Teacher attributions, expectations, and referrals for students involved in the child welfare and juvenile justice systems

The primary purpose of this study was to examine differences in the attributions teachers make toward students in the child welfare and juvenile justice systems. The study utilized vignettes and asked teachers to attribute the responsibility for declines in behavior and academic performance to one o...

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Main Author: Anthony, Stephanie Nichole
Other Authors: Missall, Kristen N.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of Iowa 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1426
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5467&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-54672019-10-13T05:01:52Z Teacher attributions, expectations, and referrals for students involved in the child welfare and juvenile justice systems Anthony, Stephanie Nichole The primary purpose of this study was to examine differences in the attributions teachers make toward students in the child welfare and juvenile justice systems. The study utilized vignettes and asked teachers to attribute the responsibility for declines in behavior and academic performance to one of five sources (the student, the parents, the teacher, the court system, or the student's friends). The study further asked teachers to identify the extent to which the changes were due to the student's internal traits and external factors, the likelihood of changes in behavior and academic performance with and without intervention, the teachers' beliefs about their ability to impact change, the amount of time the teachers reported being willing to spend with the students outside of class, and the likelihood of the student pursuing post-secondary education. Teachers were also asked to identify to whom they would first refer the student in the vignette for outside assistance due to declines in behavior and academic performance and then provide all referrals they would make. A total of 224 certified 6th -12th grade teachers in the state of Iowa completed the vignette survey between January 2014 and April 2014. Results indicated that teachers made different attributions toward students on the basis of their involvement in either the child welfare or juvenile justice system. Specifically, teachers attributed the reason for behavioral and academic declines to different sources for students in the child welfare system, the juvenile justice system, and the control condition. Teachers were more likely to attribute academic and behavioral declines to internal factors for students in the juvenile justice system and external factors for students in the child welfare system. Teachers reported students in the juvenile justice system as least likely to change without intervention. The majority of teachers across the three conditions indicated their first referral would be to mental health services within the school. Teachers did not differ in the total number of referrals made, the amount of time until making the referral, the amount of time they would be willing to spend with the student outside of class time in order to impact change, their feelings of efficacy to impact change, and the likelihood of the student obtaining post-secondary education. Finally, limitations of the study are presented, suggestions for future research are discussed, and the implications of this study for teachers and school psychologists are discussed. 2014-12-01T08:00:00Z dissertation application/pdf https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1426 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5467&context=etd Copyright 2014 Stephanie Anthony Theses and Dissertations eng University of IowaMissall, Kristen N. publicabstract Child Welfare System Juvenile Justice System Teacher attributions Teacher Expectations Vignette Research Educational Psychology
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic publicabstract
Child Welfare System
Juvenile Justice System
Teacher attributions
Teacher Expectations
Vignette Research
Educational Psychology
spellingShingle publicabstract
Child Welfare System
Juvenile Justice System
Teacher attributions
Teacher Expectations
Vignette Research
Educational Psychology
Anthony, Stephanie Nichole
Teacher attributions, expectations, and referrals for students involved in the child welfare and juvenile justice systems
description The primary purpose of this study was to examine differences in the attributions teachers make toward students in the child welfare and juvenile justice systems. The study utilized vignettes and asked teachers to attribute the responsibility for declines in behavior and academic performance to one of five sources (the student, the parents, the teacher, the court system, or the student's friends). The study further asked teachers to identify the extent to which the changes were due to the student's internal traits and external factors, the likelihood of changes in behavior and academic performance with and without intervention, the teachers' beliefs about their ability to impact change, the amount of time the teachers reported being willing to spend with the students outside of class, and the likelihood of the student pursuing post-secondary education. Teachers were also asked to identify to whom they would first refer the student in the vignette for outside assistance due to declines in behavior and academic performance and then provide all referrals they would make. A total of 224 certified 6th -12th grade teachers in the state of Iowa completed the vignette survey between January 2014 and April 2014. Results indicated that teachers made different attributions toward students on the basis of their involvement in either the child welfare or juvenile justice system. Specifically, teachers attributed the reason for behavioral and academic declines to different sources for students in the child welfare system, the juvenile justice system, and the control condition. Teachers were more likely to attribute academic and behavioral declines to internal factors for students in the juvenile justice system and external factors for students in the child welfare system. Teachers reported students in the juvenile justice system as least likely to change without intervention. The majority of teachers across the three conditions indicated their first referral would be to mental health services within the school. Teachers did not differ in the total number of referrals made, the amount of time until making the referral, the amount of time they would be willing to spend with the student outside of class time in order to impact change, their feelings of efficacy to impact change, and the likelihood of the student obtaining post-secondary education. Finally, limitations of the study are presented, suggestions for future research are discussed, and the implications of this study for teachers and school psychologists are discussed.
author2 Missall, Kristen N.
author_facet Missall, Kristen N.
Anthony, Stephanie Nichole
author Anthony, Stephanie Nichole
author_sort Anthony, Stephanie Nichole
title Teacher attributions, expectations, and referrals for students involved in the child welfare and juvenile justice systems
title_short Teacher attributions, expectations, and referrals for students involved in the child welfare and juvenile justice systems
title_full Teacher attributions, expectations, and referrals for students involved in the child welfare and juvenile justice systems
title_fullStr Teacher attributions, expectations, and referrals for students involved in the child welfare and juvenile justice systems
title_full_unstemmed Teacher attributions, expectations, and referrals for students involved in the child welfare and juvenile justice systems
title_sort teacher attributions, expectations, and referrals for students involved in the child welfare and juvenile justice systems
publisher University of Iowa
publishDate 2014
url https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1426
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5467&context=etd
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