5 results on '"Erik Malmberg"'
Search Results
2. Academic help‐seeking interactions in the classroom: A microlongitudinal study
- Author
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Kathy Sylva, Lars-Erik Malmberg, and Kyle Davison
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Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Education - Abstract
Help-seeking research has traditionally inferred behavioural responses to the need for help from post-hoc reflections and experiments outside of the classroom context.We aimed to gain an ecologically valid understanding of the help-seeking process by examining the association between pupils' task-specific perceptions and their help-seeking interactions with teachers and peers during lessons.Participants were 290 pupils in Years 4-6 (aged 8.22-11.48) and 12 teachers in 12 classrooms in three schools across two local authorities in South East England, UK.The microlongitudinal data consisted of 6,592 task-specific reports. Pupils reported on their task understanding and need for help and their help-seeking (teacher and peer) and help-giving behaviours at the end of each lesson. On average, pupils completed 25.44 reports across 14.64 lessons, 13 school subjects and 4.80 days. Teachers reported on pupils' academic performance. Data were analysed using two-level logistic and multinomial logistic regressions.Task-specific understanding and need for help were associated with help-seeking and help-giving behaviour during lessons. Understanding was associated also with the type of help sought and given among classmates and appeared to influence whether pupils were help-seekers or help-givers during peer interactions. There was an apparent reciprocity in peer help-seeking interactions, occurring namely among girls and higher performers. Overall, girls were more likely than boys to seek and give help across tasks. Pupils for whom English was an additional language were less likely than classmates to seek help when they needed it. The study (1) sheds new light on the dynamics of everyday help-seeking interactions in the classroom, (2) provides a conceptual framework for researchers interested in reciprocal processes of social interaction in self-regulated learning, and (3) highlights groups who might benefit from intervention.
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- 2022
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3. Intra‐individual dynamics of lesson‐specific engagement: Lagged and cross‐lagged effects from one lesson to the next
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Lars-Erik Malmberg, Marja-Kristiina Lerkkanen, Joona Muotka, Kaisa Aunola, and Kati Vasalampi
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oppitunnit ,opiskelumotivaatio ,Teaching method ,Emotions ,situation‐specific engagement ,Student engagement ,Sample (statistics) ,luokkatyöskentely ,Structural equation modeling ,alakoulu ,Education ,Student-teacher Relationships ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Mathematics education ,Humans ,Learning ,vaihtelu ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,dynamic structural equation modelling ,Students ,lower secondary school ,Student Engagement ,Schools ,4. Education ,05 social sciences ,School psychology ,alakoululaiset ,050301 education ,sitoutuminen ,Intra individual ,intra‐individual ,koulutyö ,Dynamics (music) ,Cross lagged ,School Teachers ,Psychology ,0503 education ,engagement ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Background Student engagement denotes active participation in academic work through commitment and involvement in learning tasks (Appleton et al., 2006, Journal of School Psychology, 44, 427). This study looks at questions such as whether engagement experiences in one lesson have an effect on the next lesson. In the present study, process‐oriented analyses were conducted to examine lower secondary school students’ engagement experiences and the stability of those experiences from one lesson to the next. Aims (1) To what extent are students’ engagement experiences, in terms of behavioural and cognitive engagement, emotional engagement, and disaffection, stable from one lesson to the next (autoregressive cyclic effects)? (2) What are the cross‐lagged relationships (dynamic effects) between engagement experiences from one lesson to the next? Sample The sample consisted of 56 Finnish lower secondary school students. The students provided ratings of their engagement experiences at the end of each lesson for one week (5 days, 975 ratings). Each student rated, on average, 17.4 lessons (SD = 5.67). Methods We specified multilevel dynamic structural equation models with random slopes. Results The models showed small significant sustainability in behavioural and cognitive engagement, emotional engagement, and disaffection from one lesson to the next, regardless of subject matter and teacher continuity. Higher behavioural and cognitive engagement in a lesson also had a self‐diminishing effect on disaffection. Conclusions The present study provides valuable information to teachers by showing that an experience in one lesson can have an effect on subsequent ones. peerReviewed
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- 2020
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4. Changes in student teachers' agency beliefs during a teacher education year, and relationships with observed classroom quality, and day-to-day experiences
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Lars-Erik Malmberg and Hazel Hagger
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Adult ,Behavior Control ,Male ,Culture ,Individuality ,Internship, Nonmedical ,Practicum ,Student engagement ,Models, Psychological ,Job Satisfaction ,Education ,Developmental psychology ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Child ,Path analysis (statistics) ,Internal-External Control ,Motivation ,Teaching ,Construct validity ,Achievement ,Self Efficacy ,Confirmatory factor analysis ,Teacher education ,England ,General partnership ,Female ,Attitude change ,Psychology ,Social psychology - Abstract
Background Conceptualizations of teachers' agency beliefs converge around domains of support and instruction. Aim We investigated changes in student teachers' agency beliefs during a 1 year teacher education course, and related these to observed classroom quality and day-to-day experiences in partnership schools during the practicum. Samples Out of a sample of 66 student teachers who had responded to at least two out of four times to a questionnaire (18 men 48 women; mean age 26.4 years), 30 were observed during teaching, and 20 completed a 4-day short form diary. Methods Confirmatory factor analysis validated two agency belief constructs. Multi-level models for change investigated individual differences in change over time. Multi-level path models related observation and diary responses to agency beliefs. Results Supportive agency belief was high and stable across time. Instructional agency belief increased over time, suggesting a beneficial effect of teacher education. This increase was predicted by observed classroom quality (emotional support and student engagement) and daily positive affect and agency beliefs. Conclusions Teacher education is successful in creating a context in which student teachers' supportive agency beliefs can be maintained and instructional agency beliefs can increase during the course.
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- 2009
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5. Academic buoyancy, student's achievement, and the linking role of control: A cross-lagged analysis of high school students
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Paul Ginns, Rebecca J. Collie, Lars-Erik Malmberg, Andrew J. Martin, and James Hall
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Male ,Coping (psychology) ,Buoyancy ,Adolescent ,050109 social psychology ,Sense of control ,Academic achievement ,engineering.material ,Education ,Developmental psychology ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Learning ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Child ,Students ,Empirical work ,Self-management ,Panel design ,Schools ,4. Education ,05 social sciences ,Australia ,050301 education ,Achievement ,Cross lagged ,engineering ,Female ,School Teachers ,Psychology ,0503 education ,Social psychology - Abstract
Background Previous research has indicated that although academic buoyancy and student's achievement are associated, the relationship is relatively modest. Aims We sought to determine whether another construct might link academic buoyancy and student's achievement. Based on prior theoretical and empirical work, we examined a sense of control as one possible linking mechanism. Sample The study analysed data from 2,971 students attending 21 Australian high schools. Methods We conducted a cross-lagged panel design as a first means of disentangling the relative salience of academic buoyancy, control, and achievement (Phase 1). Based upon these results, we proceeded with follow-up analyses of an ordered process model linking the constructs over time (Phase 2). Results Findings showed that buoyancy and achievement were associated with control over time, but not with one another (Phase 1). In addition, control appeared to play a role in how buoyancy influenced achievement and that a cyclical process may operate among the three factors over time (Phase 2). Conclusion The findings suggest that control may play an important role in linking past experiences of academic buoyancy and achievement to subsequent academic buoyancy and achievement.
- Published
- 2015
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