Perceived classroom disruption undermines the positive educational effects of perceived need-supportive teaching in science

Publication date

2021-10

Authors

Burns, Emma C.
Martin, Andrew J.
Collie, Rebecca J.
Mainhard, TimISNI 0000000390892411

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Extensive research has demonstrated the benefits of need-supportive teaching, but minimal research has examined social factors that may constrain these benefits. One factor that students experience contemporaneously to need-supportive teaching is classroom disruption. Perceived classroom disruption is a barrier to quality teaching and learning, especially in science, and may be a negative moderator of perceived need-supportive teaching. Using structural equation modelling (N = 14,530 students), this investigation examines the extent to which perceived need-supportive teaching and perceived classroom disruption uniquely predicted students' science self-efficacy, participation, and achievement; as well as the extent to which perceived classroom disruption moderates the associations between perceived need-supportive teaching and these outcomes. Findings revealed that perceived need-supportive teaching was positively associated with all outcomes. Perceived classroom disruption was negatively associated with self-efficacy and achievement and attenuated the positive association between perceived need-support and achievement. These results provide insight about the boundary conditions of need-supportive teaching.

Keywords

Achievement, Participation, Perceived classroom disruption, Perceived need-support, Self-efficacy, Taverne, Education, Developmental and Educational Psychology

Citation

Burns, E C, Martin, A J, Collie, R J & Mainhard, T 2021, 'Perceived classroom disruption undermines the positive educational effects of perceived need-supportive teaching in science', Learning and Instruction, vol. 75, 101498, pp. 1-11. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.learninstruc.2021.101498