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EDU453 Power Dynamics and Informal System

The document discusses how the informal social environment, or "climate", of schools and classrooms can influence student achievement and outcomes. It addresses several aspects of school climate, including: - The general atmosphere and culture of the school setting. - How classroom interactions, teaching styles, seating arrangements, and the physical conditions of the learning environment can impact student performance. - How the size of the school and classroom affects factors like participation, interaction, and sense of community. - The importance of friendship groups and social dynamics among students within the classroom. The overarching message is that the informal organizational features and social norms within schools play a key role in shaping the learning experience and should not be overlooked

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
704 views17 pages

EDU453 Power Dynamics and Informal System

The document discusses how the informal social environment, or "climate", of schools and classrooms can influence student achievement and outcomes. It addresses several aspects of school climate, including: - The general atmosphere and culture of the school setting. - How classroom interactions, teaching styles, seating arrangements, and the physical conditions of the learning environment can impact student performance. - How the size of the school and classroom affects factors like participation, interaction, and sense of community. - The importance of friendship groups and social dynamics among students within the classroom. The overarching message is that the informal organizational features and social norms within schools play a key role in shaping the learning experience and should not be overlooked

Uploaded by

Nor Anisa Musa
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Power Dynamics

&
Roles in the
Informal System
The Educational “Climate” &
School Effectiveness
• Climate refers to a general social condition
that characterizes a group, organization /
community, such as the general opinion in a
community’
• climate and culture are the unofficial
happenings and the atmosphere that
pervade each educational setting – warm &
accepting, strict & intolerant, large and
impersonal
• early research indicated that attention to
the school climate could influence student
academic achievement
• therefore, understanding conditions or
environment needed to maximise student
THE VALUE CLIMATE
• The climate/atmosphere of schools &
classrooms includes the schools
architecture, type of classroom, ability &
age grouping and other aspects of the
school.
• The value climate influences motivations,
aspirations and achievement of students
• Schools teach more than reading, writing
and arithmetic. Both the formal and informal
organization includes lessons in values and
morals.
• Though lessons in Morals came up within the
curriculum content of other subjects, seldom
was the purpose of a lesson to instil with
moral content
• Moral education came in other forms such
THE SHOOL CLIMATE & EFFECTIVE
SCHOOLS
The environment/atmosphere, something intangible
forms the school climate.
• School Culture (part of school climate)
• consists of values, beliefs, norms, and customs of
those making up the system
• is to bring about a group feeling of loyalty
• pep rallies, cheering at athletic events, assemblies,
singing – constitute ceremonies common to most
schools (but it is unique)
• norms in both school and a larger culture encourages
the distance between teachers and students
• teachers represent the culture of the adult society and
the dominant group – students have more limited
cultural boundary centered on age- peer group, school
and local community
• teachers are considered ‘different’ by students
• students make their own culture, which is passed on to
each new generation entering the school -: involves
language, dress, humour, music, games and hazing
School Learning Climate

• ‘the normative attitudinal & behaviour


patterns in a school which impact on the
level of academic achievement of the
student body as a whole’ – teacher
expectations, academic norms, students’
sense of futility, role definitions, grouping
patterns and instructional practices

• the concept of effective schools addresses


both formal structural variables & informal
climate variables, recognizing the
interrelationship between the two
• positive school climate emphasizes &
rewards academic achievement, the
importance scholastic success, and the
maintenance of order & fair discipline
• complementing these should be positive
home-school relations: a supportive home
environment for students, involvement of
parents with the school, & support of
students doing homework
• these relationships within the school &
classroom context make up the system of
education that must be manipulated at the
local, state and national levels to improve
schools & make them more effective
CLASSROOM LEARNING CLIMATE
 The class has often described & viewed as a
self-contained system, sealed off from society
 Psychologists & Sociologists have
concentrated on the ‘one teacher-many
students’ model
 The dynamics of classroom behaviour cannot
be understood unless the importance of the
environment is recognized
 The learning climate is made up of routines
imposed on students in classrooms in order to
maintain control & discipline
 Children must begin to acquire behaviours &
attitudes necessary for classroom learning
before coming to school
 Problems in families, lack of discipline in some
 Students understand their classroom experiences in
many diff. ways, most of which are influenced by
relations among students – especially for early
adolescents, social & personal development needs
suggest that cooperative learning activities are
important & effective
 Classroom climate can produce anti school feelings,
especially in competitive, restrictive classrooms/ it
can produce students who are motivated toward self-
improvement, academic success & enjoyment of
learning

