A main objective of classroom management (CM) is to raise students’ attention
to their daily academic work by creating a classroom environment that supports
academic and socioemotional learning. While studies have addressed CM effects
on classroom-level behaviour or students’ academic outcomes, students’ attention skills have been largely overlooked. This randomized controlled trial evaluates the effectiveness of a teacher-targeted CM intervention on students’ selective attention. Twenty-four primary schools were randomized into receiving the Inclusive And Appreciative Classroom Management (IACM) intervention
(treatment) or a general information technology (IT) didactics course (control
condition). All participating 1st-grade teachers and their students (N = 1,160)
were followed for 1 year. Using repeated measurements of the d2 Test of
Attention, we find that the IACM intervention improves students’ selective
attention with .26 standard deviations. The effect is robust to the inclusion of
student- and classroom-level characteristics. All analyses account for the
variation across students, classrooms, and schools.
to their daily academic work by creating a classroom environment that supports
academic and socioemotional learning. While studies have addressed CM effects
on classroom-level behaviour or students’ academic outcomes, students’ attention skills have been largely overlooked. This randomized controlled trial evaluates the effectiveness of a teacher-targeted CM intervention on students’ selective attention. Twenty-four primary schools were randomized into receiving the Inclusive And Appreciative Classroom Management (IACM) intervention
(treatment) or a general information technology (IT) didactics course (control
condition). All participating 1st-grade teachers and their students (N = 1,160)
were followed for 1 year. Using repeated measurements of the d2 Test of
Attention, we find that the IACM intervention improves students’ selective
attention with .26 standard deviations. The effect is robust to the inclusion of
student- and classroom-level characteristics. All analyses account for the
variation across students, classrooms, and schools.