24 de abril de 2020

BOREDOM IN THE CLASSROOM ADDRESSING STUDENT MOTIVATION, SELF-REGULATION, AND ENGAGEMENT IN LEARNING.



Boredom in the Classroom is an essential resource for researchers, scientist-practitioners, clinicians, and graduate students in the fields of child and school psychology, educational psychology, social work, and related disciplines.

This brief synthesizes current findings on the many aspects of chronic student boredom, its relationship with negative academic, emotional, and health outcomes, and what professionals can do to best address it. Citing the complexity of this common student emotion, the author spotlights boredom susceptibility during the critical K-12 years. 

The brief analyzes cognitive and emotional attributes of boredom and identifies emotional skills that can be strengthened to counteract it. In addition, the volume features strategies for educators and school counselors to reduce boredom, both internally and in class.

The academic emotion of boredom, interestingly, is one of the most commonly experienced emotions of students in schools (Pekrun, Goetz, Daniels, Stupnisky, & Perry, 2010). It is not an emotion to which teachers have paid much attention. Certainly teachers have had students tell them that they are bored in class but teachers may attribute this emotion to laziness, student anxiety or depression, or to personality variables. School psychologists and other mental health personnel in schools do not have a history of either assessing or providing interventions for boredom in schools.











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