Understanding the Correlation between Teacher and Student Behavior in
the Classroom and Its Consequent Academic Performance
Adson R. P. Damasceno, Andressa M. de O. Ferreira and Francisco C. M. B Oliveira
Ceara State University, Av. Dr. Silas Munguba, 1700, Fortaleza, Brazil
Keywords: Education, Student Engagement, Dropout, Classroom Management.
Abstract:
Education in Brazil has reflected in students’ poor academic performance. To reverse this scenario, we propose
a technological ecosystem for classroom management which we call Classroom Management (GSA, acronym
in Portuguese for Gest
˜
ao de Sala de Aula). The technology focuses on increasing teenagers’ performance and
reducing dropout rates. The GSA promotes student engagement in classroom activities; allows the monitoring
of students while performing these activities; creates channels of communication between teacher and student;
automatically addresses the level of understanding of the class; promotes student participation in class discus-
sions. We tested the GSA and got promising results: 1) For more than seventy percent of the students, the use
of technology made them understand the subject better; 2) 85% of them reported that the GSA increased their
participation in the classroom activities; 3) For more than 90% of the students, the class has become more
interesting, and; 4) 88% of them would like to use the system in all disciplines. For teachers, the GSA: 1) Has
not become an object of distraction in the classroom (opinion, 92% of them); 2) It made the students more
participative (89%); 3) It made the class more dynamic (82%) and 4) Would like to use the GSA in all their
classes (81%).
1 INTRODUCTION
According to OECD (2016), In Brazil, about 36%
of 15-year-olds report having repeated their school
year at least once, a proportion similar to that of
Uruguay. Among Latin American countries that par-
ticipated in the International Student Assessment Pro-
gram (PISA) in 2015, only Colombia has a higher
school dropout rate, around 43%. Countries with poor
performance in PISA and higher levels of social in-
equality in school are more prone to such rates of
school repetition.
Students need to be motivated to learn. OECD
(2016) distinguishes two forms of motivation to learn
science: students can learn science because they like
it (intrinsic motivation) and because they realize that
learning science is useful for their plans (extrinsic mo-
tivation), or both. In Brazil, between 2012 and 2015,
the percentage of students who had skipped a day of
school once or twice in the two weeks before the PISA
test increased by 21 percentage points, signaling a de-
terioration in students’ engagement with school dur-
ing the period.
The Vygotsky Activity Theory and Proximal De-
velopment Zone (ZPD) grounded the GSA. (Vygot-
sky, 1980). The first provides a language for un-
derstanding complex real-world activities located in
cultural and historical contexts, such as a classroom.
(Engestr
¨
om, 1987), (Hasan, 2013), (Leontjev, 1981).
As the latter examines the relationship between edu-
cation and development and is commonly associated
with the distance between the actual level of devel-
opment and the level of potential learning develop-
ment of individuals. In this context, we present the
GSA. The GSA implements Theory of Activity in-
volving people will be in activities and involving tech-
nological resources and creates learning opportunities
as promotes ZPD between teacher and pupils, since
these will count on the intervention of the teacher to
the point where they feel the need, obtaining infor-
mation necessary for the practical completion of the
content appropriation process.
This study addresses an initial assessment of GSA
acceptance with a group of teachers and students. The
GSA consists of a suite of applications (Android and
application server), and specialized communication
protocols for the classroom. To achieve this goal,
the GSA implements some strategies, such as promot-
ing student engagement in classroom activities and al-
lowing teachers and pedagogical coordinators to fol-
384
Damasceno, A., Ferreira, A. and Oliveira, F.
Understanding the Correlation between Teacher and Student Behavior in the Classroom and Its Consequent Academic Performance.
DOI: 10.5220/0007729103840391
In Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Computer Supported Education (CSEDU 2019), pages 384-391
ISBN: 978-989-758-367-4
Copyright
c
2019 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
low up on students during these activities. Also, the
GSA provides a secondary communication channel
between teachers and students in a classroom. The
GSA automatically measures the level of comprehen-
sion of the class on the content presented. Another
strategy is the control of the use of the tablets of stu-
dents in the classroom by teachers.
