Intergenerational Bonding in School: The Behavioral and Contextual Correlates of Student-Teacher Relationships

Citation

Crosnoe, R.; Johnson, M. K.; & Elder, G. H., Jr. (2004). Intergenerational Bonding in School: The Behavioral and Contextual Correlates of Student-Teacher Relationships. Sociology of Education. vol. 77 (1) pp. 60-81

Abstract

To explore the significance of social integration in the educational system, this study examined whether student-teacher relationships predicted two important student behavioral outcomes (academic achievement and disciplinary problems); whether these within-school intragenerational relationships were predicted by the structural, compositional, and climate-related characteristics of schools; and how the behavioral and contextual correlates of student-teacher relationships varied by race-ethnicity. Our findings, based on nationally representative panel data, indicated that stronger intergenerational bonding in school was associated with higher academic achievement, especially for Hispanic American girls, and with a lower likelihood of disciplinary problems, especially for white girls. Moreover, these intragenerational bonds were stronger in schools with several characteristics (private sector, greater racial-ethnic matching between students and the student body, greater perceived safety, and lower socioeconomic status), although these associations also differed by race-ethnicity.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/003804070407700103

Keyword(s)

School

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Sociology of Education

Author(s)

Crosnoe, R.
Johnson, M. K.
Elder, G. H., Jr.

Year Published

2004

Volume Number

77

Issue Number

1

Pages

60-81

DOI

10.1177/003804070407700103

Reference ID

285