A person-centered approach to homework behavior: Students’ characteristics predict their homework learning type

Publication date

2017

Authors

Flunger, BarbaraISNI 0000000403429339
Trautwein, Ulrich
Nagengast, Benjamin
Lüdtke, Oliver
Niggli, Alois
Schnyder, Inge

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

Homework time (i.e., the total amount of time spent on homework) and homework effort (i.e., the extent to which students work seriously on their homework) are defined as two central aspects that characterize students’ homework behavior. Recent research has identified homework learning types by considering differences in students in both homework effort and homework time with a person-centered approach (Flunger et al., 2015). The present study investigated how students’ characteristics (i.e., motivation, conscientiousness, gender, and verbal abilities) are associated with these homework behavior profiles. To this end, data on homework behavior in the subject of French as a second language of 1649 Swiss eighth-grade students were reanalyzed by applying latent profile analyses (LPAs) with covariates in a modified three-step method (Vermunt, 2010). The findings suggest that large amounts of homework time can be a characteristic of favorable homework behavior: When students simultaneously invested a great deal of effort in their homework, spending a lot of time on homework was associated with high motivation and high conscientiousness. By contrast, when students exerted low effort, large amounts of homework time were found to be associated with low motivation and low conscientiousness.

Keywords

Students’ homework behavior, Person-centered approach, Motivation, Conscientiousness, Cognitive abilities, Taverne

Citation

Flunger, B, Trautwein, U, Nagengast, B, Lüdtke, O, Niggli, A & Schnyder, I 2017, 'A person-centered approach to homework behavior : Students’ characteristics predict their homework learning type', Contemporary Educational Psychology, vol. 48, pp. 1-15. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cedpsych.2016.07.002