Children’s Momentary Behavioural Engagement and Class Size: A National Systematic Observation Study Momentary Behavioural Engagement

Main Article Content

Jennifer Symonds
Ricardo Boheim
Matthew P. Somerville
Ed Baines
Xin Tang
Niamh Oeri
Raven Rinas
Florian Buehler
Gertraud Benke
Aisling Davies
Seaneen Sloan
Dympna Devine
Gabriella Martinez Sainz

Abstract

This study used systematic observation to test the direct and moderating effects of class size on children’s momentary behavioural engagement in learning. Data were collected with 632 children (50.6% girls) in 121 classrooms in 92 schools recruited into the Children’s School Lives national cohort study of Irish primary schooling. The Observational and Research Classroom Learning Evaluation (ORACLE) systematic observation tool was used to observe individual children’s behaviour at 30-seconds intervals across a five-minute period in ordinary lessons of English, mathematics, science and Irish. Multilevel path models identified that behavioural engagement was higher in smaller classes and behavioural disengagement was higher in larger classes. Class size also moderated the impact of several individual differences and classroom composition factors on momentary behavioural engagement. For example, smaller classrooms protected lower ability children from disengaging whereas higher ability children were more likely to stay engaged in larger classes compared to lower ability children. Implications for research, practice and policy are discussed.

Article Details

How to Cite
Symonds, J., Boheim, R., Somerville, M., Baines, E., Tang, X., Oeri, N., Rinas, R., Buehler, F., Benke, G., Davies, A., Sloan, S., Devine, D., & Martinez Sainz, G. (2025). Children’s Momentary Behavioural Engagement and Class Size: A National Systematic Observation Study : Momentary Behavioural Engagement. Frontline Learning Research, 13(2), 51–66. https://doi.org/10.14786/flr.v13i2.1431
Section
Articles
Author Biographies

Jennifer Symonds, University College London, United Kingdom

 

 

Ricardo Boheim, Technical University of Munich, Germany

 

 

Matthew P. Somerville, University College London, United Kingdom

 

 

Ed Baines, University College London, United Kingdom

 

 

Xin Tang, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China

 

 

Niamh Oeri, University of Bern, Switzerland

 

 

Raven Rinas, Universität Augsburg, Germany

 

 

Florian Buehler, University of Bern, Switzerland

 

 

Gertraud Benke, University of Klagenfurt, Austria

 

 

Aisling Davies, University College Dublin, Ireland

 

 

Seaneen Sloan, University College Dublin, Ireland

 

 

Dympna Devine, University College Dublin, Ireland

 

 

Gabriella Martinez Sainz, University College Dublin, Ireland

 

 

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