Building relationships in higher education to support students’ motivation
Publication date
2023
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Document Type
Article
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taverne
Abstract
Student-teacher relationships in higher education take place in two embedded social contexts: the in-class environment and the educational institute in which the in-class environment is situated. The interplay between the two contexts and their association with students’ motivation was studied in the current study. In a broad sample (N=597), perceptions of student-staff relationship quality, need-supportive teaching in class, and autonomous and controlled motivation were measured. Perceptions of in-class teacher involvement were associated with autonomous motivation, while perceptions of in-class teacher structure were associated with controlled motivation. The association of perceptions of in-class teacher involvement and autonomy support with autonomous motivation seemed to be suppressed by perceptions of trust in benevolence. This indicates that students can get a ‘just tell me what to do’- attitude when trust in benevolence makes them shift from being supported to depending on support. Studying both embedded contexts in one analysis, resulted in a more fine-grained insight.
Keywords
Student-staff interactions, motivation, need-supportive teaching, relationship quality, self-determination theory, Taverne
Citation
Leenknecht, M J M, Snijders, I, Wijnia, L, Rikers, R M J P & Loyens, S M M 2023, 'Building relationships in higher education to support students’ motivation', Teaching in Higher Education, vol. 28, no. 3, pp. 632-653. https://doi.org/10.1080/13562517.2020.1839748