2018
DOI: 10.1177/016146811812000607
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Teachers’ Cognitive Flexibility on Engagement and Their Ability to Engage Students: A Theoretical and Empirical Exploration

Abstract: Background Student engagement is a cognitively complex domain that is often oversimplified in theory and practice. Reliance on a single model overlooks the sophisticated nature of student engagement and can lead to misconceptions and limited understandings that hinder teachers’ ability to engage all of their students. Assessing varied models simultaneously frames student engagement as a dynamic process contingent upon interactions among many contextual variables. Purpose We explore the relationship between how… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Previous research has established the critical role which cognitive flexibility plays by showing that teachers with higher levels of cognitive flexibility contribute positively to students’ learning and achievement (Zhang, 2021) and their classroom engagement (Stein et al, 2018). It is known that cognitively flexible teachers show a number of professional features, such as having higher problem‐solving and creativity levels (Esen–Aygun, 2018; Ionescu, 2012), better techno‐pedagogical competencies (Öztürk et al, 2020), and empathic tendencies and professionalism (Kaçay et al, 2021) in addition to higher perceptions of self‐efficacy (Spiro & Jehng, 1990).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous research has established the critical role which cognitive flexibility plays by showing that teachers with higher levels of cognitive flexibility contribute positively to students’ learning and achievement (Zhang, 2021) and their classroom engagement (Stein et al, 2018). It is known that cognitively flexible teachers show a number of professional features, such as having higher problem‐solving and creativity levels (Esen–Aygun, 2018; Ionescu, 2012), better techno‐pedagogical competencies (Öztürk et al, 2020), and empathic tendencies and professionalism (Kaçay et al, 2021) in addition to higher perceptions of self‐efficacy (Spiro & Jehng, 1990).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%