The remainder of this article is organized as fol-
lows. Section 2 describes the problem with the
main elements relating cause and effect in the teach-
ing process in the classroom. Section 3 discusses
the main ideas for solving the problem. Section 4
presents GSA (with its characteristics and functional-
ities). Section 5 outlines the methodology adopted in
the evaluation. Section 6 presents and discusses the
results. Finally, Section 7 presents the conclusions
and identifies possible future work.
2 LOW LEVEL OF
ENGAGEMENT OF THE
STUDENT IN CLASSROOM
A significant challenge for Brazilian education in high
schools is to increase the engagement of students in
the classroom, to raise their school performance. This
work focused on investigating the possibility of ob-
taining an increase in the index of learning and a
decrease in school dropout using technological re-
sources, through the development of an application
to support teachers and students in the high schools
in Brazil’s Northeast (least developed region in the
Country). Figure 1 illustrates the problem and its
leading causes.
2.1 Low Student Performance
According to Souza and de Souza (2013) Communi-
cation and Information Technologies (ICT) help the
studying and simplify the learning by making the
knowledge more structured. Technology facilitates
engagement in the relationship between teachers and
students in class. It is necessary to intervene on the
traditional method of teaching to improve the con-
struction of learning, characterized in a direct and
passive transmission of content and information from
teacher to students. GSA proposes the active partic-
ipation for students in school activities, through in-
teraction with colleagues and teachers, making use of
mediating artifacts, such as tablets and cell phones.
Based on this constructivist model (Castorina et al.,
2013), active learning is defined as a class style in
which students are involved, leading them to take
an active role in their learning process. The use of
tablets enables collaboration among students, which
also promotes learning. Active learning takes the stu-
dent from the traditional passive position and offers
more possibilities for engagement.
Several studies provide evidence of the positive
correlation between increased students engagement
and their increased school performance and their re-
tention of content in contrast to passive reception
(Smith et al., 2005), (Simoni, 2011). The use of
tablets in a classroom increases the level of student
engagement (Shishah et al., 2013). Student monitor-
ing allows teachers to address individual student de-
ficiencies and act upon them (Beyers et al., 2013).
Timid students risk learning less (Frambach et al.,
2014). It is necessary to create forms of participation
of shy students, without exposing them. The use of
devices that allow students’ responses to be automati-
cally corrected and the result displayed to the teacher,
give them the possibility to reinforce concepts that are
not yet wholly assimilated before proceeding (Her-
rmann et al., 2012).
According to Escolar (2017), soon the final years
of elementary school will overcome the last stage of
primary education concerning learning gains, due to
the current high school situation. The alert comes
from the results of the Basic Education Assessment
System (SAEB) 2017 and released by the Ministry
of Education (MEC) and the National Institute for
Educational Studies and Research An
´
ısio Teixeira
(INEP). The results show a high school that has been
almost stagnant since 2009, and with a weak contri-
bution to the cognitive development of Brazilian stu-
dents.
2.2 School Dropout
According to Neri et al. (2009), 4 in every ten brazil-
ian students who dropped out of school claimed disin-
terest as their primary reason for not attending classes.
According to the survey, these young people didn’t
see sense in the subjects taught and affirmed that the
contents didn’t stimulate them to the point of taking
the school seriously. Technologies can help motivate
teenagers and consequently reduce their school eva-
sion, as one solution to circumvent evasion is to adapt
teaching practices to the current generation of schools
by making use of technology as an ally in the class-
room. These young people grew with greater ease of
access to the Internet, with participation profile and
interaction in the more extensive networks. There-
fore, classes that are, in fact, great monologues, don’t
attract them. Proposing new teaching methods and
investing in technologies that supports the teaching-
Understanding the Correlation between Teacher and Student Behavior in the Classroom and Its Consequent Academic Performance
385
Figure 1: This figure was drawn up by the authors of this paper to illustrate the Diagram of the cause and effect of the low
level of student engagement in a classroom.
learning process can help reduce school evasion.
