Keyword search (4,164 papers available)

"Achievement" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Unraveling "Feeling Bad" in a Non-Western Culture: Achievement Emotions in Japanese Medical Students Nomura O; Sunohara M; Akatsu H; Wiseman J; Lajoie SP; 40625926
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Developmental heterogeneity of school burnout across the transition from upper secondary school to higher education: A 9-year follow-up study Nadon L; Morin AJS; Gilbert W; Olivier E; Salmela-Aro K; 39645324
PSYCHOLOGY
3 Active Child, Accomplished Youth: Middle Childhood Active Leisure Fuels Academic Success by Emerging Adulthood Kosak LA; Harandian K; Bacon SL; Fitzpatrick C; Correale L; Pagani LS; 39334672
HKAP
4 Achievement Goals as Mediators of the Links Between Self-Esteem and Depressive Symptoms From Mid-Adolescence to Early Adulthood Gilbert W; Eltanoukhi R; Morin AJS; Salmela-Aro K; 38963580
PSYCHOLOGY
5 Introducing the Basic Psychological Needs Frustration in Second Language Scale (BPNF-L2): Examining its factor structure and effect on L2 motivation and achievement Alamer A; Morin AJS; Alrabai F; Alharfi A; 37696146
PSYCHOLOGY
6 A longitudinal person-centered representation of elementary students' motivation: Do perceptions of parent and teacher achievement goals matter? Nadon L; Morin AJS; Olivier E; Archambault I; Smodis McCune V; Tóth-Király I; 37689436
PSYCHOLOGY
7 A Multilevel Person-Centered Examination of Teachers' Workplace Experiences: Replication and Extension With Links to Instructional Support and Achievement Collie RJ; Martin AJ; Morin AJS; Malmberg LE; Sammons P; 34421763
PSYCHOLOGY
8 Understanding behavioural engagement and achievement: The roles of teaching practices and student sense of competence and task value. Olivier E, Galand B, Hospel V, Dellisse S 31999841
PSYCHOLOGY
9 Adolescent media use and its association to wellbeing in a Canadian national sample. Fitzpatrick C, Burkhalter R, Asbridge M 31024788
PERFORM

 

Title:Understanding behavioural engagement and achievement: The roles of teaching practices and student sense of competence and task value.
Authors:Olivier EGaland BHospel VDellisse S
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31999841?dopt=Abstract
DOI:10.1111/bjep.12342
Publication:The British journal of educational psychology
Keywords:achievementautonomy supportbehavioural engagementsense of competencestructuretask value
PMID:31999841 Category:Br J Educ Psychol Date Added:2020-01-31
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 Substantive-Methodological Synergy Research Laboratory, Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
2 Université catholique de Louvain, Ottignies-Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium.

Description:

Understanding behavioural engagement and achievement: The roles of teaching practices and student sense of competence and task value.

Br J Educ Psychol. 2020 Jan 30;:

Authors: Olivier E, Galand B, Hospel V, Dellisse S

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Different teaching practices, such as autonomy support and structure, provide students with a positive learning context supporting their engagement, which can operate through their underlying motivation, including sense of competence and task value.

AIMS: This study aims at investigating the best configuration (unique or synergistic) between autonomy support and structure to support student behavioural engagement, including compliance, participation, and misbehaviour, and reading achievement. A second objective is to assess students' sense of competence and task value as mediators linking teaching practices to student engagement and achievement.

SAMPLE: The samples included 1,666 7th-grade students and their 85 teachers. Students answered questionnaires and tests at the beginning and the end of the school year.

METHODS: Students' perceptions of the use of autonomy support and structure by their Language Arts teacher were aggregated at the classroom level. Students rated their sense of competence and task value in Language Arts class. Twice during the school year, they also reported three facets of their behavioural engagement (compliance, participation, and misbehaviour) and answered a reading comprehension test. Multilevel path analyses using Mplus7 allowed accounting for the nested structure of data.

RESULTS: Student sense of competence mediated the association of student classroom-aggregated perceptions of teacher structure and autonomy support with self-reported participation in the classroom. Task value mediated the association between both teaching practices and student misbehaviour and compliance, as reported by students. Sense of competence was directly associated with later reading achievement, but the indirect effect of teaching practices was not significant. We found no significant interaction (synergistic effect) between teacher autonomy support and structure.

CONCLUSION: Student classroom-aggregated perception of teacher autonomy support and structure is important to nurture behavioural engagement. However, we found no extra benefit of combining these two dimensions of teaching practices. The processes linking these teaching practices to the three facets of student behavioural engagement were different. As such, to support the various aspects of student engagement, the actions of teachers, as reported by their students, should tap into the mechanisms that are most strongly related to each type of behaviour.

PMID: 31999841 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]





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