KUZLE (2021)
861
interview revealed that the drawer provided an illustration of an everyday situation:
some children are bored and his math teacher is happy that it is the end of the lesson.
Thus, these are permanently valid characteristics of geometry lessons (trait).
Figure 3.
A Grade 4 student’s drawing of a negative emotional classroom climate.
In total, five Grade 4 students (15% of drawings) represented the emotional
climate in the geometry classroom as neutral since only neutral features were
illustrated or mentioned (e.g., hands on the table, eyes with no expression, mouth
drawn as a straight line, mathematical statements such as “A circle.”). Two drawings
were rated as unidentifiable (6% of drawings). In these
drawings, there were no facial
or body expressions, and speech and thought bubbles could not be identified.
Likewise, the interview did not provide any further information.
To summarize, in the sample of Grade 4 students’ participant-produced drawings,
the drawings portraying a positive classroom climate had the highest frequency, but
they did not predominate. However, in all but one drawing a positive emotional
climate was a stable condition (trait). Only three drawings showed a completely
negative emotional classroom climate which, on the downside, reflected
a permanent
child 1
child 2
teacher
child 3
LUMAT
862
condition (trait). The cases of drawings reflecting an ambivalent classroom climate
were dominated by positive emotional features with a few negative ones.
4.1.3: Emotional classroom climate in Grade 5. Almost half of the drawings (46%,
n = 13) by Grade 5 students represented the emotional climate in the geometry
classroom as positive since often only positive features (e.g., full smile, arms open
upwards, wide open eyes) with occasionally also neutral ones (e.g., eyes with no
expression) were depicted. The interviews revealed that in all cases but two, the
drawings represented a stable condition in the geometry lesson (state). More than
one-third of the drawings (36%, n = 10) were rated as ambivalent with both positive
(e.g., arms open upwards, full smile, “I understand it.”) and negative features (e.g.,
mouth
turned downward, “boring”, “wake up”) being illustrated or mentioned. In
three cases, the drawings reflected a temporary emotional condition (state), whereas
in six cases a stable condition (trait). No drawing contained more than one negative
expression. Furthermore, two drawings (7% of drawings) represented the emotional
climate in the geometry classroom as negative since only negative features (e.g., “shut
up”, “zzz”) with some neutral ones (e.g., arms closed downwards) were illustrated,
which, however, reflected a temporary condition (state). In total, two Grade 5 students
(7% of drawings) represented the emotional climate in the geometry classroom as
neutral since only neutral features were illustrated or mentioned (e.g., hands on the
table, eyes with no expression, mouth drawn as a straight line, mathematical
statements such as “I’m drawing a prism.”). Only
one drawing was rated as
unidentifiable (4% of drawings). In this drawing, there were no facial or body
expressions, and speech and thought bubbles could not be identified. Likewise, the
interview did not provide any further information.
To summarize, in the sample of Grade 5 students’ participant-produced drawings,
a positive classroom climate was portrayed most frequently, but did not predominate.
In most of these drawings, a positive emotional climate was a stable condition (trait).
The percentage of drawings illustrating an ambivalent classroom climate
was slightly
lower than those illustrating a positive classroom climate. Also, these drawings
predominantly reflected a stable condition (trait). Only a few drawings illustrated a
negative or a neutral emotional classroom climate. The former, however, reflected a
temporary condition (state).