In Brazil, the history of the School Census reveals
a progressive decline in school dropout from 2007
to 2013 at all stages of schooling, but this pattern
changes in 2014 when rates increase. According to
Escolar (2017) between the years of 2014 and 2015
a percentage of 12.9% and 12.7% of the students en-
rolled in the first and second year of high school, re-
spectively, left school. The 9th year of elementary
education has the third highest evasion rate (7.7%),
followed by the third year of high school (6.8%). The
evasion is about 11.2% of total students considering
all high school.
Faced with the harsh reality in Brazilian educa-
tion and observing the main concepts that involve
the teaching-learning process, students and teachers
need technical support to overcome the problem con-
cerning the impact of low academic performance and
school dropout. Therefore, it opens up space for ap-
plications and fosters the production of educational
technologies, programs that are useful in the real
world.
In an article in his technology column in The New
York Times, (Richtel, 2010) argues that mobile tech-
nologies ”are in the DNA of new generations and that
any resistance to its use in the classroom is futile.
The author also discusses concerns related to the dis-
traction brought about by the use of these devices in
the classroom. However, the adoption of such tools in
the classroom may not consider the issue of entertain-
ment an obstacle - the opportunities that arise from
its use are innumerable. Strategies and technologies
need to be created to provide the necessary security
and remove barriers to the entry of devices, such as
tablets, into the classroom. Such devices can be great
learning tools.
3 CREATING LEARNING
OPPORTUNITIES
Encouraging the student to use the recent learnt con-
cepts in a different context creates a vital learning op-
portunity. It is at this moment that gaps in knowledge
arise, the ZPD. The instructor’s attention at this par-
ticular moment is precious, providing the information
needed to validate the concept appropriation process.
Innovative ways to monitor how classroom activities
in the classroom - held - by teachers and pedagogues
to be necessary, the use of tablets facilitates this mon-
itoring.
According to followers of active learning theory
(Clancy et al., 2012), the student is the principal agent
of his learning. This theory can be easily evidenced
by observing the students conducting their research
for their school activities. Aware of their deficits, the
students seek to solve them, the Internet being the pri-
mary means used for this. In this context, the use of
tablets simplify such searches and enable collabora-
tion among students, which also contributes to learn-
ing. Active learning takes the student from the tra-
ditional passive position and offers more possibilities
CSEDU 2019 - 11th International Conference on Computer Supported Education
386
for engagement. Studies show that the greater the en-
gagement, the higher the learning. With this, Internet
research should be stimulated, in the context of the
execution of the activities foreseen in the discipline.
It’s interesting to mention that these ideas are not so
recent. In 600 B.C., the Chinese philosopher Lao Tse
discussed the active learning theory: ”What I hear, I
forget. What I see, I remember. What I do, I under-
stand”.
New knowledge is, in many cases, acquired con-
structively. Like bricks on a wall, complex con-
cepts derive from more elemental ones. When a stu-
dent does not understand a specific idea, its base is
compromised, making it difficult to realize a more
complex concept derived from this more fundamen-
tal first. In traditional classrooms, teachers follow
their lessons assuming that all students are assimilat-
ing the ideas exposed unless someone manifests and
says otherwise. Cases in which students allow the
continuity of the class while maintaining a doubt for
themselves are frequent. Classrooms where students
respond through electronic devices, questions created
to investigate the understanding of the content deliv-
ered until a given point, provide teachers with instant
information about the degree of learning of the class.
Teachers can thus adjust the course of their classes to
enhance the learning level of all students, thus avoid-
ing the snowball effect of misunderstood contents.
The introduction of tablets in the classroom can
also provide the basis for the use of another essential
theoretical model, constructivism (Kutay et al., 2012).
The main idea of the theory is that we learn through
social interactions. At all moment we are learning and
teaching each other. When we engage in debates and
seek to convince others of our points of view, we use
the best of our arguments and all extension of knowl-
edge. Teachers aware of the power of constructivist
theory hold classroom discussions and group work.
