School discipline and disruptive classroom behavior: the moderating effects of student perceptions.

Sandra M Way
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引用次数: 159

Abstract

This study examines the relationship between school discipline and student classroom behavior. A traditional deterrence framework predicts that more severe discipline will reduce misbehavior. In contrast, normative perspectives suggest that compliance depends upon commitment to rules and authority, including perceptions of fairness and legitimacy. Using school and individual-level data from the National Education Longitudinal Study of 1988 and multilevel regression modeling, the author finds support for the normative perspective. Students who perceive school authority as legitimate and teacher–student relations as positive are rated as less disruptive. While perceptions of fairness also predict lower disruptions, the effects are mediated by positive teacher–student relations. Contrary to the deterrence framework, more school rules and higher perceived strictness predicts more, not less, disruptive behavior. In addition, a significant interaction effect suggests that attending schools with more severe punishments may have the unintended consequence of generating defiance among certain youth.

学校纪律与破坏性课堂行为:学生认知的调节作用。
本研究探讨学校纪律与学生课堂行为的关系。传统的威慑框架预测,更严厉的纪律将减少不当行为。相比之下,规范观点认为,遵守取决于对规则和权威的承诺,包括对公平和合法性的看法。利用1988年国家教育纵向研究的学校和个人层面数据和多层次回归模型,作者找到了规范视角的支持。认为学校权威合法、师生关系积极的学生被评为破坏性较小的学生。虽然对公平的认知也预示着较低的干扰,但这种影响是由积极的师生关系介导的。与威慑框架相反,更多的学校规则和更高的严格程度预示着更多而不是更少的破坏性行为。此外,一个显著的互动效应表明,在惩罚更严厉的学校上学可能会产生意想不到的后果,即在某些青少年中产生反抗。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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