Thorben Jansen , Jennifer Meyer , Johanna Fleckenstein , Allan Wigfield , Jens Möller
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“Can (A)I do this task?” The role of AI as a socializer of students' self-beliefs of their abilities
Students' beliefs about their own academic abilities – their answers to the question “Can I do this task?” - are crucial to their success. Learning within AI-supported environments, alongside AI agents, influences students' beliefs about their abilities. Studies show enhancing and diminishing influences that remain unexplained by motivation theory, limiting theories' explanatory effect in AI-supported learning environments, and leaving educational technology research without a solid theoretical foundation. The following article specifies the situated expectancy-value theory (SEVT) for students' self-belief formation in the context of an AI-driven society. The expanded theory conceptualizes AI as becoming an artificial socializer, capturing the role of AI as an instrumental tool and social agents making up students' individual environments. Bridging AI and motivational research provides a framework for systematically investigating students' self-beliefs in AI-supported contexts and how educational technology can support positive self-beliefs, considering students' contexts and individual differences.
期刊介绍:
Learning and Individual Differences is a research journal devoted to publishing articles of individual differences as they relate to learning within an educational context. The Journal focuses on original empirical studies of high theoretical and methodological rigor that that make a substantial scientific contribution. Learning and Individual Differences publishes original research. Manuscripts should be no longer than 7500 words of primary text (not including tables, figures, references).