Teachers can even allow students to control digital
whiteboards remotely through their tablets, favoring
scenarios of discussion and exposure of each student’s
opinions. The teacher herelf can manage and write
on the digital whiteboard from his tablet. Thus, she
can walk among the students as she writes on the
whiteboard, getting even closer to her class. Focusing
on the use of technology to bring together teachers
and students, students can ask questions directly and
confidentially to the teacher through chats. This new
open communication channel is of great value, espe-
cially for shy students, who benefit from secrecy to
accuse some point not completely understood of the
content exposed by the teacher.
One of the factors that hinder the adoption of these
techniques in the classroom is the time consumed in
their employment. ”Administrative” activities such as
benchmarking or copying content can be significantly
reduced by using technology in the classroom, cre-
ating employment opportunity for superior teaching
strategies.
The technology builds on the theories and strate-
gies outlined above. The GSA was made available to
the national and world market after having passed for
an experimental phase in real classrooms in a large
local school, presenting promising results.
4 CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT
APPLICATION (GSA)
The GSA was designed to mediate the relationships
between teachers and students while copresents in the
classroom through the use of tablets. The software,
of a simple application, can be used in the teaching of
any disciplines. The GSA, with the features described
below, is already available for commercial use. Its
functionalities have been specially developed to im-
prove the dynamics of the class with the use of digital
resources (electronic whiteboards, scanned contents
and tablets with Android technology).
Figure 2 shows the description of the GSA opera-
tional protocol. The first graphic element that stands
out in the figure is the quadrilateral that delineates the
physical space of the room separating the intra-class
components from that extra-class of the solution. The
GSA communications protocol, implemented through
a series of computational services running on the root
server (indicated by the letter A in the figure), man-
ages all communications between the devices. The
tough loss of efficacy of high-density wireless net-
works in educational environments justifies the ex-
istence of a protocol so highly specialized, where it
was evidenced by (Florwick et al., 2011). In this ar-
ticle, the authors show in detail how the addition of
wireless devices (classrooms with more students) ex-
ponentially degrades the effectiveness of the network,
forming a challenging bottleneck to remove.
Aware of the problem, we have developed a spe-
cific communication protocol for the use of the GSA,
which proved useful in this type of environment. The
protocol, however, will require extensions to contem-
plate the requirements of this project. It’s impor-
tant to emphasize that the demand for computational
resources imposed by the protocol is relatively low
and it’s therefore feasible that these services reside
in the same equipment that controls the digital board
(F). Given the GSA protocol, you can use routers (B)
without many sophisticated features, which in addi-
tion to making the solution expensive can cause un-
Understanding the Correlation between Teacher and Student Behavior in the Classroom and Its Consequent Academic Performance
387
Figure 2: GSA Protocol.
desirable side effects such as shadowing. It is also the
protocol that will manage classroom communications
with Pearson products and any other remote services
(E). The solution is also composed of specific appli-
cations for teachers (C), students (D) and pedagogical
coordinators (G).
Between GSA resources, we highlight the Map of
the Classroom. When accessing the application, the
student informs in which chair he is sitting, touching
the image of a green chair on an electronic classroom
map (the red ones represent occupied chairs). The
teacher has access to this map from his tablet, which
allows him to meet all the students by name on the
first day of class. Figure 3 illustrates the room map.
Figure 3: Room map.
Another feature is the Electronic Call. At the be-
ginning of the class, the teacher authenticates himself
in the GSA, discloses the access key to the students
and activates the ”call” option. Automatically, as stu-
dents log in through their tablets, the GSA will record
the presence of all. Figure 4 shows on the map of
the electronic classroom an image of what appears on
each student’s tablet.
As soon as the lesson starts Monitoring happens
and if a student disables the GSA application on their
desk, the teacher will receive a notification informing
what happened. The GSA will then indicate which
student made the deactivation and where in the room
it is positioned.
Figure 4: Electronic call and monitoring.
