Disciplinary climate and student achievement: evidence from schools and classrooms

Research output: Working paper/Preprint Working paperResearch

802 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Disciplinary climate has emerged as one of the single most important factors related to student achievement. Using data from the OECD Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) 2003 for Canada, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Latvia and Norway we find a significant and nontrivial association between the perceived disciplinary climate in the classroom and students’ mathematics performance in Canada, Denmark and Norway. Furthermore we
exploit country specific class-size rules in order to single out a subsample with classroom-level data (PISA is sampled by age and not by classes) and find that the estimates based on school-level data might underestimate the relationship between disciplinary climate and student achievement. Finally we find evidence for gender differences in the association between disciplinary climate and student achievement that can partly be explained by gender-specific perceptions of the classroom environment.
Translated title of the contributionDisciplinært klima og elevpræstationer
Original languageEnglish
Place of publicationAarhus
PublisherDanish School of Education, Aarhus University
Number of pages30
Publication statusPublished - 10 Oct 2016

Cite this