TY - JOUR
T1 - Student–teacher relationships and sense of academic futility
T2 - Longitudinal associations among early adolescents of immigrant and non-immigrant background
AU - Bobba, Beatrice
AU - Yanagida, Takuya
AU - Wiertsema, Maria
AU - Miconi, Diana
AU - Oyekola, Adebunmi
AU - Chukwueke, Ifunanya
AU - Özdemir, Sevgi Bayram
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 British Psychological Society.
PY - 2024/6/18
Y1 - 2024/6/18
N2 - Sense of academic futility entails feelings of having no control over ones' educational success. Although mounting evidence points to its negative consequences for students' educational outcomes, less is known about its socio-contextual antecedents. Relatedly, the current study explored how fair and supportive relationships with teachers are related to the sense of academic futility and if class belonging mediates this link in a sample of adolescents with immigrant and non-immigrant backgrounds. A total of 1065 seventh-grade students (Mage = 13.12; SD = 0.42; 45% girls) from 55 classrooms completed questionnaires at two time points 1 year apart. Results of multilevel analyses indicated that fair and supportive relationships with teachers contributed to decreases in sense of academic futility at the individual but not at the classroom level. No mediation or moderation effects emerged. These findings highlight the crucial role of democratic student–teacher relationships in supporting the positive school adjustment of all students in increasingly multicultural societies.
AB - Sense of academic futility entails feelings of having no control over ones' educational success. Although mounting evidence points to its negative consequences for students' educational outcomes, less is known about its socio-contextual antecedents. Relatedly, the current study explored how fair and supportive relationships with teachers are related to the sense of academic futility and if class belonging mediates this link in a sample of adolescents with immigrant and non-immigrant backgrounds. A total of 1065 seventh-grade students (Mage = 13.12; SD = 0.42; 45% girls) from 55 classrooms completed questionnaires at two time points 1 year apart. Results of multilevel analyses indicated that fair and supportive relationships with teachers contributed to decreases in sense of academic futility at the individual but not at the classroom level. No mediation or moderation effects emerged. These findings highlight the crucial role of democratic student–teacher relationships in supporting the positive school adjustment of all students in increasingly multicultural societies.
KW - class belonging
KW - immigrant and non-immigrant adolescents
KW - sense of academic futility
KW - student–teacher relationship
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85196314245&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/bjdp.12504
DO - 10.1111/bjdp.12504
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85196314245
SN - 0261-510X
JO - British Journal of Developmental Psychology
JF - British Journal of Developmental Psychology
ER -