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The Role of Expectancy & Self-Efficacy Beliefs
Chapter 3 The Role of Expectancy & Self-Efficacy Beliefs Notes from class textbook: Pintrich, P.R., & Schunk, D.H. (1996). Motivation in Education: Theory, Research, & Applications. Englewood Cliff, NJ: Prentice Hall.
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Expectancy of Beliefs:
Do I have the ability to succeed at this task? Do I have the skills or knowledge to do well? If I attempt this task, what do I expect will happen?
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Expectancy Most individuals will not choose to do a task or continue to engage in a task when they expect to fail Even if the task is interesting and valuable to the learner, trying and failing repeatedly will result in eventually not engaging in the task
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Historical Perspectives on Expectancy Construct
Use of expectancy construct is from cognitive perspective of motivation Reflects cognitive metaphor of individual as active and rational decision maker Less need for instigator (like instinct, drive, need, habit) Directionality: how learners make decisions about goals, direction of energies, curiosity, & activity
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Level of Aspiration Learners feel successful when meeting goals they set for themselves Prior successes generally lead to increases in aspiration, whereas failure results in decreased aspiration levels High ability learners set higher aspirations than low ability learners Learners are influenced by group goals & performance and adjust aspirations to these
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is a multiplicative function of
Atkinson Model Behavior is a multiplicative function of Incentive Value Motives Probability for Success
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Motivation Matrix (Covington)
Motive to Approach Success Low High Success- Oriented Students Motive to Avoid Failure Failure Acceptors Low High Failure Avoiders Overstrivers
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3 Current Perspectives on the Expectancy Construct
Recent Model of Expectancy for Success Cognitive (student expectancies) & Organismic (personality/psychology) Research on Self-Perception & Ability Organismic (role of individual) & Cognitive (competence & motivation) Model of Self-Efficacy Beliefs More mechanistic perspective (from social learning theory)
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1. Model of the Expectancy-for-Success Construct
Derived from Atkinson’s expectancy-value model: Probability of success Incentive value Developed by Eccles and Wigfield: Expectancy construct Task value construct
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Future Expectancy for Success
Value Construct Expectancy Construct Why should I do this task? Am I able to do this task?
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Expectancy-Value Model
Social World Cognitive Processes Motivational Beliefs Achievement Behavior 1.Cultural milieu 2. Socializers’ behaviors 3. Past per- formances and events Perceptions of social environment Interpretations and attributions for past events Goals Task value Choice Persistence Quantity of effort Cognitive engagement Actual performance Task-specific self-concept Perceptions of task difficulty Expectancy
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Correlation Studies on Student Self-Perceptions of Ability & Expectancies for Success
Strongest predictors of subsequent grades in math & English (even better than previous grades) Higher levels correlated with use of cognitive & metacognitive strategies
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Actual Achievement Expectancy Beliefs Choice Behaviors Value Beliefs
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2. Research on Self-Perceptions of Competence & Ability
Students’ self-evaluative judgments about their ability to accomplish certain tasks Is a more cognitive evaluation of ability in a domain, NOT just self-esteem about oneself
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Self-Perceptions of Competence & Ability -- Some Issues
Related to self-concept & personal identity research Early research very general & global Actually very domain specific
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Domains of Competence Academic -- general competence for school work
Social -- competence in interactions with others Physical -- competence in physical activities like sports and perceptions of physical attractiveness/appearance
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Perceptions of Competence vs. Self-Esteem
Perceptions of confidence -- more cognitive judgments of personal skills & abilities Self-esteem -- more global affective reaction or evaluation of yourself
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Reciprocal Relationship
Self- Concept Achievement
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3. Model of Self-Efficacy Beliefs
People’s judgments of their capabilities to organize & execute courses of action required to attain designated types of performances (Example -- “I can high jump 6 feet.”)
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Different from Self-Concept & Self-Perception of Competence
More specific & situational view of perceived competence in terms of including behavioral actions or cognitive skills necessary for performance Used in reference to some type of goal
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Model of Self-Efficacy Beliefs
Outcome expectations: Judgments or beliefs regarding the contingency between a person’s behavior and the anticipated outcome (Example -- “If jump 6 feet, I’ll get applause, a trophy, and feel cool about myself.”)
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Developmental Differences
Young children have an overall optimistic perception of situations Young children tend to choose the end-points of Likert scales (extremes) Younger children do not have information-processing skills available to integrate information & make necessary social comparisons Changes in environment for older children affects both structure of the classroom situation & nature of evaluation
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Gender Differences When a gender difference is found, it is that females have lower self-perceptions of ability than males Males have higher self-perceptions of their ability in math and sports Females have higher self-perceptions of their ability in English
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Ethnic Differences Research often confounds race & ethnicity with social class differences Generally have found that African American students do not have lower self-concepts of ability and often have higher expectations for success than Caucasian children Minority students may compare themselves with social groups similar to their own
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Implications for Teachers
Help students maintain relatively accurate but high expectations & efficacy and help students avoid the illusion of incompetence Students’ perceptions of competence develop not just from accurate feedback from the teacher, but through actual success on challenging academic tasks. Keep tasks & assignments at a relatively challenging but reasonable level of difficulty
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Implications for Teachers
Foster the belief that competence or ability is a changeable, controllable aspect of development Decrease the amount of relative ability information that is publicly available to students
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Implications for Teachers
Students’ perceptions of competence are somewhat domain specific and are not equivalent to global self-esteem. It is more productive for academic learning to help students develop their self-perceptions of competence rather than their global self-esteem
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