Rahila Ahmed
Follow
Posted 6 year ago
How does the teacher-student relationship affect education?
5 Answer(s)
Nisha Nikam
Follow
Posted 6 year ago Nisha Nikam

Effective teaching is more important to make the good relationship between students and teachers.

Chandni Dabral
Follow
Posted 6 year ago Chandni Dabral

Besides being a teacher he/she should be a good friend who helps the students to remove their hesitation, freely express in the way they develop their knowledge. But we should remind that a teacher can be friendly with the students but they can't be friends. Teachers should be same time a little strict also. Following these guidelines I have had amazing relationship with students.

Pinky Dahiya
Follow
Posted 6 year ago Pinky Dahiya Gurushala Teacher Coach

A Review of Educational Research analysis of 46 studies found that strong teacher-student relationships were associated in both the short- and long-term with improvements on practically every measure schools care about: higher student academic engagement, attendance, grades, fewer disruptive behaviors and suspensions

Rachna Dayal
Follow
Posted 6 year ago Rachna Dayal Gurushala Teacher Coach

students spend more than 1,000 hours with their teacher in a typical school year. That's enough time to build a relationship that could ignite a student's lifetime love of learning—and it's enough time for the dynamic to go totally off the rails. Education watchers have long known that the relationship with a teacher can be critically important to how well students learn. But emerging research is giving a clearer picture than ever of how teachers can build and leverage strong relationships with their students. "People sometimes mistake a kind of casual familiarity and friendliness for the promotion of really deep relationships that are about a child's potential, their interests, their strengths, and weaknesses," said Mary Helen Immordino-Yang, a cognitive neuroscientist at the University of Southern California who studies the effects of emotions and mindsets on learning. "A lot of teachers ... have really strong abilities to engage socially with the students, but then it's not enough," she said. "You have to go much deeper than that and actually start to engage with students around their curiosity, their interests, their habits of mind through understanding and approaching material to really be an effective teacher." In a forthcoming longitudinal study with Bank Street College of Education, Immordino-Yang is tracking how the highly effective teachers of low-income students set classroom norms and feelings of trust and safety for students—but also leverage that foundation to promote students' deeper thinking and engagement.

Shweta Jain
Follow
Posted 6 year ago Shweta Jain Gurushala Teacher Coach

A Review of Educational Research analysis of 46 studies found that strong teacher-student relationships were associated in both the short- and long-term with improvements on practically every measure schools care about: higher student academic engagement, attendance, grades, fewer disruptive behaviors and suspensions