Side Effects of Motivational Interventions? Effects of an Intervention in Math Classrooms on Motivation in Verbal Domains
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Publication date
2016-05-18
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Abstract
One way to address the leaking pipeline toward STEM-related careers (i.e., science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) is to intervene on students’ STEM motivation in school. However, a neglected question in intervention research is how such interventions affect motivation in subjects not targeted by the intervention. This question was addressed through data from a cluster-randomized study in which a value intervention was successfully implemented in 82 ninth-grade math classrooms. Side effects on value, self-concept, and effort in German as students’ native language and English as a foreign language were assessed 6 weeks and 5 months after the intervention. Negative effects on value for German, but not for English, were found 5 months after the intervention. The theoretical and educational implications of such effects are discussed.
Keywords
expectancy-value theory, dimensional comparisons, motivational intervention, self-concept, value
Citation
Gaspard, H, Dicke, A, Flunger, B, Haefner, I, Brisson, B M, Trautwein, U & Nagengast, B 2016, 'Side Effects of Motivational Interventions? Effects of an Intervention in Math Classrooms on Motivation in Verbal Domains', AERA Open, vol. 2, no. 2, pp. 1-14. https://doi.org/10.1177/2332858416649168