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Student learning emotions in middle school mathematics classrooms: investigating associations with dialogic instructional practices
Authors:Alyssa Parr  Jamie Amemiya  Ming-Te Wang
Institution:1. School of Education, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, USA;2. Department of Psychology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, USA;3. Department of Psychology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, USA;4. Learning Research and Development Center, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, USA
Abstract:Emotions are central to how students experience mathematics, yet we know little about how specific instructional practices relate to students’ emotions in mathematics learning. We examined how dialogic instruction, a socially dynamic form of instruction, was associated with four learning emotions in mathematics: enjoyment, pride, anger, and boredom. We also examined whether these associations differed by student gender and prior mathematics achievement. The sample consisted of 1307 sixth through eighth grade students (51.6% female, 59.0% White, 30.8% African American, and 10.3% other race; 42.3% receive free/reduced price lunch) from 70 mathematics classrooms. Results indicated that teachers who used more dialogic mathematics instruction had students who reported more enjoyment and pride, and less anger and boredom. Males and low-achieving students reported more positive and fewer negative emotions with greater dialogic instruction compared to their female and high-achieving counterparts.
Keywords:Adolescence  learning emotions  control-value theory  mathematics instruction
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