Abstract
This study investigated the relationship between classroom seating arrangements and the question-asking of fourth-graders. Data were collected during 53 lessons spread over 8 weeks. Children were assigned to sit in a semicircle and then in a row-and-column seating arrangement for 2 weeks each. This rotation was repeated. Both children's questions and the teacher's verbal reactions were recorded using an observational system based on Kearsley's question taxonomy. The results showed that children asked more questions in the semicircle than in the row-and-column arrangement, and that the pattern of question characteristics was stable over time. The findings also revealed that, within the row-and-column arrangement, there was an action-zone in which children asked more questions per lesson. The results are interpreted in terms of Steinzor's postulation that social interaction is encouraged when individuals are able to establish face-to-face contact.
Similar content being viewed by others
Explore related subjects
Discover the latest articles, news and stories from top researchers in related subjects.REFERENCES
Adams, R.S. & Biddle, B.J. (1970). Realities of teaching: explorations with video tape. New York: Holt, Rinehart, & Winston.
Argyle, M. (1975). Bodily communication. London: Methuen.
Axelroad, S., Hall, R.V. & Tams, A. (1979). Comparison of two common classroom seating arrangements. Academic Therapy, 15, 29–36.
Becker, F.D., Sommer R., Bee, J. & Oxley, B. (1973). College classroom ecology. Sociometry, 36, 514–525.
Breed, G. & Colaiuta, V. (1974). Looking, blinking, and sitting: nonverbal dynamics in the classroom. Journal of Communication, 24, 75–81.
Carlsen, W.S. (1997). Never ask a question if you don't know the answer: the tension in teaching between modelling scientific argument and maintaining law and order. Journal of Classroom Interaction, 32, 14–23.
Daly, J.A., Kreiser, P.O. & Roghaar, L.A. (1994). Question-asking comfort: explorations of the demography of communication in the eighth grade classroom. Communication Education, 43, 27–41.
Delefes, P. & Jackson, B. (1972). Teacher-pupil interaction as a function of location in the classroom. Psychology in the Schools, 9, 119–123.
Dewey, J. (1916). Democracy and education. New York: Macmillan.
Dillon, J.T. (1988). The remedial status of student questioning. Journal of Curriculum Studies, 20, 197–210.
Dillon, J.T. (1991). Questioning the use of questions. Journal of Educational Psychology, 83, 163–164.
Fishbein, H.D., Eckart, T., Lauver, E. & Van Leeuwen, R. (1990). Learners' questions and comprehension in a tutoring setting. Journal of Educational Psychology, 82, 163–170.
Fuhrer, U. (1987). Effects of social density and pre-knowledge on question-asking in a novel setting. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 7, 159–168.
Fuhrer, U. (1994). Fragehemmungen bei schülerinnen und schülern: eine attributionstheoretische erklärung [Students' inhibitions to ask questions: an attributional analysis]. Zeitschrift für Pädagogische Psychologie [Journal of Educational Psychology], 8, 103–109.
Gaudig, H. (1909). Didaktische Präludien [Didactical prelude]. Leipzig, Germany: Teubner.
Good, T.L., Slavings, R.L., Harel, K.H. & Emerson, H. (1987). Student passivity: a study of question-asking in K-12 classrooms. Sociology of Education, 60, 181–199.
Gump, P.V. (1987). School and classroom environments. In D. Stokols & I. Altman (Eds.), Handbook of environmental psychology (pp. 691–732). New York: Wiley.
Hare, A.P. & Bales, R.F. (1963). Seating position and small group interaction. Sociometry, 26, 480–486.
Hays, W.L. (1994). Statistics. Harcourt Brace: College Publishers.
Hillmann, R.B., Brooks, C.I. & O'Brien, J.P. (1991). Differences in self-esteem of college freshmen as a function of classroom seating-row preference. Psychological Record, 41, 315–320.
Jones, M.G. (1990). Action zone theory, target students and science classroom interactions. Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 27, 651–660.
Jones, M.G. & Gerig T.M. (1994). Silent sixth-grade students: characteristics, achievement, and teacher expectations. Elementary School Journal, 95, 169–182.
Karabenick, S.A. & Sharma, R. (1994). Perceived teacher support of student questioning in the college classroom: its relation to student characteristics and role in the classroom questioning process. Journal of Educational Psychology, 86, 90–103.
