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Student's and Classmates' Prosocial Behavior predict Academic Engagement in Middle School. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The social climate of a classroom significantly influences students' academic engagement, but more research is needed on the impact of peer prosocial behavior.
  • A study involving 905 middle school students examined how perceptions of classmates' prosocial behavior related to academic engagement over the school year.
  • Results indicated that perceiving peers as helpful led to increased prosocial behavior in students, which in turn positively impacted their cognitive, behavioral, and emotional engagement in school.

Article Abstract

Students' academic engagement is greatly informed by a classroom's social climate. However, more research is needed regarding how specific peer behavior, especially prosocial behavior, come to shape academic engagement. The present study investigated whether students' perceptions about their classmates' prosocial behavior were associated with their academic engagement (cognitive, behavioral, affective) across the school year. Indirect effects via increases in students' own prosocial behavior were examined. Participants were 905 middle school students from rural, low-income communities in the Midwestern United States (50% girls, 46% boys; M = 12.94 years). Students completed self-report surveys in the fall and spring of the 2022-2023 school year. Results revealed that students' perceptions of their classmates' prosocial behavior were positively associated with students' own prosocial behavior. Students' own prosocial behavior was positively associated with all three dimensions of engagement. The positive indirect effect of classmates' prosocial behavior on engagement through students' own prosocial behavior was significant. The findings highlight the importance of classmates' behavior on individuals' academic engagement and offer insights into classroom-based interventions aimed at improving collective behavior.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10964-024-02027-1DOI Listing

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