—then often defaults to an unbalanced binary structure in which teachers hold authority but students do not. To rectify this problem, authority and its importance in the classroom must be remembered and reconsidered. This thesis undertakes a critical analysis of authority to state its complex features clearly. Moreover, this analysis will show how authority is distinct from importantly related concepts like autonomy, agency, self-regulation, and power. The analysis then moves to examine the education models of Peters, Dewey, and Neill, with the purpose of highlighting the prevalence and importance of authority in education. With these distinctions and boundaries drawn, the final section of this thesis will describe the strengths of an authoritative student role in epistemic, political, and moral realms, positioning student-held authority alongside the socio-critical theory of Freire, Apple, and Giroux. / Graduate
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Art and identity: the high school artistAlbertson, Rebekah Ann 01 December 2011 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to investigate the artistic identity of high school females and the relationships they have with their art teachers. The research compiled my own experience as a high school student with the reflections of five participants who graduated from high school within the past five years. Each participant was interviewed about her time in high school related to art, including relationships and events in and outside of the art classroom. The themes that emerged from each participant's experience brought about the conclusion that the high school artistic identity is comprised of action, product, space, and perception. Uncovering the artistic identity of the high school student highlights the importance of the art teacher and the physical and emotional space they create in the art room.
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College Student Perceptions of Secondary Teacher Influence on the Development of Mathematical IdentityVan Wagoner, Kathryn 01 May 2015 (has links)
This phenomenological study explored how college students’ perceptions of experiences with their secondary mathematics teachers affected their mathematical identities. The study was rooted in Wenger’s notion that learning is an experience of identity and Dewey’s theory that all experiences are inextricably linked to past and future experiences. Constructed narratives of eight college developmental mathematics students with high and low levels of mathematics anxiety were created from autobiographical essays and semistructured interviews. Analysis of the constructed narratives employed a deductive coding process using a priori themes related to experiences with secondary teachers and dimensions of mathematical identity.
The study answered three research questions: What kind of experiences did students recall having with their secondary mathematics teachers? How did students perceive that those experiences influenced their mathematical identities? What common student experiences positively or negatively affecting mathematical identity emerged from the data? Two general factors that affect student mathematical identity emerged from the research: student-teacher interactions and student-mathematics interactions. Interconnectivity existed between positive student-teacher relationships, meaningful student-mathematics interactions, and strong mathematical identities. Positive student-teacher relationships were foundational to the overall connection.
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How Effective Teachers Differentiate Instruction and Interact With Students Who Engage in Off-task Behaviours in the ClassroomBHANGU, Amrit 26 August 2010 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to discover and describe how two teachers effectively interacted with and differentiated instruction for students who displayed off-task behaviors in the classroom. Through the use of observations and interviews, I described how two teachers interacted with students who display high-frequency, low-intensity off-task behaviors; identified strategies these effective teachers used in dealing with these behaviors; described where the teachers’ behaviours, attitudes, and practices lay on the Preventive-Restorative (P-R) continuum of beliefs of inclusion; and discovered how the teachers’ self-efficacy is related to P-R orientations and effective teaching behaviors.
The teachers were chosen based on their principals’ belief in their effectiveness in dealing with off-task behaviours. The principal and the teacher collaboratively chose the students who displayed off-task behaviours on a consistent basis. The findings of this study confirm the existing research; the two teachers, whose beliefs lay on the preventive end of the continuum of beliefs of inclusion, tended to use effective teaching practices; these beliefs and practices were related to the teachers’ beliefs of their capability in being able to effectively help their students; these two teachers, who have preventive beliefs and high efficacy beliefs, interact in ways that are beneficial to students who display off-task behaviours.
The common themes that emerged through the analysis of both teachers’ data included the belief in and the use of differentiated instruction; the belief in the importance of having a positive classroom environment; the practice of ensuring student engagement; the teachers’ use of their knowledge about students; and the teachers’ beliefs about inclusion and efficacy beliefs. The diversity of the teachers and their classroom contexts resulted in some differences in the findings, which are also discussed. This research extends previous research about teachers’ beliefs about inclusion and efficacy beliefs to teaching practices used for and interactions with students who display off-task behaviours. The findings also extend previous research revealing a relationship between teachers’ beliefs about inclusion and the belief in the importance of creating a positive classroom environment. Implications of this research for practice and for future research are discussed. / Thesis (Master, Education) -- Queen's University, 2010-08-26 09:43:54.336
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Awakening the muse in the land of the morning calm : guidelines for new and future teachers bound for South Korea /Gerken, Laura Jennifer. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.T.) -- School for International Training, 2006. / Advisor -- Paul Levasseur Includes bibliographical references (leaves 60).