Kearsley, G.P. (1976). Questions and question asking in verbal discourse: a crossdisciplinary review. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 5, 355–374.
King, A. (1990). Enhancing peer interaction and learning in the classroom through reciprocal questioning. American Educational Research Journal, 27, 664–687.
King, A. (1994). Autonomy and question asking: the role of personal control in guided student-generated questioning. Learning and Individual Differences, 6, 163–185.
King, A. (1995). Inquiring minds really do want to know: using questioning to teach critical thinking. Teaching of Psychology, 22, 13–17.
Koneya, M. (1976). Location and interaction in row-and-column seating arrangements. Environment and Behavior, 2, 265–281.
Levine, D.W., O'Neal, E.C., Garwood, S.G. & McDonald, P.J. (1980). Classroom ecology: the effects of seating position on grades and participation. Psychology Bulletin, 6, 409–412.
MacPherson, J.C. (1984). Environments and interaction in row-and-column classrooms. Environment and Behavior, 16, 481–502.
Millard, R.J. & Stimpson, D.V. (1980). Enjoyment and productivity as a function of classroom seating location. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 50, 439–444.
Montello, D.R. (1988). Classroom seating location and its effect on course achievement, participation, and attitudes. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 8, 149–157.
Montello, D.R. (1992). An effect of seating location on course achievement?: comment on Brooks and Rebeta. Environment and Behavior, 24, 396–399.
Pearson, J.C. & West, R. (1991). An initial investigation of the effects of gender on student questions in the classroom: developing a descriptive base. Communication Education, 40, 22–32.
Pedersen, D.M. (1994). Personality and classroom seating. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 78, 1355–1360.
Proshansky, H.M., Ittelson, W.H. & Rivlin, L.G. (1976). Environmental psychology: people and their physical settings. New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston.
Roth, W.M. (1996). Teacher questioning in an open-inquiry learning environment: interactions of context, content, and student responses. Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 33, 709–736.
Saur, R.E., Popp, M.J. & Isaacs, M. (1984). Action zone theory and the hearingimpaired student in the mainstreamed classroom. Journal of Classroom Interaction, 19, 21–25.
Sommer, R. (1967a). Small group ecology. Psychological Bulletin, 67, 145–152.
Sommer, R. (1967b). Classroom ecology. Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, 3, 489–502.
Sommer, R. (1989). Classroom ecology and acquaintanceship. Educational Psychology, 9, 63–66.
Srivastava, R., Pandey, A.P., Srivastava, D.S. & Srivastava, B. (1992). Classroom seating position in relation to alienation and ego strength. Indian Journal of Psychometry and Education, 1, 43–47.
Steinzor, B. (1950). The spatial factor in face-to-face discussion groups. Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 45, 552–555.
Stires, L.K. (1980). Classroom seating location, student grades and attitudes. Environment and Behavior, 2, 241–254.
Totusek, P.F. & Staton-Spicer, A.Q. (1982). Classroom seating preference as a function of student personality. Journal of Experimental Education, 3, 159–163.
Van der Meij, H. (1986). Questioning: a study on the questioning behavior of elementary school children. The Hague, The Netherlands: SVO.
Van der Meij, H. & Dillon, J.T. (1994). Adaptive student questioning and students' verbal ability. Journal of Experimental Education, 62, 277–290.
Walberg, H.J. (1969). Physical and psychological distance in the classroom. The School Review, 77, 64–77.
Weinstein, C.S. (1985). Seating arrangements in the classroom. In T. Huséun & T.N. Postlethwaite (Eds.), International encyclopedia of education (pp. 103–145). New York: Pergamon.
West, R. & Pearson, J.C. (1994). Antecedent and consequent conditions of student questioning: an analysis of classroom discourse across the university. Communication-Education, 43, 299–311.
Wheldall, K., Morris, M. & Vaughan P. (1981). Rows versus tables: an example of the use of behavioral ecology in two classes of eleven-year-old children. Educational Psychology, 2, 171–184.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Marx, A., Fuhrer, U. & Hartig, T. Effects of Classroom Seating Arrangements on Children's question-asking. Learning Environments Research 2, 249–263 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1009901922191
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1009901922191