Psychological determinants of test motivation in low-stakes test situations: A longitudinal study of singletrait–multistate models in accounting

IF 1.6 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Empirical Research in Vocational Education and Training Pub Date : 2018-12-01 DOI:10.1186/s40461-018-0074-7
Christoph Helm, Julia Warwas
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We draw on Urhahne’s (Psychologische Rundschau 59:150–166, 2008. https://doi.org/10.1026/0033-3042.59.3.150) synthesis of motivation theories in academic learning contexts to substantiate potential predictors. Since we concentrate on person-dependent characteristics, relevant predictors are types of self-determined/external behavioural regulation, achievement motivation, academic self-concept, and grit. In line with Eccles et al. (In: Spence JT (eds) Achievement and achievement motives: psychological and sociological approaches. Freeman, San Francisco, pp 109–132, 1983) and Sundre (The Student Opinion Scale (SOS). A measure of examinee motivation: test manual. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/238741273_The_Student_Opinion_Scale_SOS, 2007), we further discern value attributions to and invested effort in each test as two separate dimensions of test motivation.MethodEmpirical analyses utilize longitudinal questionnaire and test performance data of students (N = 852) from full time vocational schools, who participated repeatedly in a low-stakes accounting test at the end of each school year (5 years in total). Latent singletrait–multistate (STMS) models serve to disentangle trait-like and state-like components of students’ test motivation and their respective associations with trait- and state-components of the assumed predictor variables.ResultsFindings from STMS models indicate that approx. 30% of variation in students’ test motivation is stable over time, whereas approx. 25% is attributable to the test situation, leading to a high portion of 45% residual variance. Bivariate STMS analyses show that students’ achievement motivation and type of behavioural regulation predict the value dimension of their test motivation. This pattern appears for the trait-like components of investigated constructs (here: time-invariant, person-specific levels of predictors and criteria) as well as for the state-like components (here: intra-individual increases or declines in predictors and criteria). Regarding the effort dimension of test motivation, similar associations among the trait-like components appear. Students’ self-reported effort is positively predicted by type of behavioural regulation and achievement motivation. Moreover, and in contrast to the value dimension, students’ perseverance plays a crucial role when predicting test-taking effort. Finally, a multivariate intercept-only growth model was estimated to analyse the relative contributions of different psychological determinants of test motivation. It shows that (a) students’ introjected regulation predicts the value dimension and (b) students’ identified behavioural regulation and perseverance (as an essential aspect of grit) predict the effort dimension of test motivation.ConclusionsStudents’ motivation to master low-stakes tests represents an equally trait- and state-like construct—at least with respect to the investigated test format (paper–pencil), content (accounting) and examinee population (vocational students). Our finding that comparably stable motivational dispositions of students, namely person-specific types of behavioural regulation, achievement motivation, and grit, are highly predictive of their test motivation in multiple test situations implies that test motivation bias can be reduced substantially by controlling for general student motivation (in the relevant academic domain).","PeriodicalId":38550,"journal":{"name":"Empirical Research in Vocational Education and Training","volume":"2012 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.6000,"publicationDate":"2018-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Empirical Research in Vocational Education and Training","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1186/s40461-018-0074-7","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

BackgroundWhile several studies show that examinees’ test motivation biases their results in low-stakes tests, studies that investigate the predictors of motivation when taking low-stakes tests are rare. Moreover, little evidence exists on whether test motivation represents a state-like or trait-like construct. Research into these matters needs statistical models that allow distinguishing inter-individual from intra-individual variability of motivation across a range of test situations. The present study is located in a vocational school setting and aims to explain variations in vocational students’ low-stakes test motivation. We draw on Urhahne’s (Psychologische Rundschau 59:150–166, 2008. https://doi.org/10.1026/0033-3042.59.3.150) synthesis of motivation theories in academic learning contexts to substantiate potential predictors. Since we concentrate on person-dependent characteristics, relevant predictors are types of self-determined/external behavioural regulation, achievement motivation, academic self-concept, and grit. In line with Eccles et al. (In: Spence JT (eds) Achievement and achievement motives: psychological and sociological approaches. Freeman, San Francisco, pp 109–132, 1983) and Sundre (The Student Opinion Scale (SOS). A measure of examinee motivation: test manual. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/238741273_The_Student_Opinion_Scale_SOS, 2007), we further discern value attributions to and invested effort in each test as two separate dimensions of test motivation.MethodEmpirical analyses utilize longitudinal questionnaire and test performance data of students (N = 852) from full time vocational schools, who participated repeatedly in a low-stakes accounting test at the end of each school year (5 years in total). Latent singletrait–multistate (STMS) models serve to disentangle trait-like and state-like components of students’ test motivation and their respective associations with trait- and state-components of the assumed predictor variables.ResultsFindings from STMS models indicate that approx. 30% of variation in students’ test motivation is stable over time, whereas approx. 25% is attributable to the test situation, leading to a high portion of 45% residual variance. Bivariate STMS analyses show that students’ achievement motivation and type of behavioural regulation predict the value dimension of their test motivation. This pattern appears for the trait-like components of investigated constructs (here: time-invariant, person-specific levels of predictors and criteria) as well as for the state-like components (here: intra-individual increases or declines in predictors and criteria). Regarding the effort dimension of test motivation, similar associations among the trait-like components appear. Students’ self-reported effort is positively predicted by type of behavioural regulation and achievement motivation. Moreover, and in contrast to the value dimension, students’ perseverance plays a crucial role when predicting test-taking effort. Finally, a multivariate intercept-only growth model was estimated to analyse the relative contributions of different psychological determinants of test motivation. It shows that (a) students’ introjected regulation predicts the value dimension and (b) students’ identified behavioural regulation and perseverance (as an essential aspect of grit) predict the effort dimension of test motivation.ConclusionsStudents’ motivation to master low-stakes tests represents an equally trait- and state-like construct—at least with respect to the investigated test format (paper–pencil), content (accounting) and examinee population (vocational students). Our finding that comparably stable motivational dispositions of students, namely person-specific types of behavioural regulation, achievement motivation, and grit, are highly predictive of their test motivation in multiple test situations implies that test motivation bias can be reduced substantially by controlling for general student motivation (in the relevant academic domain).
