Teachers' attitudes and students' opposition. School misconduct as a reaction to teachers' diminished effort and affect.
published in 'Teaching and Teacher Education'
Recent decades have seen many studies dealing with the effects of teacher expectations. While most have focused on... more Recent decades have seen many studies dealing with the effects of teacher expectations. While most have focused on students’ cognitive outcomes, we relate teacher expectations to student deviancy. We expect low expectations to be associated with students’ feelings of futility and less teacher support, which, according to respectively strain theory and social control theory, give rise to misconduct. Multilevel analyses of data (2004e2005) from 11,844 students and 2104 teachers in 84 Flemish secondary schools suggest that, in schools where teacher expectations are low, students report less perceived teacher support, which is associated with higher rates of self-reported school misconduct.
Social-ethnic school composition and school misconduct. Does sense of futility clarify the picture?
Published in 'Sociological Spectrum'
This article assesses whether social-ethnic composition influences students’ school misconduct. Based on general... more This article assesses whether social-ethnic composition influences students’ school misconduct. Based on general strain theory, we expect to find that individual sense of futility acts as an intermediate mechanism. Starting from cultural deprivation and oppositional culture theory, however, we hypothesize that a shared school culture of futility acts as mediator. Multilevel analyses of data from the Flemish Educational Assessment, consisting of 11,872 students in 85 schools, showed that ethnic composition has an impact on school misconduct: there is more deviancy in ethnically mixed schools than in ethnic concentration schools due to a greater student sense of futility. The presence of a culture of futility did not affect the probability of being deviant. These results were true only for natives: school factors did not affect migrants’ deviancy. We conclude that, although a dispersal of ethnically diverse students across all schools is favorable, this can yield negative side effects.
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