You will research and read one academic article for each annotated bibliography, preferably on a topic that will go beyond the content you have learne
You will research and read one academic article for each annotated bibliography, preferably on a topic that will go beyond the content you have learned so far and that delves deeper into an area of interest that will benefit you.
- Research Criteria: An article from an academic journal found through EBSCOhost databases at EU.
- Writing Criteria: In 300 words (Time Roman, 12-font, double-spaced, 5-6 sentences), summarize your article and indicate how it will be a useful reference for Part IIB.
Teacher Influences 1
Chen, J., Jiang, H., Justice, L. M., Lin, T.-J., Purtell, K. M., Ansari, A. (2020). Influences of
teacher-child relationships and classroom social management on child-perceived peer social
experiences during early school years. Frontiers in Psychology, 11, 2746.
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.586991
Influences of Teacher-Child Relationships and Classroom Social Management on Child-
Perceived Peer Social Experiences during Early School Years
Jing Chen
Hui Jiang
Laura M. Justice
Tzu-Jung Lin
Kelly M. Purtell
Arya Ansari
The Ohio State University Acknowledgement The research reported here was supported by the Institute for Education Sciences, through Grant R305N160024 awarded to The Ohio State University (Justice). The opinions expressed are those of the authors and do not represent views of the Institute or National Center for Education Research. We would like to thank the research team, staff, and families without whom this research would not have been possible.
Teacher Influences 2
Abstract
Interactions with teachers and peers are critical for children’s social, behavioral, and academic
development in the classroom context. However, these two types of interpersonal interactions in
the classroom are usually pursued via separate lines of inquiries. The current study bridges these
two areas of research to examine the way in which teachers influence child-perceived peer social
support and peer victimization for 2,678 children within 183 classrooms in preschool through
grade three. Two levels of teacher influence are considered, namely teacher-child closeness and
conflict relationships at the child-level, and teacher management of interpersonal interactions at
the classroom-level. Results of multilevel regression models showed that teacher-child closeness
was associated with the growth of child-perceived peer social support from fall to spring,
whereas teacher-child conflict and teachers’ behavior management practices were associated
with the change in child-perceived peer victimization across the academic year. These
associations were unique and above and beyond the influence of children’s actual peer social
interactions, including reciprocal friendships and the collective classroom reputation of peer
victimization. Collectively, findings highlight the multi-faceted teacher roles in shaping
children’s perceptions of their peer social experiences during the earliest years of schooling.
Keywords: Child-perception of peer social experiences; peer social support; peer victimization;
teacher-child relationships; classroom social management
Teacher Influences 3
Influences of Teacher-Child Relationships and Classroom Social Management on Child-
Perceived Peer Social Experiences during Early School Years
Children’s interactions with their teachers and peers are both salient features of the
classroom environment and figure prominently in theories concerning children’s development
and learning (Bronfenbrenner & Morris, 2006). Studies find that positive interactions with
teachers and with peers and the way in which teachers manage interpersonal interactions in the
classroom influence children’s concurrent and long-term social, emotional, and academic
development (e.g., Hosan & Hoglund, 2017; Jerome et al., 2009; Kochenderfer & Ladd, 1996;
Ladd et al., 2017). However, much of the extant literature has considered the influence of
teachers and peers separately (Hughes & Im, 2016; Wang et al., 2016). Consequently, we know
little about the roles of teachers in optimizing children’s perceptions of their peer social
experiences and whether teacher influences are above and beyond children’s actual peer social
interactions. This an important gap in knowledge because researchers have argued that children’s
perceptions of their peer social experiences might be more predictive of their social and
psychological well-being and school success than their actual peer interactions (Betts et al.,
2013; Önder et al., 2019; Troop-Gordon et al., 2019). Thus, the current study examines multiple
levels of teacher influences, including teacher-child relationships (i.e., closeness and conflict) at
the child-level and teachers’ classroom management of interpersonal interactions at the
classroom-level, on two aspects of peer social experiences from children’s perspective: peer
social support and peer victimization.
Significance of Child-Perceived Peer Social Experiences
Peer social support and peer victimization are two important aspects of children’s
classroom experiences. Peer social support refers to supportive behaviors from peers that can
Teacher Influences 4
enhance children’s functioning and resilience to difficulties (Bakalım & Taşdelen-Karçkay,
2016). Bakalım and Taşdelen-Karçkay argued that peer social support provides children with
emotional comfort that protects children against anxiety and stress, helps them cope with
difficulties via guidance and feedback. Indeed, peer social support is associated with a range of
positive outcomes, including children’s motivation, attention, academic attitudes, and
achievement (Bursal, 2017; Coolahan et al., 2000). Thus, peer social support is considered as a
primary indicator of school adaptiveness and academic success from preschool through
elementary school and above (Blandon et al., 2010; Coolahan et al. , 2000).
