1. The differential effect of the teacher-student interpersonal relationship on student outcomes for students with different ethnic backgrounds.
- Author
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den Brok P, van Tartwijk J, Wubbels T, and Veldman I
- Subjects
- Acculturation, Adolescent, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Models, Psychological, Morocco ethnology, Netherlands, Self Concept, Suriname ethnology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Turkey ethnology, Emigrants and Immigrants psychology, Ethnicity ethnology, Ethnicity psychology, Faculty, Interpersonal Relations, Students psychology
- Abstract
Background: The differential effectiveness of schools and teachers receives a growing interest, but few studies focused on the relevance of student ethnicity for this effectiveness and only a small number of these studies investigated teaching in terms of the teacher-student interpersonal relationship. Furthermore, the methodology employed often restricted researchers to investigating direct effects between variables across large samples of students., Aims: This study uses causal modelling to investigate associations between student background characteristics, students' perceptions of the teacher-student interpersonal relationship, and student outcomes, across and within several population subgroups in Dutch secondary multi-ethnic classes., Methods and Sample: Multi-group structural equation modelling was used to investigate causal paths between variables in four ethnic groups: Dutch (N=387), Turkish first- and second-generation immigrant students (N=267), Moroccan first and second generation (N=364), and Surinamese second-generation students (N=101)., Results: Different structural paths were necessary to explain associations between variables in the different (sub) groups. Different amounts of variance in student attitudes could be explained by these variables., Conclusions: The teacher-student interpersonal relationship is more important for students with a non-Dutch background than for students with a Dutch background. Results suggest that the teacher-student relationship is more important for second generation than for first-generation immigrant students. Multi-group causal model analyses can provide a better, more differentiated picture of the associations between student background variables, teacher behaviour, and student outcomes than do more traditional types of analyses.
- Published
- 2010
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