Relationships Among Parent, Student, And Teacher Responses To The Missouri School Improvement Program Cycle Four Advanced Questionnaire Climate Items And Student Mathematics Achievement On The Missouri Assessment Program
Relationships among Parent, Student, and Teacher Responses to the Missouri School Improvement Program Cycle Four Advanced Questionnaire Climate Items and Student Mathematics Achievement on the Missouri Assessment Program
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE3
Introduction3
Overview of School Climate4
The History of School Climate5
Definition of School Climate8
Dimensions of School Climate9
School Climate and Student Success11
Middle School Climate and Adolescent Needs15
The Evolution of School Climate18
No Child Left Behind (NCLB)19
Teachers: Emotional Aspects of School Climate and Student Impact24
School Administrators and School Climate Intervention25
Systems Level Change and Continuing Professional Development26
Team Building and Communication27
Role of Perceptions in Shaping the Behaviour of People29
Parents' Perceptions of Schools30
Parents Attitudes towards Answering Surveys30
Teachers' Perceptions of Schools31
Students Perceptions31
Assessing School Climate (Connection of dimensions to Missouri AQ) (Stakeholders)32
Parent/Student and Teacher Trust Relationships34
Current State of Math Achievement of 8th Graders in the United States In Relation To Other Countries35
Summary36
REFERENCES38
REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE
Introduction
This chapter of the literature review incorporates the relevant literature on the topic of relationships among parent, student, and teacher responses to the Missouri school improvement program cycle. The literature has been extracted from electronic libraries, journals, books, articles, etc.
This chapter addresses the No Child Left behind Act and its accountability mandates, which forms the basis for current schooling contexts and plays a significant role in the way that teachers, administrators, children, and parents may perceive the school climate. The history of school climate, including the definition of school climate, the dimensions of school climate and the effect school climate has on academic achievement will be reviewed. In addition, this chapter addresses middle school climate, which is the focus of this study. Adolescents' needs are defined and their association with academic learning, and interaction, as it interacts with school climate are discussed.
Lastly, this chapter examines the dimensions of school climate and how those dimensions are associated with the survey used in this study to measure student, staff, and parent perceptions regarding school climate. In addition, the importance of recognizing student, staff, and parent perceptions of school climate is discussed. The gap in research lies in understanding the specific processes associated with school climate that affect achievement the most. Educators and researchers no longer debate the influence of school climate. The major concerns according to Anderson (1982) are: what should we look at in schools regarding climate, and how should we look at it in order to include all stakeholders.
Overview of School Climate
School climate has been studied for decades. It has been defined variously as the atmosphere, ethos, tone, ideology, community, personality, or milieu of a school (Hoy and Miskel, 2008), how one feels about the school and the people involved in the school (Chandler and Kern, 1996), or how one feels about their experiences in a school.
Only recently, however, has there been a consolidated, formally agreed upon, definition of school climate. The definition refers to four areas of school functioning: 1) physical safety, 2) relationships of those in the school environment, including faculty, students, and parents, 3) methods, and 4) the actual physical environment of the school. This definition of school climate was agreed ...