Evidence for General and Domain-Specific Elements of Teacher-Child Interactions from Educational and Psychological Research


Authors : G. Vinoth

Volume/Issue : Volume 10 - 2025, Issue 9 - September


Google Scholar : https://tinyurl.com/66u8bp45

Scribd : https://tinyurl.com/5n7kb34m

DOI : https://doi.org/10.38124/ijisrt/25sep727

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Abstract : Improving educational achievements for people and, for many, raising living standards, is a national priority for many nations throughout the world. One way to do this is by investing in tactics that make teachers more successful. In this section, we show how, regardless of cultural background, instructors may have a beneficial impact on their students' growth and learning via the interactions they have with them. We think of the interactions between teachers and students as processes that are close by, and thus drive, the engagement and learning of the students. It is evident from the evidence that interactions may be observed to evaluate their quality and enhanced via interventions in professional development. We offer a framework that explains fundamental aspects of successful teacher-student interactions that seem to be consistent across these extremely diverse contexts and cultures, based on our experience and data collected from tens of thousands of observational studies worldwide. In order to investigate the impact of interaction quality on student outcomes worldwide, we survey studies that assess this paradigm in various settings. We also provide recommendations for educational policy and practice as well as potential avenues for further study and examine the framework's cross- cultural applicability.

Keywords : General and Domain-Specific Elements; Teacher-Child Interactions; Educational and Psychological Research; Instructions for Learning.

References :

  1. Spilt, J.L., Verschueren, K., Van Minderhout, M.B., & Koomen, H.M. (2022). Practitioner Review: Dyadic teacher-child relationships: comparing theories, empirical evidence and implications for practice. Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.
  2. Shinn, M.M., Timmer, S.G., Torres, E.L., & Weir, A.E. (2024). Teacher–Child Interaction Training—Group Coaching (TCIT-GC): removing barriers to advancing classroom behavioral health. Journal of Research in Innovative Teaching & Learning.
  3. Jirawon, T. (2021). Identity-related attitude in the child development centres for protecting educational asylum of early childhoods: From rural communities to schooling cities. Journal of Advanced Pediatrics and Child Health.
  4. Polovina, O., & Stadniichuk, M. (2023). Nature of creative abilities of three-year-old children: philosophical and psychological aspects. Pedagogical Education:Theory and Practice.
  5. Abbas, A., Aftab, M.J., & Naz, I. (2025). Experience of University Teacher on Self-Esteem of Visually Impaired Students. Research Journal for Social Affairs.
  6. Hood, P. (2019). Does Early Childhood Education in England for the 2020s Need to Rediscover Susan Isaacs: Child of the Late Victorian Age and Pioneering Educational Thinker? Genealogy.
  7. Saragih, E., Hashim, H.U., Junaid, A., Nababan, T., & Nababan, T.M. (2024). Contextualizing primary school teachers’ perception of the parent-child relationship. Psikologia: Jurnal Pemikiran dan Penelitian Psikologi.
  8. Litvinenko, I., & Bogdan, L. (2020). Psychological diagnosis of the safety of the educational environment of the educational institution. Scientific Visnyk V.O. Sukhomlynskyi Mykolaiv National University. Psychological Sciences.
  9. McKeown, S., Vezzali, L., & Stathi, S. (2025). Understanding and harnessing intergroup contact in educational contexts. The British Journal of Social Psychology, 64.
  10. Claxton, G. (2022). Cyberbullying in Middle School Students: An Intervention Using an Educational Mobile Application for Caregivers: A Pilot Study. Journal of the Georgia Public Health Association.
  11. Koryakina, T.G., Arkhipova, S.N., & Neustroeva, E.A. (2024). Practical training of future teachers as prevention of psychological barriers in inclusive education. Perspectives of Science and Education.

Improving educational achievements for people and, for many, raising living standards, is a national priority for many nations throughout the world. One way to do this is by investing in tactics that make teachers more successful. In this section, we show how, regardless of cultural background, instructors may have a beneficial impact on their students' growth and learning via the interactions they have with them. We think of the interactions between teachers and students as processes that are close by, and thus drive, the engagement and learning of the students. It is evident from the evidence that interactions may be observed to evaluate their quality and enhanced via interventions in professional development. We offer a framework that explains fundamental aspects of successful teacher-student interactions that seem to be consistent across these extremely diverse contexts and cultures, based on our experience and data collected from tens of thousands of observational studies worldwide. In order to investigate the impact of interaction quality on student outcomes worldwide, we survey studies that assess this paradigm in various settings. We also provide recommendations for educational policy and practice as well as potential avenues for further study and examine the framework's cross- cultural applicability.

Keywords : General and Domain-Specific Elements; Teacher-Child Interactions; Educational and Psychological Research; Instructions for Learning.

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Paper Submission Last Date
31 - December - 2025

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