Data_Sheet_1_Cultural universality and specificity of teacher-student relationship: a qualitative study in Belgian, Chinese, and Italian primary school teachers.docx

Extensive evidence highlights the significant influence of dyadic, emotional teacher-student relationship (TSR) on students’ cognitive functioning, socio-emotional development, and overall well-being. However, it remains unclear whether the TSR construct and its manifestations can be generalized across cultures. This qualitative study investigated TSR among 60 primary school teachers in Belgium, China, and Italy (i.e., countries with varying positions on the collectivistic-individualistic continuum of culture). Through semi-structured interviews and metatheme analysis, the study examined the s... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Canmei Xu
Mariëtte Huizinga
Giuseppe De Luca
Sophie Pollé
Ruwen Liang
Simona Sankalaite
Debora L. Roorda
Dieter Baeyens
Dokumenttyp: Dataset
Erscheinungsdatum: 2023
Schlagwörter: Applied Psychology / Clinical Psychology / Developmental and Educational Psychology / Neuroscience and Physiological Psychology / Organizational Behavioral Psychology / Personality / Social and Criminal Psychology / Gender Psychology / Health / Clinical and Counselling Psychology / Industrial and Organisational Psychology / Psychology not elsewhere classified / Psychology and Cognitive Sciences not elsewhere classified / teacher-student relationship / cross-cultural investigation / qualitative study / metatheme analysis / primary school teacher
Sprache: unknown
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26530458
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1287511.s001

Extensive evidence highlights the significant influence of dyadic, emotional teacher-student relationship (TSR) on students’ cognitive functioning, socio-emotional development, and overall well-being. However, it remains unclear whether the TSR construct and its manifestations can be generalized across cultures. This qualitative study investigated TSR among 60 primary school teachers in Belgium, China, and Italy (i.e., countries with varying positions on the collectivistic-individualistic continuum of culture). Through semi-structured interviews and metatheme analysis, the study examined the similarities and differences in TSR across these countries, revealing a nuanced and diverse picture in various cultural contexts. The findings align with the existing TSR model by including dimensions of closeness, conflict, and dependency, while also extending the model to identify additional dimensions such as authority, balance, distance, fairness, increasing student motivation, patience, and strictness. Regarding cultural perspective, teachers from these three countries exhibited similar conceptualizations of closeness, conflict, fairness, increasing student motivation, patience, and strictness, whereas the conceptualization of dependency, authority, balance, and distance may be influenced by (collectivistic versus individualistic) culture. Moreover, the manifestations of TSR varied across countries, highlighting the influence of cultural factors such as cultural norms, collectivistic versus individualistic values, and the perceived legitimacy of teacher authority. These findings shed light on the complexities of TSR across countries and emphasize the significance of culturally sensitive approaches in fostering positive TSR in education.