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The Role of Student Characteristics and Teacher Behaviors in Students’ Learner Empowerment
156
Citations
59
References
2009
Year
Student CharacteristicsInstructor Communication BehaviorStudent TeachingEducational PsychologyTeacher-student RelationEducationInstructional ModelsPsychologyTeacher LeadershipTeacher EducationStudent MotivationLearning PsychologyClassroom Management StrategyTeacher DevelopmentBehavioral SciencesSocial SkillsLearning SciencesAbstract Empowered LearnersInstructionTeacher EnhancementPerformance StudiesTeachingInstructional CommunicationTeacher BehaviorsArtsAchievement Motivation
Abstract Empowered learners are more motivated to perform classroom tasks, and they feel more competent in the classroom, find the required tasks more meaningful, and feel they have an impact on their learning process. Previous work has concluded that empowerment is primarily influenced by teacher behavior, which is not consistent with contemporary research on achievement motivation. The focus of the present study was to examine the role of student characteristics (temperament and learner orientation) on empowerment along with the impact of instructor communication behavior (nonverbal immediacy and clarity). Interpretation of results via the motivation model revealed teacher clarity to be the primary predictor of student empowerment and learning. Student temperament and learner orientation had little impact On empowerment. Keywords: Student CharacteristicsTeacher BehaviorsLearner Empowerment Additional informationNotes on contributorsMarian L. Houser Marian L. Houser (PhD 2002, University of Tennessee) is an Assistant Professor in the Communication Studies Department at Texas State University-San Marcos Ann Bainbridge Frymier Ann Bainbridge Frymier (EdD, 1992, West Virginia University) is a Professor of the Department of Communication and Associate Dean of the Graduate School at Miami University
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