HARNESSING VALUES TO PROMOTE MOTIVATION IN EDUCATION.

Judith M Harackiewicz, Yoi Tibbetts, Elizabeth Canning, Janet S Hyde
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Abstract

Purpose: We review the interventions that promote motivation in academic contexts, with a focus on two primary questions: How can we motivate students to take more STEM courses? Once in those STEM courses, how can we keep students motivated and promote their academic achievement?

Design/methodology/approach: We have approached these two motivational questions from several perspectives, examining the theoretical issues with basic laboratory research, conducting longitudinal questionnaire studies in classrooms, and developing interventions implemented in different STEM contexts. Our research is grounded in three theories that we believe are complementary: expectancy-value theory (Eccles & Wigfield, 2002), interest theory (Hidi & Renninger, 2006), and self-affirmation theory (Steele, 1988). As social psychologists, we have focused on motivational theory and used experimental methods, with an emphasis on values - students' perceptions of the value of academic tasks and students' personal values that shape their experiences in academic contexts.

Findings: We review the experimental field studies in high-school science and college psychology classes, in which utility-value interventions promoted interest and performance for high-school students in science classes and for undergraduate students in psychology courses. We also review a randomized intervention in which parents received information about the utility value of math and science for their teens in high school; this intervention led students to take nearly one semester more of science and mathematics, compared with the control group. Finally, we review an experimental study of values affirmation in a college biology course and found that the intervention improved performance and retention for first-generation college students, closing the social-class achievement gap by 50%. We conclude by discussing the mechanisms through which these interventions work.

Originality/value: These interventions are exciting for their broad applicability in improving students' academic choices and performance, they are also exciting regarding their potential for contributions to basic science. The combination of laboratory experiments and field experiments is advancing our understanding of the motivational principles and almost certainly will continue to do so. At the same time, interventions may benefit from becoming increasingly targeted at specific motivational processes that are effective with particular groups or in particular contexts.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

利用价值观促进教育的动力。
目的:我们回顾了在学术背景下促进学习动机的干预措施,重点关注两个主要问题:如何激励学生选修更多的 STEM 课程?一旦选修了这些 STEM 课程,我们又该如何保持学生的积极性并提高他们的学业成绩?我们从多个角度探讨了这两个激励问题,通过基础实验室研究、在课堂上开展纵向问卷调查研究以及制定在不同 STEM 环境中实施的干预措施,对理论问题进行了研究。我们的研究基于三个我们认为可以互补的理论:期望值理论(Eccles & Wigfield, 2002)、兴趣理论(Hidi & Renninger, 2006)和自我肯定理论(Steele, 1988)。作为社会心理学家,我们关注动机理论,并使用实验方法,重点是价值观--学生对学业任务价值的看法,以及影响他们在学业情境中体验的学生个人价值观:我们回顾了高中科学课和大学心理学课的实地实验研究,在这些研究中,效用价值干预提高了高中学生对科学课和本科生对心理学课程的兴趣和学习成绩。我们还回顾了一项随机干预措施,在这项干预措施中,家长为他们的高中生提供了有关数学和科学效用价值的信息;与对照组相比,这项干预措施使学生多学了近一个学期的科学和数学课程。最后,我们回顾了一项在大学生物课程中进行价值观肯定的实验研究,结果发现该干预措施提高了第一代大学生的成绩和保留率,将社会阶层的成绩差距缩小了 50%。最后,我们讨论了这些干预措施的作用机制:这些干预措施在改善学生的学业选择和学习成绩方面具有广泛的适用性,因此令人兴奋;它们在基础科学方面的潜在贡献也令人兴奋。实验室实验和现场实验的结合正在推进我们对动机原理的理解,而且几乎肯定会继续这样做。与此同时,针对特定群体或特定情况下有效的特定动机过程的干预措施可能会越来越有针对性。
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