Doktorarbeit / Dissertation, 2025
179 Seiten, Note: Collegiate
TOC: Page 7-9
This dissertation examines the relationship between school-based administrators' perceptions of school safety and its impact on student academic achievement, specifically within an urban school district serving a high number of marginalized students. The study seeks to understand how administrators interpret safety policies, implement strategic plans, and perceive the influence of a safe environment on overall student outcomes, including academic performance and emotional well-being.
School Safety and Academic Performance
Safety is essential to student well-being and learning (Twemlow, 2002). Studies have proven that school climate and safety directly impact students' academic performance (Milam, 2010). While school safety and academic achievement are often discussed independently, they are interactive and often interdependent. Based on a review from the Education Testing Services, there was an emphasis that school safety was correlated with academic achievement (Barton, 2003). When students feel safe and secure in their learning environment, they are more likely to be engaged and take an active part in their learning (Croft, 2019). It is apparent that there is a strong relationship and link between perceived student safety and academic outcomes.
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY: Provides the foundation for the research, including the background, purpose, research questions, and the conceptual frameworks (Staying Safe and Comprehensive School Safety) that underpin the study.
CHAPTER 2: LITERATURE REVIEW: Explores existing research on the nexus between school safety and student outcomes, tracing the history of school safety trends from the 1990s to the 2020s and discussing policies, practices, and challenges in urban settings.
CHAPTER 3: METHODOLOGY: Details the qualitative, phenomenological research approach, including participant selection (principals and administrators), data collection methods (semi-structured interviews), and the measures taken to ensure validity and ethical rigor.
CHAPTER 4: DATA ANALYSIS AND RESULTS: Presents the findings derived from participant interviews, categorized by themes such as social-emotional learning, the balance between physical and emotional safety, and the role of communication and relationships in fostering student achievement.
CHAPTER 5: SUMMARY, CONCLUSIONS, AND RECOMMENDATIONS: Synthesizes the study's key findings, connects them back to the literature, and offers theoretical, practical, and policy-oriented recommendations for urban school districts to enhance safety and student success.
academics, achievement, administration, marginalized, school safety, urban schools, school climate, student outcomes, phenomenological study, safety preparedness, qualitative research, school leadership, security measures, social emotional learning, family engagement.
The research investigates how school-based administrators perceive the impact of school safety practices on student academic achievement, particularly within the context of an urban school district serving marginalized populations.
Key themes include the role of relationships and communication, the distinction between physical and emotional safety, the implementation of safety policies, and the impact of school climate on student engagement.
The study aims to discover how administrators define and operationalize school safety preparedness and whether they perceive a direct correlation between these safety efforts and student success in the classroom.
The study employs a phenomenological qualitative research design, utilizing semi-structured interviews with five school administrators to gain deep, subjective insights into their lived experiences.
The work covers a thorough literature review, a detailed description of the qualitative methodology, the analysis of interview results, and the synthesis of findings regarding policy and practice improvements.
Important keywords include school safety, urban schools, student achievement, administration, social emotional learning, and school climate.
The participants highlight that while physical security (like lockdowns) is necessary, emotional safety is fostered through strong relationships, a sense of belonging, and meeting the basic emotional and social needs of students, which prevents disruptive behavior.
The author recommends that urban school districts should review safety protocols bi-annually, mandate comprehensive social-emotional health programs for students, and move toward more holistic, relationship-driven safety initiatives rather than relying solely on "hardening" the school through physical security.
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