How Future Goals Enhance Motivation and Learning in Multicultural Classrooms
Publication date
2004
Authors
Andriessen, I.
Lens, W.
Phalet, K.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
DOI
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Abstract
This review examines the impact of future goals on motivation and learning
in multicultural classrooms. Across cultures, schooling is a future-oriented
investment. Studies of minority students’ school achievement have advanced
future goals as a crucial protective factor in the face of frequent school failure.
At the same time, cultural discontinuities and limited opportunities in minority
students’ school careers may weaken the motivational force of the future. Our
review of the seemingly contradictory evidence on the role of the future in minority
students’ school achievement calls for a more fine-grained motivational
theory of the future. Specifically, converging findings support conceptual distinctions
(a) between positive and negative perceptions of the instrumentality
of school tasks for future goals, and (b) between internal and external regulation
of classroom behaviour by future goals. Thus, positive instrumentality
and internal regulation enhance intrinsic motivation and adaptive learning in
multicultural classrooms. We conclude that the motivational force of future
goals can be generalized to minority students and that it depends crucially on
perceived instrumentality and internal regulation.
Keywords
future goals; multicultural classrooms; motivation; instrumentality