Description
Poster title:The influence of teachers’ conceptualisations of student engagement on their teaching practices
Poster abstract:
Student engagement literature delineates student engagement as a malleable construct, involving a student’s actions, feelings and thoughts, which can be influenced by the learning context, and more specifically, by the teacher. Teachers’ skills and practices can actively engage students in learning, support them to be successful in the classroom and promote positive student outcomes. For this reason, investigating teachers’ understandings of student engagement, and how this links with teachers’ classroom practices to positively influence student engagement, forms the core focus of this research.
This research uses a pragmatic research paradigm and a mixed method approach to collect data. This ethically approved (ECN-17-238) study establishes how teachers conceptualise student engagement in relation to three key dimensions (behavioural, emotional and cognitive engagement) that are derived from the literature. Findings from quantitative and qualitative data from the pilot study, cognitive interviews, national questionnaire, in-class observations and interviews with teachers will be presented. The findings demonstrate how teachers conceptualise the multi-dimensional construct of student engagement, the strategies they believe are most important in promoting student engagement in the classroom, and how these conceptualisations of student engagement impact on their pedagogy.
The implications for this research are valuable for providing insight into secondary school teachers' understandings of behavioural, emotional and cognitive engagement in the classroom. It will also provide insight into the teaching strategies teachers believe to be important in supporting each dimension of student engagement in the classroom and how their understandings ultimately impact on their teaching practices.
Period | 25 Jun 2019 → 26 Jun 2019 |
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Event type | Conference |
Location | Gold Coast, Australia, QueenslandShow on map |
Related content
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Research Outputs
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The teachers' role in student engagement: A review
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › Research › peer-review