– Classroom Codes: Interaction in the


classroom
 the type & extent of classroom interaction is related
to teacher styles, which can be grouped into 3 types:
 AUTHORITARIAN : Formal Power is vested & used by
 the daily student-teacher interactions &
interpersonal relations determine the
atmosphere of the classroom
 The classroom dynamics (the rules that govern
interaction, power relationships between
teachers- students & how these relate to the
social class of students) lead to the social
reproduction of class.
 Classrooms have interaction ‘codes’ – rules,
practises, & agencies regulating communication
that determine e the distribution of power
 Code refers to a ‘regulative principle which
underlies various message systems, especially
curriculum & pedagogy’
 Pedagogy refers to the transmission of
knowledge, usually through structured curricula
 Among the codes are hierarchy – the interaction
between transmitter (teacher) & the acquirer
(student); the sequencing & pacing / progression
STUDENT FRIENDSHIP &
INTERACTION PATTERNS IN THE
CLASSROOM
 Who students ‘hang-out’ with is an important part of
the informal experience in schools.
 These friendship patterns affect each student’s
peer-group affiliation and in turn aspirations for
educational attainment.
 Student friendship patterns and interaction vary
depending on whether the classroom is structured in
an open or traditional manner.
 Open, flexible, and democratic classrooms stress the
affective or emotional growth of students, whereas
traditional classrooms are teacher centered & often
stress the basics.
 Students in open classes had fewer best friends but
more general friendship where else in traditional
 All children need social peers & close friends to feel
that they belong; to the extent that teachers can
facilitate these relationships, children’s
achievement may improve.
 There are clear differences between female and
male popularity & friendship patterns: Females are
closely knit & egalitarian, sharing intimacies &
problems; Males are loosely knit, with clear status
hierarchies based on shared activities such as
sports.
 The organizational structure of a school can also
affect interactions.
 Interracial friendships are important as a training
ground for future work environments and as an
influence on college aspirations & attendance – the
closer the peers, the greater the influence,
especially in the same track and gender.
 Teachers often manipulate the classroom situation
in order to have better control over interaction
Seating arrangements &
Physical conditions in
classrooms and schools
 A persistent question in the field of school facilities
planning is the relationship between the building
environment & the performance & behaviour of
users, particularly students.
 Evidence points to the influence of classroom
structure & school conditions in the achievement of
students.
 The location of a student’s seat affects both that
student’s behaviour and the teacher’s attitude
toward the student.
 Students focus better on individual tasks when they
are in rows.
 For some tasks, sofas and effective room décor,
 Attention has also been paid to the physical
conditions that produce the best working
conditions, including open-space programs, school
building age, thermal factors, visual factors, colour
and interior painting, hearing factors, building
maintenance etc.
 Researchers found that the most important factors
affecting student performance & achievement were
the thermal environment, lighting, adequate space,
and equipment & furnishings, especially in science
education.
 Other factors, such as types of seats, wall colour,
shape of room, music & noise level in & outside the
classroom, all have some affect on learning, though
evidence in this field is scanty.
 Concerns about classroom & school health hazards
abound. Some research (GAO) been made and
found out in US, 1 in 8 schools is old, dilapidated,
and in poor condition for learning and 25% lack of
Size of school and classroom
 One assumes that ‘smaller is better’ in the classroom – that
smaller class meant fewer problems, more interaction &
communication between teachers and students. (Research
revealed that reduced class size increased achievement &
improved instruction.)
 However, teachers do not take advantage of the smaller class
size to create climates more conducive to learning(Galton, 1998);
teacher training is important to maximise learning potential in
small classes.
 Students can play a more active role in school life, and interact
more informally with teachers & administrators in smaller
schools.
 In contrast, the climate in large schools leads students to be
more passive with adults, to be followers, to depend on others to
manage their affairs, and to have fewer leadership opportunities.
 Percentage of participation decreased with increased size of the
school.
 Certain types of activities, such as hobby clubs, can increase in
size to include any number, but other activities-athletic teams,
music & drama-are inelastic; students attending larger schools
are at a disadvantage because a smaller percentage of the
school population can participate.
Architecture of schools
 Architectural designs reflect the purpose that a building is to
serve; in turn, the design influences activities within a building,
and how these will interact with surrounding activities &
buildings.
 School architectural style & sites make schools stand out
among buildings, indicating their distinct function.
 Whether school buildings are squeezed between other
buildings or located on sprawling campuses, their fenced-in
area or other physical separation distinguishes them from the
community at large.
 Some educators object to this physical isolation from the
surrounding community.
 Separation isolates schools from valuable interactions with the
wider community.
 Yet it serves the function of concentrating students in
one place for one specific activity.
 A school is composed of many dynamic parts that fir
together, from buildings that make possible certain
interaction patterns to the atmosphere/climates that
influence the learning process.
 All these are part of the complex informal system of
education.

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