Do Observed Teaching Behaviors Relate to Students’ Engagement in Physical Education?
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Date
24/02/2021Estado
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionMetadata
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El objetivo de este trabajo fue analizar la relación entre el estilo interpersonal del profesor y el compromiso comportamental de los alumnos en el aula de educación física. Abstract: Teachers’ behaviors can affect students’ engagement in the Physical Education (PE) setting.
According to self-determination theory, teachers can rely on either a need-supportive or a controlling
teaching behavior, and these behaviors will differently affect students’ outcomes. The main
objective of this research was to analyse how teaching behaviors and some contextual variables influence
students’ engagement in PE classes. The present study adds to the existing literature
through an observation-based design in which real-life examples of need-supportive and thwarting
teaching behaviors, as well as students’ engagement behaviors, have been identified. Thirty-seven
different PE lessons were coded for 5-min intervals to assess the occurrence of 36 teaching behaviors
and five students’ behaviors. Stepwise regression revealed that both structure during activity and
relatedness support could predict student engagement in a positive way. Surprisingly, cold teaching
also emerged as a direct predictor in the last step of the analysis. On the other hand, controlling
and structure before activity behaviors inversely predicted students’ engagement. These four variables
explained 39% of the variance in student engagement, whereas autonomy support did not
correlate with student engagement. These new findings in the field not only confirm the known
relevance of teaching behavior for students’ outcomes but also suggest an unexpected lack of influence
of autonomy support on students’ engagement as well as an association between cold teaching
and students’ engagement. Results are discussed in the light of new approaches, and some practical
implications are provided.
Do Observed Teaching Behaviors Relate to Students’ Engagement in Physical Education?
Tipo de Actividad
Artículos en revistasISSN
1661-7827Materias/ categorías / ODS
Innovación educativa para una formación integral en diferentes etapas y contextosPalabras Clave
teoría de la autodeterminación; estilo interpersonal;behavioral engagement; teaching behavior; self-determination theory; physical education