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Teacher-Student Relationships and Student Outcomes: A Systematic Second-Order Meta-Analytic Review

  • Valentin Emslander
  • , Doris Holzberger
  • , Sverre Berg Ofstad
  • , Antoine Fischbach
  • , Ronny Scherer
  • Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen
  • University of Oslo
  • University of Luxembourg

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

42 Scopus citations

Abstract

Teacher–student relationships (TSRs) play a vital role in establishing a positive classroom climate and promoting positive student outcomes. Several meta-analyses have suggested significant correlations between positive TSRs and, for example, academic achievement, motivation, executive functions, and well-being, as well as between negative TSRs that result in behavior problems or bullying. These meta-analyses have differed substantially in TSR-outcome relationships, moderators, and methodological quality, thus complicating the interpretation of these findings. In this preregistered systematic review of meta-analyses plus original second-order meta-analyses (SOMAs), we aimed to (a) synthesize the meta-analytic evidence on relations between TSRs and student outcomes, (b) map influential moderators of these relations, and (c) assess the methodological quality of the meta-analyses. We synthesized over 70 years of educational research across 26 meta-analyses encompassing 119 meta-analytic effect sizes based on approximately 2.64 million prekindergarten and K-12 students. We conducted several three-level SOMAs and found that TSRs had similar large significant relations with eight clusters of student outcomes: academic achievement, academic emotions, appropriate student behavior, behavior problems, executive functions and self-control, motivation, school belonging and engagement, and well-being. The link with bullying was only marginally significant. Our moderator analyses suggested a larger TSR- outcome link for middle and high school students. Although more recent meta-analyses fulfilled more methodological quality criteria, these differences were not associated with TSR-outcome relations. These results map the field of TSR research; present their relations, moderators, and methodological quality in meta-analyses; and show how TSRs are equally important for a wide range of student outcomes and samples.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)365-397
Number of pages33
JournalPsychological Bulletin
Volume151
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 10 Feb 2025

Keywords

  • academic achievement
  • school students
  • second-order meta-analysis
  • teacher-student relationships
  • well-being

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