How Finnish and Swedish Learners’ Academic Self-Control Relates to Time Spent Online in Class, Perceptions of Educator Qualities, and School Appreciation: A Cross-Sectional Comparison
In school settings, self-control is central to the ability of learners to complete their academic work successfully. Learners’ self-control is directly influenced by the ways in which educators execute their work, including their instructional explanations, their classroom management, and the expect...
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doaj-106a02e87cc6495c831d4fa9156b6ec22020-11-25T01:02:12ZengMDPI AGEducation Sciences2227-71022017-08-01736810.3390/educsci7030068educsci7030068How Finnish and Swedish Learners’ Academic Self-Control Relates to Time Spent Online in Class, Perceptions of Educator Qualities, and School Appreciation: A Cross-Sectional ComparisonThomas Arnesen0Eyvind Elstad1Knut-Andreas Christophersen2Department of Teacher Education, Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, P.O. Box 7030, 5020 Bergen, NorwayDepartment of Teacher education and School Research, University of Oslo, P.O. Box 1099, Blindern, 0317 Oslo, NorwayDepartment of Political Science, University of Oslo, P.O. Box 1097, Blindern, 0317 Oslo, NorwayIn school settings, self-control is central to the ability of learners to complete their academic work successfully. Learners’ self-control is directly influenced by the ways in which educators execute their work, including their instructional explanations, their classroom management, and the expectations that they express to their learners. Our research on this phenomenon investigated Finnish and Swedish learners in upper secondary schools. Not only is the use of digital technology very different in these two countries; the autonomy and status of educators are as well. This article compares the empirical significance of antecedents of learners’ academic self-control in the two national settings by surveying 2191 learners in Swedish and Finnish schools. Our analysis applies structural equation modeling to two cross-sectional datasets, and the results reveal that the associations between educators’ instructional explanations, classroom management, and their high expectations on the one hand and learners’ academic self-control on the other are stronger overall among Finnish students than among Swedish students. Furthermore, the association between digital technology use and learners’ perceptions of conflict between school norms and Internet opportunities are much stronger in the Swedish sample than the Finnish sample. Lastly, we discuss the meaning of these results and their possible implications for research and practice.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/7/3/68academic self-controldigital technologycomputersFinlandSwedenclassroom managementinstructional explanationhigh expectationsvaluing school as an institution |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Thomas Arnesen Eyvind Elstad Knut-Andreas Christophersen |
spellingShingle |
Thomas Arnesen Eyvind Elstad Knut-Andreas Christophersen How Finnish and Swedish Learners’ Academic Self-Control Relates to Time Spent Online in Class, Perceptions of Educator Qualities, and School Appreciation: A Cross-Sectional Comparison Education Sciences academic self-control digital technology computers Finland Sweden classroom management instructional explanation high expectations valuing school as an institution |
author_facet |
Thomas Arnesen Eyvind Elstad Knut-Andreas Christophersen |
author_sort |
Thomas Arnesen |
title |
How Finnish and Swedish Learners’ Academic Self-Control Relates to Time Spent Online in Class, Perceptions of Educator Qualities, and School Appreciation: A Cross-Sectional Comparison |
title_short |
How Finnish and Swedish Learners’ Academic Self-Control Relates to Time Spent Online in Class, Perceptions of Educator Qualities, and School Appreciation: A Cross-Sectional Comparison |
title_full |
How Finnish and Swedish Learners’ Academic Self-Control Relates to Time Spent Online in Class, Perceptions of Educator Qualities, and School Appreciation: A Cross-Sectional Comparison |
title_fullStr |
How Finnish and Swedish Learners’ Academic Self-Control Relates to Time Spent Online in Class, Perceptions of Educator Qualities, and School Appreciation: A Cross-Sectional Comparison |
title_full_unstemmed |
How Finnish and Swedish Learners’ Academic Self-Control Relates to Time Spent Online in Class, Perceptions of Educator Qualities, and School Appreciation: A Cross-Sectional Comparison |
title_sort |
how finnish and swedish learners’ academic self-control relates to time spent online in class, perceptions of educator qualities, and school appreciation: a cross-sectional comparison |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Education Sciences |
issn |
2227-7102 |
publishDate |
2017-08-01 |
description |
In school settings, self-control is central to the ability of learners to complete their academic work successfully. Learners’ self-control is directly influenced by the ways in which educators execute their work, including their instructional explanations, their classroom management, and the expectations that they express to their learners. Our research on this phenomenon investigated Finnish and Swedish learners in upper secondary schools. Not only is the use of digital technology very different in these two countries; the autonomy and status of educators are as well. This article compares the empirical significance of antecedents of learners’ academic self-control in the two national settings by surveying 2191 learners in Swedish and Finnish schools. Our analysis applies structural equation modeling to two cross-sectional datasets, and the results reveal that the associations between educators’ instructional explanations, classroom management, and their high expectations on the one hand and learners’ academic self-control on the other are stronger overall among Finnish students than among Swedish students. Furthermore, the association between digital technology use and learners’ perceptions of conflict between school norms and Internet opportunities are much stronger in the Swedish sample than the Finnish sample. Lastly, we discuss the meaning of these results and their possible implications for research and practice. |
topic |
academic self-control digital technology computers Finland Sweden classroom management instructional explanation high expectations valuing school as an institution |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/7/3/68 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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