One feature presented by the application is Con-
tent Sequencing, the teacher starts his presentation
on the electronic whiteboard and with the GSA he has
complete control over the sequencing of content pre-
sentation. It’s this functionality that manages the flow
of information and thus maintains the focus and at-
tention of students. At the beginning of the class, the
teacher projects his or her first slide on the electronic
whiteboard or multimedia projector, makes notes as
he moves through the class, and when he completes
the subject of the slide it passes to the students. Alter-
natively, he can design/share the slides as he projects
them, giving students the opportunity to take notes.
The Electronic Ink counts the pen, eraser, color
palette, thickness of risks, zooming and panning. It
serves as a kind of electronic notebook - the Elec-
tronic Ink is used in the resolutions of questions pro-
posed to the students. Figure 5 illustrates the Elec-
tronic Ink feature.
Figure 5: Electronic Ink.
The student can, through the Chat feature, dis-
creetly send questions and comments to the teacher’s
tablet. It’s a direct channel of communication be-
CSEDU 2019 - 11th International Conference on Computer Supported Education
388
tween the shy student and the teacher.
Together with the Electronic Ink feature, the Au-
tocorrect will give the teacher the possibility to au-
tomatically measure the degree of comprehension of
the students in the course of the class, allowing him
the adjustment of the exposed and the reinforcement
of certain concepts. Figure 6 illustrates the ”Autocor-
rect” functionality.
Figure 6: Example of auto-broker. Student emphasizes the
word (black griffin) and the GSA automatically answers the
answer (green griffin).
With the GSA we seek to solve the problem of the
low level of engagement of the students in the class-
room, impacting on their improvement of school per-
formance and reduction of evasion from the imple-
mentation of strategies listed and discussed below:
1. Promote Engagement of Students in Class-
room Activities. Several studies provide ev-
idence of the positive correlation between in-
creased student engagement and improvement in
content learning and retention, in contrast to pas-
sive reception (Smith et al., 2005) (Hrepic, 2009)
(Simoni, 2011). The use of tablets in the class-
room increases the level of student engagement
(Shishah et al., 2013).
2. Allow the Monitoring of Students, by Teach-
ers and Pedagogical Coordinators, While Car-
rying out these Activities. Student monitor-
ing allows teachers to address individual student
deficits and act upon them (Beyers et al., 2013).
3. Create Secondary Communication Channels
between Teacher and Students allowing Class-
room Use. Shy students risk learning less (Fram-
bach et al., 2014). It’s necessary to create ways
to encourage shy students to participate more ac-
tively during the classes, but without exposing
them.
4. Automatically Measure the Level of Compre-
hension of the Class about the Concepts un-
der Discussion. The use of devices that allow
students’ responses to be automatically corrected
and the result displayed to the teacher, give them
the possibility to reinforce concepts that are not
yet wholly assimilated before proceeding with the
content (Herrmann et al., 2012).
5. Allow the Control of the use of the Students’
Tablets in the Classroom by Teachers. The
GSA experience in the classroom shows that this
functionality is never activated because students
are engaged in the tasks assigned to them by
teachers. However, functionality must be main-
tained, increasing the level of confidence of teach-
ers as it demonstrates to students their authority
and even strengthens in this new scenario.
The technology uses Activity Theory through the
tasks generated between teachers and students as co-
chairs in the classroom with exposure to the applica-
tion. According to (Carroll, 2003), the Activity The-
ory allows us to study several levels of activity com-
bined: from the activity of strict use of a computa-
tional artifact to the broader context of use and design.
It also allows you to modify the scale and study the
connections at multiple levels of activities in which
computational artifacts are used and designed, with-
out establishing a permanent hierarchy in the analy-
sis.
5 METHODOLOGY
In this section, we will present the GSA assessment
methodology. In this evaluation was applied an
experiment to evaluate the impact that the technology
that makes use of the theory of active learning causes
in the engagement of students in the classroom.
Besides, we assess the GSA for validation of its
operation.
Application of the Comparative Questionnaire
to the End of the Experiment
A post-experiment questionnaire was applied, at
the end of the class using the technology. At the time
the activity was completed, the participant answered
the survey, to guarantee the fidelity of the answers
concerning their involvement in the experiment and
with the final objective of ascertaining the acceptance
of the user when using the tool.
