University of Edinburgh: Positive teacher relationships may reduce crime
Experts at the University of Edinburgh examined the experiences of 1483 young people who had a change of teacher between the ages of 9 and 10.
They identified pairs of young people with similar backgrounds and influences, but who reported different experiences of the teacher change. Each pair had one young person who had a relatively better relationship with their teacher and one who had a relatively worse relationship with their teacher but were otherwise highly similar.
Researchers then compared each pair’s levels of delinquency and violence at three stages, at ages 13, 15 and 17. The analyses were carried out on 208 pairs at age 13, 235 pairs at age 15 and 194 pairs at age 17.
Data collection
Data collected from when the children were 11 years old was used to assess their relationship with their teacher. At the three age stages, the participants also completed questionnaires that captured examples of aggressive and anti-social behaviour such as stealing from home, shoplifting or vandalism.
Researchers found those with a better quality of teacher-student relationships at age 11 year reported fewer delinquent acts up to age 17 than those with worse teacher-student relationships.
The young people with a better relationship with their teacher also reported being less aggressive and violent at age 17.
Bonds with teachers
Importantly, the findings were consistent, even when taking into account a wide range of characteristics that affect behaviour such as different types of parenting, a range of mental health issues and aggressive behaviour before the change of teacher.
The study suggests that bonds that young people form with teachers during childhood, and the importance they place on these relationships, affects whether they may engage in delinquency and violence in adolescence, researchers say.
By controlling for additional potential predictors of delinquency and violence in adolescence, we were able to provide some of the strongest evidence to date for a link between the quality of teacher-student relationships and later delinquency and violence. Perceiving the relationship in a positive way and feeling supported and understood by the teacher has the power to protect young people from engaging in rule-breaking behaviours such as delinquency and violence.
Dr Ingrid Osbuth
School of Health in Social Science
Data were drawn from the first nine waves of the Social Development from Childhood to Adulthood – an ongoing longitudinal cohort study that began in 2004 led by the University of Zurich.
Zurich study
The Zurich project examines the developmental dynamics involved in aggressive behaviour and victimisation during childhood and adolescence.
The study is published in the journal of Crime & Delinquency.
The study – funded by Jacobs Foundation and the Swiss National Science Foundation – was carried out in partnership with the Universities of Cambridge and Zurich. It was also supported by the Jacobs Center for Productive Youth Development at the University of Zurich.