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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Elementary school teachers adapt their instructional support according to students' academic skills – A variable and person-oriented approach
Marja-kristiina LerkkanenEsko LeskinenJari-erik NurmiPoikkeus Anna-maijaPekka NiemiNoona KiuruMinna Torppasubject
evocative effectSocial Psychologymathematicseducationindividual support and attentionadaptive teachingAcademic achievementbehavioral disciplines and activitiesteacher–student relationshipEducationSchool teachersDevelopmental NeuroscienceAcademic skillsreadingmental disordersDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyMathematics educationStatistical analysista516Life-span and Life-course StudiesPsychologyPath analysis (statistics)Social Sciences (miscellaneous)ta515description
This study examined the longitudinal associations between children’s academic skills and the instructional support teachers gave individual students. A total of 253 Finnish children were tested on reading and math skills twice in the first grade and once in the second grade. The teachers of these children rated the instructional support that they gave each child in reading and mathematics. The results showed that the poorer the student’s reading and math skills were, the more support and attention the student received from his or her teacher later on. However, instructional support did not contribute positively to the subsequent development of the students’ academic skills. The person-oriented analyses showed that a relatively small group of children, that is, those showing the poorest academic skills, received the largest dose of teacher support, both with respect to reading and mathematics.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2015-07-07 | International Journal of Behavioral Development |