Cover image for Task and social relationships in classrooms : a study of instructional organization and its consequences
Title:
Task and social relationships in classrooms : a study of instructional organization and its consequences
Personal Author:
Series:
The Arnold and Caroline Rose monograph series of the American Sociological Association
Publication Information:
Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1979
ISBN:
9780521224451

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30000001860851 LB1025.2 B67 1979 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

Moving beyond the assumption that a teacher's personality or expectations are the primary determinants of classroom behaviour to the more complex sociological perspective of group organisation and social relationships, Steven Bossert provides a glimpse inside the 'black box' of the classroom, as well as clear methodological and conceptual implications for future research and policy making. Although common sense tells us that schooling involves social interaction, most studies have ignored the nature of the classroom as a group and have failed to illuminate the link between learning processes and social relationships. The behaviour of each class member must be seen in relation to the overall pattern of teacher and pupil interactions within the group. When the author explores the implications of classroom organisation for group relations, the importance of the structure of resources, roles, expectations, values and verbal exchanges in the school environment fades in relation to that of the structure of tasks, task evaluation systems and supervision. The social organisation of the classroom thus emerges as more significant than individual relationships in understanding behaviour.


Table of Contents

List of tables
Preface
1 Introduction
2 The setting and study design
3 Four classrooms
4 The teacher-pupil relationship
5 Peer relations
6 The impact of task organisation
7 Activity structures and learning: some implications
Appendices
Notes
References