Who Is Responsible for Students’ Challenging Behaviour? A Study of the Causal Attributions of Teachers to Challenging Behaviour in Primary Schools in West Bengal, India
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Understanding the Context
1.2. Literature Review
1.3. Types of Challenging Behaviours
1.4. Causal Attributions of Challenging Behaviours
1.5. Strategies
1.6. Theoretical Framework
2. Researcher Positionality
3. Current Study
- How do teachers perceive challenging behaviours, and what factors do they attribute to challenging behaviours?
- What strategies do primary school teachers identify as effective when addressing challenging behaviours within their classrooms?
4. Materials and Methods
4.1. Participants
4.2. Data Collection
4.2.1. Instrumentation
4.2.2. Procedure for Data Collection
4.3. Data Analysis
5. Results
5.1. Research Question: How Do Teachers Perceive Challenging Behaviours, and What Factors Do They Attribute to Challenging Behaviours?
5.1.1. Types of Challenging Behaviours
BG2: “Students talk too much, do not respond, put things in their mouth, make noise, push each other, scream and use abusive words in class.”
JPB3: “Students talk among themselves, ask too many questions and use loud voices. They feel doing so will make them look like a good student.”
5.1.2. Causal Attributions of Challenging Behaviours
Parent- or Home-Related Causes
LP7: “Parents are not giving them (student) time. both parents are working and coming home late, children are with grandparents or servants.”
JPB2: “There is a lack of discipline at home, children are not instructed at home to follow discipline or even listen to their teachers. Nowadays parents promote children to misbehave.”
“Parents use corporal punishment at home, so students are not happy at school. Parents force students to come to school and it does not help the teachers as they are not interested. Parents fighting at home or family violence affects the child, the child is unhappy and reflect the behaviour at school. Parents showing irresponsible behaviour reflects on the students’ behaviour. Students get angry with their parents and stop focusing at school and fail exams deliberately. Students feel that this way they can take revenge from parents. They fail to understand that it affects them when they are not performing at school or behaving disruptively.”
High Academic Expectations for Students
LP1: “Children at young age tend to drive themselves through their own interests and do not meet their parents’ and teachers’ expectations. So to keep up with high expectations, the child ends up behaving through cheating, or even stealing in class.”
JB2: “Parents were pressuring a student to score higher in his/her tests, which led to anxiety and the made the student misbehave in class.”
JBP3: “Children are pressurized by their parents to perform well in school.”
Social Causes
JPB5: “Parents are unware of school work or their child. Even as teacher if we tell them their children have ADHD they do not respond and choose to ignore. Some of the students are even first-generation learners and their parents do not know anything about education or academics, so they fail to support them at home.”
JPB2: “Parents are involved in electronic gadgets, when child goes back home and sees mother watching television, father, busy with mobile phone, the child is constantly distracted.”
School-Related Causes
JPB6: “There are no ratios maintained in class, there are too many students, and the classwork is not interesting.”
JPB6: “The lessons are monotonous. There should be playgrounds for students. Activities like rhymes, studying through use of colours, activities based instruction, science experiments, clay modelling, and paper cutting allowing students to be more active in classrooms through activities. The purpose should be to make the students enjoy coming to school.”
Government-Policy-Related Causes
KCM1: “Due to banning of corporal punishment the students do not pay attention to classwork at all.”
KCM2: “The government should allow some type of punishment or punishment within a limit, this can help the teachers to manage their classroom.”
Student-Related Causes
JBP4: “Students with ADHD and autism, do not respond and do not understand me or the concept of a teacher in the classroom.”
LP2: “The ones (students) who talk they are the slow learners, they cannot follow instructions in the class, so they distract others also and then everyone is talking.”
5.2. Research Question: What Strategies Do Primary School Teachers Identify as Effective When Addressing Challenging Behaviours within Their Classroom?
5.2.1. Strategies Suggested by Teachers to Manage Challenging Behaviours
Improving Teaching Practices
LP7: “I have to separate the weak student to teach them separately as they cannot cope up with instruction in class.”
LP7: “Students don’t eat and come to school. They are also sleepy and cannot focus. Children are going late to bed because parents are late from work. I allow them to eat and sleep in the class so that they can focus better, and tell them separately what they had missed in the class.”
LP7: “I did extra classes for students who are first generation learners.”
LP7: “There are students who are capable of finishing regular classwork earlier than other students and have the tendency to distract the ones who are still working. Teachers usually provide them with extra work to keep them occupied.”
LP6: “When the student distracts others, I call her close to me, change her sitting position so that I can see her closely. I also try to provide individual attention.”
Collaborating with Parents
LP7: “The student feels happy when the parents show up to pick them up from school, the students need more affection at home and time from parents. I always talk to the parents and try to work out with them. According to me if students are given time and affection at home then they will behave appropriately at school. I am dealing with lot of children so even if I try I cannot give attention to students all the time in the class.”
LP6: “When I come across disinterested students I try to go into depth to see why they are not interested in class. I usually would find that parents were watching TV until late at night and the child slept late too making them tired in class. I try to tell the parents to change but some listen some do not.”
LP6: “Some parents are very strict, they expect that a student, in an examination have to get all correct answers even though the student might not be capable. The students are compelled by strict parents. I talk to parents to not put pressure on the student and in turn it helps them.”
Building Positive Relationships between Students and Teachers
LP1: “I focus on resolving the issues right at the beginning, if I know the background of the child and understand why the child misbehaves in class, I talk to them and assure them that I care for them. This way the child already knows that they are going to get attention and their behaviour improves as well as their academic achievements go up.”
Discipline Strategies
JBP2: “When I see two student’s hitting or fighting, I scold both of them. The victim and the attacker. I tell the victim that it is their responsibility to ask the attacker to stop and complain about the incident, this way if they don’t they are also participating in the fight. I also tend to use firm voice when instructing students about their behaviour.”
6. Discussion
7. Limitations and Recommendations
8. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Demographics |
Number of years in profession: |
Educational qualification: |
Age: |
Gender: |
Prior knowledge in special education: |
Interview questions |
|
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Patnaik, S.; Sharma, U.; Subban, P. Who Is Responsible for Students’ Challenging Behaviour? A Study of the Causal Attributions of Teachers to Challenging Behaviour in Primary Schools in West Bengal, India. Disabilities 2022, 2, 56-72. https://doi.org/10.3390/disabilities2010005
Patnaik S, Sharma U, Subban P. Who Is Responsible for Students’ Challenging Behaviour? A Study of the Causal Attributions of Teachers to Challenging Behaviour in Primary Schools in West Bengal, India. Disabilities. 2022; 2(1):56-72. https://doi.org/10.3390/disabilities2010005
Chicago/Turabian StylePatnaik, Susmita, Umesh Sharma, and Pearl Subban. 2022. "Who Is Responsible for Students’ Challenging Behaviour? A Study of the Causal Attributions of Teachers to Challenging Behaviour in Primary Schools in West Bengal, India" Disabilities 2, no. 1: 56-72. https://doi.org/10.3390/disabilities2010005
APA StylePatnaik, S., Sharma, U., & Subban, P. (2022). Who Is Responsible for Students’ Challenging Behaviour? A Study of the Causal Attributions of Teachers to Challenging Behaviour in Primary Schools in West Bengal, India. Disabilities, 2(1), 56-72. https://doi.org/10.3390/disabilities2010005