A nonlinear dynamical systems approach to real-time teacher behavior: Differences between teachers
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Publication date
2014
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Abstract
A positive teacher-student relationship is important for students' motivation, students' academic achievement, and teacher well-being. How the teacher-student relationship develops in real-time has hardly been studied. In the present study we explored real-time interpersonal behavior (micro-level) for teachers with different relatively stable patterns of interpersonal teacher behavior (macro-level), i.e., interpersonal profiles. Interpersonal profiles are considered indicative of the teacher-student relationship. Interpersonal teacher behavior was conceptualized using Interpersonal Theory in terms of (a blend of) Agency and Communion. We used a Nonlinear Dynamic Systems (NDS) approach to explore differences in content (attractors) and structure of changing behavior (variability) in real-time interpersonal teacher behavior using State Space Grid (SSG) analyses. We found the expected differences between teachers and correspondence between the location of the attractors in the SSG and the blend of Agency and Communion characterizing the teachers' interpersonal profiles. Regarding structure, we found the expected higher variability in real-time behavior for teachers with interpersonal profiles characterized by lower levels of Agency and Communion. We concluded there is sufficient potential of NDS to differentiate between teachers in order to use a NDS approach in future research on the connection between teacher-student relationship and real-time teacher interpersonal behavior.
Keywords
Interpersonal theory, Nonlinear dynamic systems, Real-time interpersonal teacher behavior, State space grid, Applied Mathematics
Citation
Pennings, H J M, Brekelmans, M, Wubbels, T, van der Want, A C, Claessens, L C A & van Tartwijk, J 2014, 'A nonlinear dynamical systems approach to real-time teacher behavior : Differences between teachers', Nonlinear Dynamics, Psychology, and Life Sciences, vol. 18, no. 1, pp. 23-45.