TY - JOUR
T1 - When closeness is effortful
T2 - Teachers’ physiological activation undermines positive effects of their closeness on student emotions
AU - Mainhard, Tim
AU - Donker, Monika H.
AU - van Gog, Tamara
N1 - Funding Information:
We want to thank all teachers and students for their participation in the study.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors. British Journal of Educational Psychology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Psychological Society.
PY - 2022/12
Y1 - 2022/12
N2 - Background: Student perceptions of teachers’ interpersonal closeness positively affect their emotions. If closeness is, however, effortful for the teacher (i.e., emotional labour, signalling less genuine closeness), this may undermine these positive effects. We tested this assumption by using student reports and external observations of teacher closeness and ambulant measures of teacher heart rate, to gauge teachers’ physiological effort connected to being close during class. Aims: We investigated the association between teachers’ physiological effort connected to closeness and students’ lesson-focused emotions. Sample: 75 teachers and their students (N = 1645) participated during one real-life lesson. Methods: Teacher interpersonal closeness was continuously coded based on a video recording and teachers’ heart rate was measured continuously as an indicator of physiological effort. Students reported their emotions and perception of teacher closeness at the end of the lesson. Results: Multilevel models with student emotions as DVs and students’ perceptions of teacher warmth (L1 predictor) and teachers’ physiological effort when being close (i.e., an intra-individual cross-correlation, L2 predictor) were tested. As expected, students reported more positive and less negative emotions when they perceived more teacher closeness. The physiological effort connected to being close was not directly associated with student emotions; however, such effort moderated the effect of perceived closeness, especially with regard to negative student emotions (i.e., cross-level interactions). The more effortful teacher closeness was, the less closeness protected students from negative emotions. Conclusions: In line with extant research on faking enjoyment and emotional labour, students seemed to be affected when teacher closeness was physiologically effortful, and overall positive effects of teacher closeness were undermined.
AB - Background: Student perceptions of teachers’ interpersonal closeness positively affect their emotions. If closeness is, however, effortful for the teacher (i.e., emotional labour, signalling less genuine closeness), this may undermine these positive effects. We tested this assumption by using student reports and external observations of teacher closeness and ambulant measures of teacher heart rate, to gauge teachers’ physiological effort connected to being close during class. Aims: We investigated the association between teachers’ physiological effort connected to closeness and students’ lesson-focused emotions. Sample: 75 teachers and their students (N = 1645) participated during one real-life lesson. Methods: Teacher interpersonal closeness was continuously coded based on a video recording and teachers’ heart rate was measured continuously as an indicator of physiological effort. Students reported their emotions and perception of teacher closeness at the end of the lesson. Results: Multilevel models with student emotions as DVs and students’ perceptions of teacher warmth (L1 predictor) and teachers’ physiological effort when being close (i.e., an intra-individual cross-correlation, L2 predictor) were tested. As expected, students reported more positive and less negative emotions when they perceived more teacher closeness. The physiological effort connected to being close was not directly associated with student emotions; however, such effort moderated the effect of perceived closeness, especially with regard to negative student emotions (i.e., cross-level interactions). The more effortful teacher closeness was, the less closeness protected students from negative emotions. Conclusions: In line with extant research on faking enjoyment and emotional labour, students seemed to be affected when teacher closeness was physiologically effortful, and overall positive effects of teacher closeness were undermined.
KW - heart rate
KW - physiological effort
KW - student emotions
KW - teacher closeness
KW - teacher emotional labour
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85129407631&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/bjep.12506
DO - 10.1111/bjep.12506
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85129407631
SN - 0007-0998
VL - 92
SP - 1384
EP - 1402
JO - British Journal of Educational Psychology
JF - British Journal of Educational Psychology
IS - 4
ER -