TY - JOUR
T1 - Investigating the predictive relations between self-efficacy and achievement goals on procedural and conceptual science learning
AU - Boden, Kelly
AU - Kuo, Eric
AU - Nokes-Malach, Timothy J.
AU - Wallace, Tanner
AU - Menekse, Muhsin
N1 - This research was supported by grant DUE-1534829 from the National Science Foundation and grant No. 22020483 from the James S. McDonnell Foundation. No endorsement should be inferred. Portions of these results were presented at the 2017 American Association of Physics Teachers Summer Meeting and the Physics Education Research Conference, the 58th Meeting of the Psychonomic Society, the 2018 NARST 91st International Annual Conference, and the 6th International Workshop on Advanced Learning Sciences. We thank Emily Wenz, Breanna Wallbaum, Morgan Endlein, and Quentin King-Shepard for their assistance in coding data.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Self-efficacy and achievement goals represent two extensively researched motivational factors in education and have been related to numerous academic outcomes. However, little is known about how they relate to different types of problem-solving. Furthermore, while prior work has found these motivational factors are related, less work has examined them over time, during learning, and controlling for prior knowledge. The current study investigated the relations between these motivational constructs and procedural and conceptual problem-solving in middle school science. Sixth-grade science students’ self-efficacy and achievement goals were surveyed along with procedural and conceptual problem-solving before and after instruction. Results revealed students’ self-efficacy was positively correlated with both procedural and conceptual posttest performance. However, controlling for prior knowledge, self-efficacy only predicted conceptual performance. No relations were found between achievement goals and procedural or conceptual problem-solving. Additionally, results found that changes in mastery-approach goals were positively related to changes in self-efficacy beliefs.
AB - Self-efficacy and achievement goals represent two extensively researched motivational factors in education and have been related to numerous academic outcomes. However, little is known about how they relate to different types of problem-solving. Furthermore, while prior work has found these motivational factors are related, less work has examined them over time, during learning, and controlling for prior knowledge. The current study investigated the relations between these motivational constructs and procedural and conceptual problem-solving in middle school science. Sixth-grade science students’ self-efficacy and achievement goals were surveyed along with procedural and conceptual problem-solving before and after instruction. Results revealed students’ self-efficacy was positively correlated with both procedural and conceptual posttest performance. However, controlling for prior knowledge, self-efficacy only predicted conceptual performance. No relations were found between achievement goals and procedural or conceptual problem-solving. Additionally, results found that changes in mastery-approach goals were positively related to changes in self-efficacy beliefs.
KW - Achievement goals
KW - conceptual
KW - problem solving
KW - procedural
KW - self-efficacy
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U2 - 10.1080/00220671.2023.2251415
DO - 10.1080/00220671.2023.2251415
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85175375994
SN - 0022-0671
VL - 116
SP - 241
EP - 253
JO - Journal of Educational Research
JF - Journal of Educational Research
IS - 5
ER -