Abstract

OF THE THESIS RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN A MIDDLE SCHOOL BAND DIRECTOR'S ATTIRE AND INCIDENCES OF STUDENT OFF-TASK BEHAVIORS IN THE CLASSROOM by Josephine Camacho Florida International University, 2005 Miami, Florida Professor Carolyn Fulton, Major Professor The purpose of this study was to examine whether a middle school band director's attire had an effect on off-task student behaviors in his classroom. One male middle school band director participated and three of his classes were observed. The study lasted twenty days and consisted of three treatments (casual attire, business casual attire, and formal business attire). A tally sheet was used to determine the number of off-task behaviors per student per minute. The results indicated that in this classroom, the students (of all three classes) were off-task less often when the band director wore business casual attire. This was the clothing that he wore consistently from the beginning of the school year. Straying from this consistency made off-task behaviors in the classroom rise. The most off-task behaviors occurred when the band director wore casual clothing. Off-task behaviors also rose when the band director wore business formal attire.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call