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低分数考试情况下考试动机的心理决定因素:会计学单特质-多特质模型纵向研究
背景虽然有一些研究表明,考生的考试动机会影响他们在低分考试中的成绩,但很少有研究调查预测考生在低分考试中考试动机的因素。此外,关于考试动机是一种类似于状态还是类似于特质的结构的证据也很少。对这些问题的研究需要建立统计模型,以便在各种考试情况下区分考试动机在个体间和个体内的差异性。本研究以职业学校为背景,旨在解释职业学校学生低分数考试动机的变化。我们借鉴了 Urhahne(《心理学月刊》59:150-166,2008 年。https://doi.org/10.1026/0033-3042.59.3.150)对学术学习背景下动机理论的综述,以证实潜在的预测因素。由于我们关注的是个人依赖特征,因此相关的预测因素包括自我决定/外部行为调节类型、成就动机、学业自我概念和勇气。与 Eccles 等人(In:Spence JT (eds) Achievement and achievement motives: psychological and sociological approaches.弗里曼,旧金山,第 109-132 页,1983 年)和 Sundre(《学生意见量表》(SOS)。https://www.researchgate.net/publication/238741273_The_Student_Opinion_Scale_SOS, 2007),我们进一步将对每次测试的价值归因和投入的努力作为测试动机的两个独立维度进行了分析。方法实证分析利用了全日制职业学校学生(N = 852)的纵向问卷和测试成绩数据,这些学生在每个学年(共 5 年)结束时重复参加了一次低风险会计测试。Latent singletrait-multistate (STMS) 模型用于区分学生考试动机中的特质类成分和状态类成分,以及它们分别与假定预测变量的特质类成分和状态类成分之间的关联。结果STMS 模型的研究结果表明,学生考试动机中约有 30% 的变异是长期稳定的,而约有 25% 的变异可归因于考试情境,从而产生了高达 45% 的残差。STMS 双变量分析表明,学生的成就动机和行为调节类型可以预测其考试动机的价值维度。这种模式出现在所调查的建构的特质类成分(这里指预测因子和标准的时间不变、个人特定水平)以及状态类成分(这里指预测因子和标准的个体内部增减)上。关于考试动机的努力维度,特质类成分之间出现了类似的关联。学生自我报告的努力程度会受到行为调节类型和成就动机的正向预测。此外,与价值维度不同的是,学生的毅力在预测考试努力程度时起着至关重要的作用。最后,我们估算了一个只截距的多元增长模型,以分析不同心理决定因素对考试动机的相对贡献。结果表明:(a) 学生的内省调节可以预测价值维度;(b) 学生的识别行为调节和毅力(作为勇气的一个重要方面)可以预测考试动机的努力维度。结论学生掌握低风险考试的动机是一种类似于特质和状态的建构--至少在调查的考试形式(纸笔考试)、内容(会计)和考生群体(职业学生)方面是如此。我们的研究发现,学生相对稳定的动机倾向,即个人特有的行为调节类型、成就动机和勇气,可以高度预测他们在多种考试情境中的考试动机,这意味着通过控制(相关学术领域的)一般学生动机,可以大大减少考试动机偏差。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
7.70%
发文量
9
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊介绍: The main focus of this journal is to provide a platform for original empirical investigations in the field of professional, vocational and technical education, comparing the effectiveness, efficiency and equity of different vocational education systems at the school, company and systemic level. The journal fills a gap in the existing literature focusing on empirically-oriented academic research and stimulating the interest in strengthening the vocational part of the educational system, both at the basic and higher education level.
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