Validating frameworks for understanding classroom processes that contribute to student learning and development is important to advance the scientific study of teaching. This article presents one such framework, Teaching through Interactions, which posits that teacher-student interactions are a central driver for student learning and organizes teacher-student interactions into three major domains. Results provide evidence that across 4,341 preschool to elementary classrooms (1) teacher-student classroom interactions comprise distinct emotional, organizational, and instructional domains; (2) the three-domain latent structure is a better fit to observational data than alternative one- and two-domain models of teacher-student classroom interactions; and (3) the three-domain structure is the best-fitting model across multiple data sets.
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Journals Division
The University of Chicago Press
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Teaching through Interactions
Testing a Developmental Framework of Teacher Effectiveness in over 4,000 Classrooms
Bridget K. Hamre, Robert C. Pianta, Jason T. Downer, and Jamie DeCoster,
University of Virginia
Andrew J. Mashburn,
Portland State University
Stephanie M. Jones,
Harvard University
Joshua L. Brown,
Fordham University
Elise Cappella,
New York University
Marc Atkins,
University of Illinois, Chicago
Susan E. Rivers and Marc A. Brackett, and
Yale University
Aki Hamagami
University of Virginia
ARTICLE CITATION
Bridget K. Hamre, Robert C. Pianta, Jason T. Downer, Jamie DeCoster, Andrew J. Mashburn, Stephanie M. Jones, Joshua L. Brown, Elise Cappella, Marc Atkins, Susan E. Rivers, Marc A. Brackett, and Aki Hamagami, "Teaching through Interactions: Testing a Developmental Framework of Teacher Effectiveness in over 4,000 Classrooms," The Elementary School Journal 113, no. 4 (June 2013): 461-487.
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