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Journal Article

Citation

Alevriadou A, Pavlidou K. J. Intellect. Disabil. 2015; 20(3): 213-227.

Affiliation

University of Western Macedonia, Greece.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/1744629515599108

PMID

26283661

Abstract

Teachers' interpersonal style is a new field of research in the study of students with intellectual disabilities and challenging behaviors in school context. In the present study, we investigate emotions and causal attributions of three basic types of challenging behaviors: aggression, stereotypy, and self-injury, in relation to teachers' interpersonal style. One hundred and seventy seven Greek general and special educator teachers participated in the study by completing a three-scaled questionnaire. Statistical analysis revealed that the type of challenging behaviors affected causal attributions. According to regression analysis, emotions, teaching experience, expertise in special education, and gender explained a significant amount of variance in interpersonal style. Emotions were found to have a mediating role in the relationship between causal attributions and interpersonal style of "willingness to support," when challenging behaviors were attributed to stable causes or causes under the control of the individual with intellectual disabilities.


Language: en

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