Abstract

There is limited knowledge concerning children’s relationships with their teachers, and specifically, we lack a suitable, culturally appropriate measurement instrument for assessing the teacher-student relationship from the student’s perspective in Asia. This study used attachment theory as a theoretical framework to understand teacher-student relationships. Using a dataset from the Ministry of Education (MOE) of Singapore, the authors developed and validated a student version of the Teacher-Student Relationship Inventory (S-TSRI), with good psychometric properties for Singaporean children. The three-factor S-TSRI model comprising the factors satisfaction, instrumental help, and conflict was first established by exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and confirmed by confirmatory factor analysis (CFA). Through subsequent multigroup CFAs, we found that the factorial invariance was supported across gender, grade levels, and students of different academic levels, represented by the pass and fail groups. The structural model was tested in the total, pass, and fail groups. For the total and pass groups, the factors satisfaction and instrumental help showed significant positive relationships with a sense of school belonging, and negative or non-significant relationships with aggression. The conflict factor showed a weaker negative or non-significant relationship with a sense of school belonging, and a positive relationship with aggression. For the fail group, identical results were obtained with one exception; this was discussed in light of the fail group having a different needs profile. Findings from this study show that the 14-item S-TSRI measure has robust psychometric properties and yields scores that are reliable and valid in this large sample of primary school students from Singapore.

Highlights

  • Teachers play a crucial role in the developmental trajectory of students, and a supportive teacherstudent relationship is a very important determinant of students’ psychosocial and behavioral adjustment (Hughes et al, 1999; Ang, 2005; Mason et al, 2017)

  • We found that the three-factor model was good for the pass group: SBχ2(74, n = 5,851) = 1,260, p < 0.001, comparative fit index (CFI) = 0.990, incremental fit index (IFI) = 0.990, non-normed fit index (NNFI) = 0.988, and root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA) = 0.052; and the fail group: SBχ2(74, n = 615) = 164, p < 0.001, CFI = 0.988, IFI = 0.988, NNFI = 0.985, and RMSEA = 0.044

  • We found that the three-factor model was good for the male group: SBχ2(74, n = 3,190) = 582, p < 0.001, CFI = 0.991, IFI = 0.991, NNFI = 0.989, and RMSEA = 0.046; and the female group: SBχ2(74, n = 3,388) = 851, p < 0.001, CFI = 0.988, IFI = 0.988, NNFI = 0.986, and RMSEA = 0.056

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Summary

Introduction

Teachers play a crucial role in the developmental trajectory of students, and a supportive teacherstudent relationship is a very important determinant of students’ psychosocial and behavioral adjustment (Hughes et al, 1999; Ang, 2005; Mason et al, 2017). A meta-analysis based on 99 studies indicates that there are small to medium associations between the teacher-student relationship and academic achievement, and medium to large associations between the teacher-student relationship and students’ school engagement (Roorda et al, 2011). In an academically at-risk sample of 706 primary school students, a positive teacher-student relationship was found to be related to students’ higher academic achievement, a greater sense of school belonging, and a lower level of externalizing behaviors (Wu et al, 2010).

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