Peer victimization, on the other hand, has been linked with school maladjustment, which
refers to physical and emotional harms children receive from peers, such as being hit and teased.
Studies find that peer victimization is a precursor of loneliness and school avoidance (Buhs &
Ladd, 2001; Kochenderfer & Ladd, 1996) and is associated with low self-esteem, depression,
external behavioral problems, and academic failure (Alsaker, 1993; Blandon et al., 2010; Ladd et
al., 2017; Olweus, 1992). Researchers report that children who experience peer victimization
tend to be less engaged classroom activities, which, in turn, is associated with their emotional
adjustment difficulties and limits their access to opportunities and resources that are essential for
social and academic development (Blandon et al., 2010; Buhs & Ladd, 2001).
Although children’s perceptions of their peer social experiences are related to their actual
peer social interactions (Kochenderfer & Ladd, 1996), only a few studies have conceptually
differentiated children’s perceived peer experiences from their actual peer experiences. This
differentiation is important because some researchers suggest that perceptions of being supported
by peers reflect children’s competency in peer interactions, which is associated with their
learning behaviors and school success (Blandon et al., 2010; Coolahan et al., 2000). Specifically,
Teacher Influences 5
in the literature of peer isolation, the distinction between objective isolation and perceived
isolation has been established, with the former representing the actual quantity of peer
interactions and the latter capturing loneliness or the feeling of being isolated by peers (Danese
et al., 2009; Cacioppo & Hawkley, 2009).
Differentiating perceived from actual peer social experience is also meaningful because
children’s perceptions might be more strongly associated with their social and emotional well-
being. On the one hand, children’s perceptions of their peer social experiences can shape their
self-perceptions or self-worth, which can then influence children’s social behaviors (Ogelman et
al., 2019) and their levels of being liked by peers (Önder et al., 2019). Önder et al. explained that
self-perception reflects one’s own competence and personality, which is established when
children perceive their strengths and weaknesses when interacting with others and that children
with low self-perception are likely to be passive and timid in peer interactions, which would
contribute to their being less liked by peers. On the other hand, Troop-Gordon et al. (2019)
discussed that support and victimization experiences in peer groups build children’s beliefs about
peers, which, according to social information processing theories, would shape their behavioral
and emotional responses to future interpersonal events. Some suggest that perceived isolation
tends to result in more severe and enduring consequences than objective isolation, because the
perceptions of being isolated can alter individuals’ social reasoning and information processing
(Danese et al., 2009; Cacioppo & Hawkley, 2009). Specifically, Cacioppo and Hawkley
explained that the perception of being isolated by peers may trigger children’s confirmatory and
memorial bias and can lead to their negative interpretations of peers’ social moves, which in turn
may contribute to children’s misbehaviors and emotional maladaptiveness. Hence, although
perceived and actual peer social experiences are rarely distinguished in the broader sense of peer
Teacher Influences 6
social experience, it stands to reason that perceived peer social support and perceived peer
victimization would shape children’s understandings about themselves and about others.
Therefore, there is a need to examine factors that may influence children’s perceptions of their
peer social experiences.
Teacher Influences on Peer Social Experiences
Besides peers, teachers represent another key dimension of classroom ecology (Hamre &
Pianta, 2001; Jerome et al., 2009). As noted earlier, however, interactions with teachers and
interactions with peers tend to be discussed separately (Hughes & Im, 2016; Wang et al., 2016),
except for only a few studies as elaborated below; such work has suggested that teachers’
relationships with individual children and their classroom social management can shape
children’s peer social experiences in the classroom.
For individual children, their interactions with teachers matter to their social experiences
with peers. This is because teacher-child interactions can be observed by all classmates, which
helps classmates draw inferences about children’s attributes and likeability and form a classroom
consensus about children’s reputations (Hughes & Im, 2016). Further, teacher-child closeness is
grounded in positive interactions, such as warm and open communications, between a teacher
and a child (Birch & Ladd, 1997), which forms a secure base for children to feel being cared and
connected to the classroom environment. Teacher-child closeness is associated with children’s
engagement in classroom activities and their social competences and peer acceptance (e.g., Birch
& Ladd, 1997; Gest & Rodkin, 2011; Hall-Lande et al., 2007; Pianta & Stuhlman, 2004).
Children with close relationships with teachers may also receive greater support from teachers,
which contributes to their social and academic development (Hamre & Pianta, 2001). On the
contrary, teacher-child conflicts contribute to peer disliking as well as school avoidance,
Teacher Influences 7
externalizing behaviors, and decreased prosocial behaviors and cooperation (Hamre & Pianta,
2001; Hughes & Im, 2016).
