N. Hastings et J. Schwieso, TASKS AND TABLES - THE EFFECTS OF SEATING ARRANGEMENTS ON TASK ENGAGEMENT IN PRIMARY CLASSROOMS, Educational research, 37(3), 1995, pp. 279-291
Large-scale research programmes in primary schools have frequently ide
ntified a mismatch between classroom seating arrangements and the natu
re of pupils' tasks. While children are typically seated in groups, th
eir assigned tasks are generally individual. Intervention studies have
consistently found that seating in rows for individual task work impr
oves time spent on-task. However, one weakness of these studies is tha
t novelty could account for all or part of the improvement rather than
the seating arrangements per se. In the first study reported here, an
attempt was made to test the novelty hypothesis. Two primary classes,
neither of which normally sat in groups or rows for individual task w
ork, took part. In parallel ABA designs, one class moved from rows to
groups to rows and the other from groups to rows to groups. In both cl
asses, on-task behaviour was higher in the rows arrangement, with the
effect being most marked for children who were least on-task when seat
ed in groups. A second study, designed to increase the time on-task of
three individually disruptive pupils and employing seating in rows fo
r individual task work, produced a similar pattern of outcomes: class
mean time on-task increased substantially, while the time on-task of t
he three target pupils increased dramatically. The implications of the
se findings are discussed.