“…For instance, Reynolds et al ( 2017 ) suggested that school climate and school identification (connectedness, belonging, relatedness) are conceptualized as distinct but related concepts and should be investigated in the same model to explain academic development. Speaking of the school environment, one of the key environmental elements is the disciplinary climate (Cheema and Kitsantas, 2014 , 2016 ; Sortkær and Reimer, 2016 ; Chi et al, 2018 ), which refers to the degree to which noise and disorder are suppressed, teachers have more time to cover the curriculum and use diverse teaching strategies, and students have time and opportunities to concentrate on academic tasks (Cheema and Kitsantas, 2014 , 2016 ). And existing findings have revealed the moderating effect of disciplinary climate on the relationships between other variables and academic outcomes, such as mathematics performance (Sortkær and Reimer, 2016 ) and science achievement (Chi et al, 2018 ), but no similar exploration has been done in the reading context.…”