Teacher expectation effects on need-supportive teaching, student motivation, and engagement: A self-determination perspective

Publication date

2018

Authors

Hornstra, LisetteORCID 0000-0001-5873-7409ISNI 0000000419556412
Stroet, K.
van Eijden, Eva
Goudsblom, Jeannette
Roskamp, Claire

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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Abstract

Previous research has shown that teachers differentiate their behaviour based on their expectations of students. Self-determination theory (SDT) makes explicit how teacher behaviour relates to students’ motivation and engagement, namely, via need-supportive teaching. In the present study, we combined both research traditions and examined associations of teacher expectations with need-supportive teaching and thereby students’ motivation and engagement. Two-hundred-and-seventy-six secondary school students and their teachers (N = 11) completed questionnaires. The results indicated that teacher expectations were moderately but positively associated with students’ intrinsic motivation and engagement, and negatively with amotivation. These relationships were fully mediated, although with small effect sizes, by need-supportive teaching. These findings highlight the value of combining research on teacher expectations and SDT, to gain further understanding of how teacher expectations may cause teachers to provide more need support to some students than to others, thereby affecting students’ motivation and engagement.

Keywords

Teacher expectations, student motivation, need-supportive teaching, autonomy support

Citation

Hornstra, T E, Stroet, K, van Eijden, E, Goudsblom, J & Roskamp, C 2018, 'Teacher expectation effects on need-supportive teaching, student motivation, and engagement : A self-determination perspective', Educational Research and Evaluation, vol. 24, no. 3-5, pp. 324-345 . https://doi.org/10.1080/13803611.2018.1550841