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Démarches d’apprentissage et de professionnalisation d’acteurs : quêtes artistiques et identitaires / Artistic and identity search as part of the learning and professionalization of actorsAugereau, Flore 12 January 2017 (has links)
Cette thèse analyse les parcours des acteurs depuis la naissance de leur vocation jusqu’à leurs débuts professionnels, à partir de l’étude de leurs propres discours (récits autobiographiques, journaux personnels, correspondances, entretiens). La profession théâtrale est, depuis son apparition au XVe siècle, l’objet de considérations sociales ambivalentes pesant sur la décision de devenir acteur : longtemps accusé de moeurs dissolues mais acclamé par le public, le comédien est, par l’exercice professionnel d’une activité singulière, appelé à la fois à se marginaliser et à rejoindre une élite. S’il revendique, dès le XVIIIe siècle, une démarche désintéressée dans le but de réhabiliter sa fonction, l’apparition du metteur en scène comme protagoniste de l’entreprise théâtrale au tournant du XXe siècle, va imposer un idéal artistique commun à tous les membres de la troupe, derrière lequel doivent souvent s’effacer les motivations personnelles. À cette période, le Conservatoire d’Art Dramatique, seule école existante, est accusé d’inciter les élèves au cabotinage, aussi cet idéal devient-il un enjeu pour de nouvelles formations d’acteurs. Au sein des écoles et troupes d’avant-garde, l’élève-comédien est confronté à la démarche artistique et éthique de celui qui, à ses yeux, devient un maître. Puis, au cours du siècle, une très large offre de formation apparaît : des écoles supérieures aux espaces alternatifs d’expérimentation (théâtre étudiant, troupes semi-professionnelles), le parcours initiatique est aujourd’hui jalonné de confrontations avec des enseignants et metteurs en scènes différents. Si la démarche d’apprentissage et de création du jeune acteur implique qu’il accorde sa confiance à ces derniers et adhère aux expériences qu’ils lui proposent, elle doit également consister, à terme, à rompre avec eux afin d’emprunter le chemin de l’autonomie artistique. / This thesis analyzes the path of actors from the moment their vocation started until their first steps as professional actors, on the basis of their own words (autobiographical stories, personal journal, letters, interviews). Since its appearance in the 15th century, acting as a profession has been subject to ambivalent social interests when it comes to deciding to become an actor. The actor used to be highly touted by the audience despite his being considered as a person of loose values. By choosing an unusual professional path, the actor inevitably needs to marginalize himself and to join an elite. Starting from the 18th century, the actor would claim his choice to be selfless to restore the image of this occupation. But the appearance of the director within the theatrical organization during the 20th century would impose an artistic ideal which needed to be common to all members of the theater company, who thus had to put their personal motivations aside. At the time, the only school in this area, the Academy of Dramatic Arts, was accused of inciting its students to showing off. This ideal thus became a concern for the next generations of schools and trainings. Within avant-garde schools and companies, when learning how to be a professional actor, the student faced the artistic and ethical approach of the person he saw as his teacher. Later on, various schools and trainings appeared: with higher schools or alternative experimental areas (student theater, semi-professional companies), the student now has to deal with several teachers and directors throughout his learning path, who all have their own approach. On the one hand, the teaching approach and the creation process of the young actor implies that he trusts these teachers and directors and accepts to take part to the experiences they offer him. But on a longer term, he/she should also learn to put those aside in order to reach his/her artistic emancipation.
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Student-lärarrelationen i högre utbildning : En kvalitativ studie ur tidigare studenters perspektiv / The student-teacher relationship in higher education : A qualitative study from previous students’ perspectivesHarström, Julia January 2021 (has links)
Relationen mellan elev och lärare i grund- och gymnasieskolan och dess betydelse för eleverna är ett stort forskningsområde, motsvarande relation i högre utbildning har dock inte undersökts i samma omfattning och särskilt inte utifrån Leader-Member exchange teorin. Syftet med denna studie var att med hjälp av intervjuer identifiera, belysa och analysera tidigare studenters upplevelser av student-lärarrelationen utifrån LMX-teorin. Studien har en kvalitativ ansats med semistrukturerade intervjuer. Respondenterna har tidigare genomfört en distansutbildning inom det samhällsvetenskapliga området. Av resultatet framgår att respondenterna har något skilda upplevelser av student-lärarrelationen och att behovet av en god och nära relation med lärarna varierar, men att den i huvudsak upplevts som positiv och betydelsefull för bland annat respondenternas motivation. Däremot upplever respondenterna att distansformen utgör ett hinder för att skapa dessa relationer samt att de inte får bli för nära då studenten befinner sig i beroendeställning. Resultatet bekräftar till stor del tidigare forskning på området. Fortsatt forskning kring student-lärarrelationen ur ett LMX-perspektiv, under en längre tidsperiod och med fler deltagare skulle kunna bidra till ökad förståelse för hur dessa relationer skapas och utvecklas över tid samt vilken betydelse dessa har för studenterna, särskilt för distansstudenter. / <p>Betygsdatum 2021-06-07</p>
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Relationen mellan lärare och elever i förhållande till digitala verktyg / The relationship between teachers and students in relation to digital devicesKoljanin, Deanna January 2021 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to examine whether the relationship between social science teachers and their students are affected by the presence and usage of computers and smartphones in the classroom. Since there are no studies examining this aspect of education prior to this one, the aim is to identify potential aspects that could be interesting for further studies to be able to conclude if the relationship is affected by the digital devices. Five upper secondary school teachers in social science have been interviewed for the purpose. The interviews concluded that the digital devices have a greater tendency to distract students, leading to possible conflicts between teachers and students. Furthermore, the teachers pointed out possible complications due to the way students now gather information, for example questioning of authority. The effective information gathering could on the other hand also lead to better classroom discussions which affected the relationship in a positive manner. Additionally, the interviewed teachers informed about students having an increased sense of infringement which was acknowledged during discussions about social topics, teachers feeling an increased sense of exposure due to the possibility of being taped or filmed by the digital devices, as well as the impossibility of maintaining or creating a relationship with students through the screen during the period of distance learning. Since the prerequisites for this study are not enough for generating an overall ensuring conclusion, the result should only be used as inspiration for further studies on the subject.
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Assessing Undergraduate Student-Teacher Relationship Factors using Working Alliance and Interpersonal Influence TheoriesDe Clute, Shannon M. 11 December 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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