TY - JOUR
T1 - Classroom emotions in civic education: A multilevel approach to antecedents and effects.
AU - Graf, Elisabeth
AU - Stempfer, Lisa
AU - Muis, Krista
AU - Götz, Thomas
PY - 2024/4
Y1 - 2024/4
N2 - Background: Classroom emotions are major predictors of student learning and academic outcomes. Emotions might be of particular significance in civic education, where oftentimes highly controversial and heated debates take place. Aims: We aimed to examine antecedents and effects of emotions in civic education through the lens of the control-value theory. Specifically, we investigated the classroom climate during discussions of political and social issues as an antecedent of students’ enjoyment, shame, anxiety, and boredom, in addition to a possible mediation effect of these emotions on political knowledge and participation as core outcomes in this domain. Sample: Participants were 1162 students from vocational schools (grades 10–13). Methods: Multilevel structural equation modeling was used for the analysis. Results: We found a positive relation between an open classroom climate and enjoyment and negative relations with anxiety and boredom. No support was provided for the relation to shame. Enjoyment related positively, and all negative emotions (shame, anxiety, boredom) negatively to achievement on the knowledge test. All activating emotions (enjoyment, shame, anxiety) related positively to intended political participation. Furthermore, enjoyment mediated the association between classroom climate and intended political participation at the student level. Conclusions: This study strongly supports the theoretical assumptions of the control-value theory. Pedagogically, the results imply that fostering a classroom context that is open to diverse opinions can prevent the experience of negative emotions and increase students’ experience of enjoyment.
AB - Background: Classroom emotions are major predictors of student learning and academic outcomes. Emotions might be of particular significance in civic education, where oftentimes highly controversial and heated debates take place. Aims: We aimed to examine antecedents and effects of emotions in civic education through the lens of the control-value theory. Specifically, we investigated the classroom climate during discussions of political and social issues as an antecedent of students’ enjoyment, shame, anxiety, and boredom, in addition to a possible mediation effect of these emotions on political knowledge and participation as core outcomes in this domain. Sample: Participants were 1162 students from vocational schools (grades 10–13). Methods: Multilevel structural equation modeling was used for the analysis. Results: We found a positive relation between an open classroom climate and enjoyment and negative relations with anxiety and boredom. No support was provided for the relation to shame. Enjoyment related positively, and all negative emotions (shame, anxiety, boredom) negatively to achievement on the knowledge test. All activating emotions (enjoyment, shame, anxiety) related positively to intended political participation. Furthermore, enjoyment mediated the association between classroom climate and intended political participation at the student level. Conclusions: This study strongly supports the theoretical assumptions of the control-value theory. Pedagogically, the results imply that fostering a classroom context that is open to diverse opinions can prevent the experience of negative emotions and increase students’ experience of enjoyment.
KW - Civic education
KW - Classroom climate
KW - Control-value theory
KW - Emotions
KW - Political knowledge
KW - Political participation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85183618718&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.learninstruc.2023.101869
DO - 10.1016/j.learninstruc.2023.101869
M3 - Article
VL - 90
JO - Learning and Instruction
JF - Learning and Instruction
SN - 0959-4752
M1 - 101869
ER -