At the classroom-level, teachers’ classroom management of interpersonal interactions
(i.e., classroom social management) serves to shape children’s peer social experience. Classroom
social management is a challenge and critical task for teachers, which requires them to be aware
of children’s social needs and to afford developmental opportunities for children to positively
interact with peers from diverse backgrounds (Farmer, Hamm, Dawes, Barko-Alva, & Cross,
2019). A commonly used tool to capture classroom social management is the Classroom
Assessment Scoring System (CLASS; Downer et al., 2012; Hamre & Pianta, 2007; Pianta et al.,
2008), which features three domains of classroom management based on social and instructional
interpersonal interactions (i.e., emotional support, classroom organization, and instructional
support). These three domains are further categorized into nine dimensions. The current study
includes four dimensions that mainly focus on the social aspect of interactional interactions,
naming positive climate, which refers to interactions between teachers and children and among
children that feature enthusiasm, enjoyment, and respect; negative climate, which refers to
classroom interpersonal interactions that involve anger, aggression, or harshness; teacher
sensitivity, which represent the extent to which teachers provide comfort, reassurance, and
encouragement based on individual children’s needs; and behavior management, which refers to
teachers’ effectiveness in preventing and redirecting children’s misbehaviors. Warm and
sensitive interactions with teachers and well-managed classrooms promote classroom
inclusiveness and facilitate social connections among children, through which children develop
social and emotional competences, reduce problematic behaviors, and become less vulnerable to
peer victimizations (Cappella & Neal, 2012; Downer et al., 2012; Hamre & Pianta, 2001).
Teacher Influences 8
Although teachers can influence children’s peer social experiences via multiple avenues
as reviewed above, few studies have taken into account different levels of teacher influences
simultaneously. Farmer et al. (2019) discussed that teachers are not only members in the
classroom society interacting directly with individual children, but, at the same time, they also
are leaders who act as an authority and a facilitator to manage classroom dynamics and to ensure
children following the rules. Hence, the current study aims to capture teachers’ multi-faceted
roles to have a more comprehensive understanding of teacher influence on children’s peer social
experiences in the classroom.
The Current Study
The current study focuses on children from preschool through grade three; during these
grades, positive peer experiences provide essential support to children’s development and
learning, whereas peer victimization occurs relatively more often than that in the later grades
(Ladd et al., 2017; Kochenderfer & Ladd, 1996). Thus, there is a need to investigate teacher roles
in managing classroom social dynamics during children’s primary years of schooling.
Although there has been some research examining certain teacher influence on children’s
peer social experiences, it is not clear whether teacher influences operate above and beyond the
influence of children’s actual peer social interactions. For the purpose of this study, children’s
actual peer interactions were operationalized as the number of reciprocal friendships and their
classroom reputation of peer victimization. Friendship is considered as the most important source
of peer support, which provides children with a context for skill acquisition and development and
helps children to validate their shared beliefs and identifies (Gifford-Smith & Brownell, 2003;
Ladd et al., 1996). Further, compared to unilateral friendships (i.e., one child identifies the other
as a friend but not vice versa), reciprocal friendships (i.e., children mutually identify each other
Teacher Influences 9
as friends) tend to have higher quality, are more stable, and, therefore provide greater peer
support (e.g., Quinn & Hennessy, 2010). Classroom reputation of peer victimization reflects the
consensus among all classmates about the extent of harassment one experiences from peers.
Hughes and Im (2016) discussed that children’s disliking of a child tends to go beyond dyadic
antipathy and would be contributed greater by group-based reputation based on shared
observations. Both reciprocal friendship and classroom reputation of peer victimization
triangulate the perceptions from both children and peers, which, therefore, would be less biased
by individuals’ opinions.
In all, the current study aims to examine multiple levels of teacher influence on child-
perceived peer social support and peer victimization in the spring of the academic year when
controlling for those in the fall. Teacher influences include teachers’ closeness and conflict with
individual children and their classroom social management at the classroom-level as represented
by observations of positive climate, negative climate, teacher sensitivity, and behavior
management. A sub-aim is to determine whether the above teacher influences on children-
perceived social experiences are unique and operate beyond the influence of their actual peer
interactions manifested as the number of reciprocal friendships and classroom reputation of peer
victimization.
Methods
Participants
This study is part of a large federally funded project focused on advancing understanding
of early childhood learning experiences from preschool (pre-kindergarten) to third grade. The
study sample consisted of two cohorts of participants, recruited from two large school districts in
Teacher Influences 10
a Midwestern state. Recruitment procedures were carried out in accordance with protocols to
protect human subjects as approved by the institutional review board (IRB) of the university.
Before the school year started, informational sessions were held in schools located within
district borders to recruit teachers. All children in classrooms taught by participating teachers
were eligible to enroll, and consent packets were sent home via backpack mail. Most participants
were recruited in the fall, although additional preschool classrooms were added in winter and
spring to meet recruitment goals. Consented teachers were asked to complete questionnaires
about their classrooms, their children, their teaching practices, and their own background
information. Consented children were administered direct assessments in fall and spring of the
school year.
