The same but somehow different: contemporary Swedish teachers' perceptions of troublesome behaviour (original) (raw)
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Students’ perception of reactions towards disruptive behaviour in Norwegian and American schools
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Findings from this comparative study include students' perceived experience on the disruptive behaviour during class by utilizing a questionnaire administered in Norwegian and American schools. The sample in the study is 1153 students between 15-17 years old. We present the student perspective of how students and teachers react towards disruptive behaviour. In both countries, reactions from students indicated a tendency to escalate disruptive behaviour, while the reactions from teachers mostly decreased disruptive behaviour. We analyse these findings in light of the concept of emotional involvement. movements (master's thesis)." University of Oslo.
Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 2005
I Dedication I dedicate this book to Professor Pat Petrie, Professor Chris Kyriacou and Associate Professor Roger Mathiesen. Pat, when I was new to social pedagogy, you introduced me to its secrets and its power for good. Chris, as my knowledge of social pedagogy grew, you enthralled me with your incisive questions and became my Socrates. Roger, you have taught me how important it is to buttress social pedagogic practice with rigorous social pedagogic theory.
Journal of Education for Teaching, 2007
A group of postgraduate (secondary school) student teachers attending a teacher training course in York (England) and Stavanger (Norway) completed a questionnaire at the start (N=174) and at the end (N=128) of their course which explored their views regarding the factors accounting for pupil misbehaviour, the frequency of pupil misbehaviour, the strategies for dealing with pupil misbehaviour, and their confidence that as a full-time teacher they will have the skills needed to keep pupils engaged in their work and to deal with pupil misbehaviour that occurs. Overall, the major factor accounting for pupil misbehaviour was reported to be 'parents who do not instil proschool values in their children'; the most frequent pupil misbehaviour reported was 'talking out of turn (e.g. calling out, interrupting, inappropriate remarks or distracting chatter during the lesson)'; and the strategy rated most positively was 'establish clear and consistent school and classroom rules about the behaviours that are acceptable and that are unacceptable'. Both the York and Stavanger students grew in confidence over the year. The study also highlights areas where there appear to be shifts in students' views over the course of their training year and differences between the students across the two settings (York and Stavanger).
2006
secondary schools, while more recently Arbuckle and Little (2004) and Little (2005) have reported the types of classroom behaviour Victorian middle years and secondary teachers find troublesome. Infantino and Little (2005) have recently added the students' perspectives of classroom behaviour problems, and Conway, Tierney, and Schofield (1990) and Stuart (1994) have reported some findings from New South Wales (see Chapter 2). One major aim of the present research is to add to the relevant Australian classroom data.
Recent research on troublesome classroom behaviour
2009
A review is provided of recent research literature on the topic of troublesome classroom behaviour, published over the past decade or so with particular reference to research carried out in Australian schools. Nine Australian studies are reviewed, as well as a further seven from the USA, Hong Kong, Jordan, Greece and Malta. Seven of the studies deal with the early years and primary level of schooling, with six studies at the secondary level, and three that span primary and secondary levels of schooling. The following main themes are elucidated: the prevalence of behaviourally troublesome students; time spent managing troublesome behaviour; gender differences; and types of classroom (mis)behaviours, their severity and their frequency. Recent research confirms earlier findings that classroom misbehaviour is of widespread concern to teachers but that the main causes of disruption, while being frequent, are often relatively trivial in nature ('talking out of turn' behaviours in particular). While prevalence rates for troublesome students across classes are variable, boys are consistently identified as being more troublesome than girls.
Views of Teachers Working at Turkish Schools in England about Students’ Misbehaviors in Classroom
2019
The aim of this research is to point out views of teachers working at Turkish schools in England about misbehaviours of students’ in Turkish lessons. The research has been carried out in accordance with the phenomenological design of qualitative research designs, descriptive analysis technique was used for data analysis. The research has been carried out with 23 teachers chosen by basing maximum variety sampling at schools in England. Data has been gathered with semi-structured interview form prepared by taking advantage of body of literature and expert opinion by researcher. According to teachers, the most misbehaviour is “talking out of turn” in lessons. Misbehaviours such as “playing with personal stuff”, “not being interested in lesson/not listening” follow this misbehaviour. Majority of teachers have stated that they have got training about solutions of misbehaviours and they find themselves proficient. It has been determined that problems resulting from “family” and “circle of...
Students’ Perceived Experience of Disruptive Behavior in Schools
Nordic Studies in Education, 2018
This article reports findings from a comparative study of disruptive behaviors in schools in Norway and the United States. The study investigated students' perceived experience of the phenomenon during class. In total, 1,153 students participated in the study (544 in Norway and 609 in the US). The majority of students in both countries claimed to have been disturbed during the last week and also said that this occurred one or more times every day. Discrepancies in the results were found in that American students report a higher prevalence of disruptive behavior, while Norwegian students seem to find disruptive behavior more disturbing than their American counterparts.
Pupils' Aggressive behaviour towards teachers in elementary schools in slovakia
The New Educational Review, 2016
Pupils' aggressive behaviour towards teachers is a serious educational problem prompting social need for its solution in the school environment. The present research study aims to monitor the current state of pupils' aggressive behaviour towards teachers. The study is of a theoretical-empirical nature. At the theoretical level, the issue is relatively little treated in the Slovak professional literature. It is paid more attention by foreign authors. The empirical section of the study presents results of our research conducted in Slovakia in 2016 among teachers of the elementary school second level in the Banská Bystrica and Žilina regions, as well as among professional staff at centres for pedagogical counselling and prevention. The research paid special attention to forms of aggressive behaviour, gender differences and causes of these serious behavioural disorders in pupils. Pupils' aggressive behaviour towards teachers may have a variety of forms of which the verbal form such as back-talking and vulgarisms towards teachers is the most frequent. Gender differences recorded in pupils' aggressive behaviour towards teachers showed the prevalence of boys. From the aspect of causes of pupils' aggressive behaviour towards teachers, those were mainly improper parenting and a lack of teacher authority.
Nordic Journal Of Educational History, 2018
This article examines the dominant discourses of behaviour and discipline in the debate on schooling and the conduct of school pupils in Swedish professional teacher journals between 1946 and 1962, the formative years of the Swedish comprehensive school. Drawing from the theoretical framework of discourse, governmentality and the fabrication of the subject developed by Michel Foucault, the fabrication and governing of the school pupil is highlighted and analysed. The findings of the study are related to historical research of the period as well as Foucauldian studies where a historical shift of perspectives on discipline and behaviour in the school have been proposed. The result is a detailed analysis of the fabrication and governing of the subject within the dominant discourses of behaviour and discipline during the period, as well as a critical nuancing of the idea of this historical shift.