TY - JOUR
T1 - The effect of achievement goals
T2 - Does level of perceived academic competence make a difference?
AU - Kaplan, Avi
AU - Midgley, Carol
N1 - Funding Information:
. . . each of the achievement goals runs off a different ‘‘program’’ with different commands, decision rules, and inference rules, and hence, with different cognitive, affective, and behavioral consequences. Each goal, in a sense, creates and organizes its own world—each evoking different thoughts and emotions and calling forth different behaviors. (p. 11) The analyses in this paper were conducted on data collected in a study supported by a grant from the Office of Educational Research and Improvement R117C80003 to Dr. Martin L. Maehr. Address correspondence and reprint requests to Avi Kaplan, 1400 School of Education, University of Michigan, 610 East University Ave. Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1259.
PY - 1997/1/1
Y1 - 1997/1/1
N2 - Researchers using a goal orientation framework have hypothesized that learning goals are associated with adaptive patterns of behavior, regardless of the level of perceived ability. In contrast, perceived ability is hypothesized to moderate the relation between performance goals and patterns of adaptive or maladaptive behavior. We examined this hypothesis in two samples of seventh grade middle school students, focusing on the math domain in one sample and on the English domain in the other. Using two different statistical methods, median split and multiple regression, we found only little support for the role of perceived competence as a moderator between performance goals and patterns of behavior. Contrary to what has been suggested, we found some evidence that perceived competence moderated the relation between learning goals and behavior. Implications of these findings for recent efforts to use goal theory to reform classrooms and schools are discussed.
AB - Researchers using a goal orientation framework have hypothesized that learning goals are associated with adaptive patterns of behavior, regardless of the level of perceived ability. In contrast, perceived ability is hypothesized to moderate the relation between performance goals and patterns of adaptive or maladaptive behavior. We examined this hypothesis in two samples of seventh grade middle school students, focusing on the math domain in one sample and on the English domain in the other. Using two different statistical methods, median split and multiple regression, we found only little support for the role of perceived competence as a moderator between performance goals and patterns of behavior. Contrary to what has been suggested, we found some evidence that perceived competence moderated the relation between learning goals and behavior. Implications of these findings for recent efforts to use goal theory to reform classrooms and schools are discussed.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0031256298&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1006/ceps.1997.0943
DO - 10.1006/ceps.1997.0943
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0031256298
SN - 0361-476X
VL - 22
SP - 415
EP - 435
JO - Contemporary Educational Psychology
JF - Contemporary Educational Psychology
IS - 4
ER -