The sample included 43 schools, 183 classrooms, and 2,678 consented children. As
summarized in Table 1, 50% of the participating children were girls, 66% were White, and 13%
were Hispanic/Latino(a). Twelve percent of the children came from households that primarily
spoke a language other than English and 10% of children had identified disabilities. Annual
family income was distributed bimodally with 27% of the participating families falling in the
lowest income bracket ($30,000 or lower) and 31% in the highest income bracket ($120,001 or
higher). Forty-five percent of the children’s mothers completed four-year college education or
higher. At the classroom level, an average classroom had 22 children (range = 12 ~ 29). Teachers
were mostly female (97%), White (96%), and non-Hispanic (99%). On average, they were 38
years old with 13 years of teaching experience. Ninety-four percent of the teachers had a
bachelor’s degree or higher, and 82% had a teaching certificate.
Measures
Teacher Influences 11
To address the aims of the current study, we included measures of child-perceived peer
social experiences, teacher-child relationships, classroom social management, and actual peer
social interactions. Children’s family background and demographic information were collected
from caregiver and teacher questionnaires at the beginning of the school year.
Child-perceived peer social experiences. In fall and spring of the school year, one-on-
one child interviews were conducted by trained research staff in quiet areas of the school
hallway, and responses were recorded using a tablet in accordance with the approved study
protocols. Based on previous studies of peer relationship and children’s school adjustment
(Asher et al., 1984; Kochenderfer & Ladd, 1996; Ladd, 1990; Waters et al., 2012), the research
team developed measures of perceived peer social support comprising a total of 11 items (e.g.,
“How often would kids in your class help you if you are hurt?” and “How often would kids in
your class tell you you’re good at things?”) and perceived peer victimization consisting of four
items (e.g., “Does anyone in your class ever hit you?” and “Does anyone in your class ever say
mean things to you?”). All items used a three-point frequency scale (0 = Never, 1 = Sometimes, 2
= A lot), and the internal consistency (Cronbach’s alpha) ranged from .75 to .78 across scales and
time points. The responses from items on the same scale were averaged to create composite
scores for each child. In the analysis, spring scores were used as outcomes, and fall scores were
included as covariates.
Teacher-child relationships. In the fall, teachers reported on their closeness and conflict
with each child using the Student-Teacher Relationship Scale (Pianta, 1991). The closeness
subscale included seven items (e.g., “I share an affectionate, warm relationship with this child”
and “If upset, this child will seek comfort from me”) and the conflict subscale contained eight
items (e.g., “This child and I always seem to be struggling with each other” and “Dealing with
Teacher Influences 12
this child drains my energy”). All items used a five-point Likert-type scale (0 = Definitely does
not apply, 4 = Definitely applies) and the scales demonstrated strong internal consistency (alphas
ranged from .88 to .94). For analysis, the mean score of each subscale of the teacher-child
relationship was calculated for each child.
Classroom social management. Teacher’s classroom social management was captured
in the winter with the Classroom Assessment Scoring System (CLASS, Pianta et al., 2008). As
noted earlier, although the original CLASS includes nine dimensions, the current study focuses
on four dimensions mainly from the social domain, including 1) positive climate, which reflects
the warmth, respect, and enjoyment communicated by verbal and non-verbal interactions, 2)
negative climate, which assesses the overall level of expressed negativity among teachers and
children in the classroom, 3) teacher sensitivity, which refers to the teacher’s awareness and
responsiveness to the various needs of individual children and the entire class, and 4) behavior
management, which encompasses the teacher’s use of clear behavioral expectations and effective
methods to prevent and redirect misbehavior. In each classroom, trained and reliable research
staff conducted two 30-minute observation cycles, where observers live-coded the teacher’s
practice or behavior as it contributed to the overall classroom environment on scales of 1 to 7 (1
= minimally characteristic, 7 = highly characteristic). Composite scores for each dimension
were created by averaging across the two cycles. To ensure reliability, research staff completed
extensive training sessions before entering the field, and ongoing quality checks were conducted
via biweekly drift meetings. In addition, 20% of all in-field observations were double-coded, and
inter-rater agreement (i.e., two coders scored within one point of difference on the same
dimension) ranged from .90 to .92.
Teacher Influences 13
Peer social interactions. Peer social interactions including reciprocal friendships and
classroom reputation of peer victimization were collected in the spring based on a peer
nomination approach (Parkhurst & Asher, 1992), which has been found valid for children as
young as preschoolers (Chen et al., 2020; Daniel et al., 2016). We asked children to identify
classmates “who are your best friends” and “who gets picked on or teased?” Preschoolers were
presented with a photo roster of all children in their classrooms to facilitate the nomination,
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