At the end of the experiment, the research subjects
answered the questions, with which it was possible
to compare the traditional class with the class using
the supporting technology and observe how the tool
used was analyzed. The issues were elaborated us-
ing a five-point Likert scale, responses ranging from
”strongly disagree” to ”strongly agree.
With the application of this questionnaire we tried
to answer the following questions: Are students more
Understanding the Correlation between Teacher and Student Behavior in the Classroom and Its Consequent Academic Performance
389
motivated to participate in another lesson with the
tool? Teachers and students would like to rely on
this technology in future classes? The device does
not disturb the communication between teachers and
students? We observe the correlation of classroom be-
haviors between teachers and students as to the activ-
ities in which they are involved.
6 DATA ANALYSIS
A large school has closely followed the evolution of
the GSA project. Its conservative stance is justified
since there is a long history in the city of schools that
tried to use tablets in their classrooms and failed. The
school has allowed access to its facilities, students and
teachers, on an experimental character.
With the GSA we taught classes in Mathematics,
Geography, Chemistry, Biology, Portuguese and En-
glish. At the end of their first class with the GSA,
the students answered electronic questionnaires using
the tablets they were using (Likert scale assertions).
Figures 7 and 8 illustrates the results for students and
teachers.
Figure 7: Students result.
Figure 8: Teachers result.
6.1 Discussion
We tested a trial version of the GSA with 123 high
school students and 15 teachers, all members of the
institution mentioned above. Teachers and students
were introduced to the GSA minutes before classes
began. With the training reduced to minutes, the
seamless use of the GSA functionality strongly indi-
cates the adoption of large-scale the GSA in Brazilian
high schools. However, the logistics of training hun-
dreds of teachers and students add undesirable costs
to product adherence and constitutes a barrier to entry
of the product into the market.
The GSA worked perfectly. The teacher and stu-
dent community approved the GSA. Front a positive
evaluation, the college itself acquired some licenses
from the GSA, instructed its IT staff to pursue further
testing and renewed its commitment to continue vali-
dating new versions of the GSA on its premises.
7 CONCLUSIONS
This paper deals with the psychological correlatives
of school performance related to the attitudes of stu-
dents and teachers of the high school in the classroom
captured automatically through the GSA application.
As a contribution of this study, the GSA im-
plementation allows monitoring frequency, engage-
ment in classroom activities and accuracy percentages
among corrected questions by the autocorrect func-
tionality. Besides that, the GSA shows the rate of
neighbors’ correct answers (given the GSA electronic
classroom map functionality), number of notes made
in the electronic notebooks and the number of ques-
tions asked to the teacher (through the chat function).
All these indicators are examples of potential predic-
tors.
As future work, we intend from the tools already
available and in a project to address some interesting
scenarios. Among them, we highlight the possibility
of predicting students’ school performance. The pro-
posed innovation is the construction of a set of perfor-
mance predictors, from the data collection with the
use of the GSA in the classroom. You will not have to
wait for the end of semester tests to know that students
who do not participate in classroom activities or who
do not respond correctly to questions (corrected auto-
matically) will perform poorly. The pedagogical team
of the educational institution together with parents
may use performance predictors, to rescue early stu-
dents with difficulty. The frequency, engagement in
classroom activities, percentages of correct answers
(among the questions corrected by the autocorrect),
CSEDU 2019 - 11th International Conference on Computer Supported Education
390
the rate of correct answers of neighboring students
(given the GSA electronic classroom map function-
ality), the number of notes made (the role to be de-
veloped in the GSA to record these events) are ex-
amples of potential predictors. The challenge here is
pedagogical. How will students and educators react to
the availability of such predictors? What impacts will
these numbers have on educational practices? How
will the parents and guardians be notified and what
will be their reaction? We foresee strong changes
in the relationships between the teaching/learning ac-
tors. Thus, given the depth of impact, the approach
requires some scientific rigor in proposing and evalu-
ating changes in experimental setup.
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