Filtern
Volltext vorhanden
- nein (47) (entfernen)
Dokumenttyp
- Wissenschaftlicher Artikel (45)
- Sonstiges (2)
Gehört zur Bibliographie
- ja (47) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- motivation (5)
- Teacher self-efficacy (4)
- mathematics (4)
- self-concept (4)
- teaching quality (4)
- Mathematics classrooms (3)
- Multilevel analyses (3)
- Teacher enthusiasm (3)
- Teacher support (3)
- Teaching quality (3)
- gender (3)
- Adolescence (2)
- Interest (2)
- Motivation (2)
- Multilevel latent change model (2)
- Self-concept (2)
- Teacher motivation (2)
- achievement emotions (2)
- adolescence (2)
- latent transition analysis (2)
- motivation in mathematics (2)
- task value (2)
- Academic self-concept (1)
- Achievement emotions (1)
- Achievement goal orientation (1)
- Achievement goal orientations (1)
- Adaptive teaching (1)
- Adaptives Unterrichten (1)
- Beanspruchungsfolgen (1)
- Beginning teachers (1)
- Betty's brain (1)
- Big Five personality traits (1)
- COVID-19 (1)
- COVID-19-Pandemie (1)
- Career change (1)
- Classroom research (1)
- Demands (1)
- Educational plans (1)
- Educational transitions (1)
- Effort (1)
- Elementary school (1)
- Emotional exhaustion (1)
- Expectancy-value theory (1)
- Fernunterricht (1)
- Fragebogen (1)
- Gender (1)
- Heterogenität (1)
- Heterogenous groups (1)
- Individual school self-concept (1)
- Inoculation against setbacks (1)
- Instruction (1)
- Instructional quality (1)
- Instruktionsqualität (1)
- Interest value (1)
- Intrinsic motivation (1)
- Intrinsicmotivation (1)
- Intrinsische Motivation (1)
- Krankheitsangst (1)
- Latent change model (1)
- Latent profile analysis (1)
- Latent profile analysis; (1)
- Latent transition analysis (1)
- Lehrer-Schüler-Beziehung (1)
- Lehrkräfte (1)
- Lehrkräftebildung (1)
- Lernroboter (1)
- Longitudinal multilevel analysis (1)
- Mathematics (1)
- Mentoring (1)
- Model (1)
- Motivational change (1)
- Motivational development (1)
- Motivational profiles (1)
- Motives (1)
- Multilevel (1)
- Parent-teacher partner-ship (1)
- Performance (1)
- Practical experiences (1)
- Praxissemester (1)
- Professional development (1)
- Psychologiestudierende (1)
- Reading motivation (1)
- Realistic Accuracy (1)
- Reflection (1)
- Reflexionsprozesse (1)
- School (1)
- School value (1)
- Selbstwirksamkeitserwartungen (1)
- Self-efficacy (1)
- Self-efficacy beliefs (1)
- Social school self-concept (1)
- Task values (1)
- Teacher educator (1)
- Teacher interest (1)
- Teacher training (1)
- Teacher-student relationship (1)
- Teachers (1)
- Transition preparedness (1)
- Unterrichtspraxis (1)
- Video-based (1)
- Videobasierte Reflexion (1)
- Vielfältige Zusammenarbeit von Eltern und Lehrkräften (1)
- Well-being (1)
- absolute (1)
- academic (1)
- analysis (1)
- attributions (1)
- augmented reality (1)
- autonomy (1)
- big-fish-little-pond-effect (1)
- boredom (1)
- career plans (1)
- characteristics (1)
- classroom (1)
- classroom characteristics (1)
- classroom management (1)
- competence (1)
- competencies (1)
- composition (1)
- control-value (1)
- criterial (1)
- dimensional comparison (1)
- distant teaching (1)
- educational (1)
- educational achievement (1)
- effects (1)
- engagement (1)
- expectancy-value theory (1)
- gender-sensitive didactics (1)
- gendered motivational beliefs (1)
- grade retention (1)
- health anxiety (1)
- heterogeneity (1)
- high-ability tracked students (1)
- home-based parental involvement (1)
- individual academic self-concept (SESSKO) (1)
- individualisiertes Unterrichten (1)
- individualization (1)
- individualized instruction (1)
- intelligent tutoring system (1)
- intelligent tutoring systems (1)
- intelligente tutorielle Systeme (1)
- interindividual change (1)
- intraindividual hierarchies of motivation (1)
- intrinsic motivation (1)
- job demands-resources model (1)
- language arts (1)
- large-scale study (1)
- latent change model (1)
- latent profile analysis (1)
- latent transition analysis/latent profile analysis (1)
- linear mixed models (1)
- longitudinal (1)
- media in education (1)
- mental disorders (1)
- mental hypochondriasis (1)
- mentale Hypochondrie (1)
- motivational-affective learning processes (1)
- motivational-affektive Lernentwicklung (1)
- non-native speakers (1)
- occupational choices (1)
- parents’ beliefs (1)
- parent–child conversations (1)
- perceived classroom management (1)
- personality (1)
- psychische Störungen (1)
- psychology (1)
- questionnaire (1)
- reflection (1)
- relatedness (1)
- school based parental involvement (1)
- schulische Kompetenzen (1)
- simulations (1)
- social (1)
- social robots (1)
- socioeconomic status (1)
- students (1)
- teacher judgements (1)
- teacher professional development (1)
- teacher self-efficacy (1)
- teacher self-efficacy for classroom management (1)
- teacher‐ assigned grades (1)
- teaching (1)
- teaching/learning strategies (1)
- theory (1)
- virtual reality (1)
- ängsschnittliche Mehrebenenanalyse (1)
Effects of social and individual school self-concepts on school engagement during adolescence
(2020)
While school self-concept is an important facilitator of a student's school engagement, previous studies rarely investigated whether it may also explain the change in students' school engagement during secondary school. Moreover, as social relations play an increasingly important role in adolescence, the current research distinguishes between the social and individual school self-concepts of a student. Whereas individual school self-concept uses the perception of a student's own ability in the past in order to estimate perceived current ability, social school self-concept refers to the comparison of a student's own perceived current ability with the current perceived abilities of others. We examined the role of students' individual and social school self-concepts in the development of behavioral and emotional school engagement during the period from grade 8 to grade 9. The sample consisted of 1088 German adolescents at the first measurement time (M-age = 13.70, SD = 0.53; 53.9% girls). The findings suggested a significant decline in both emotional and behavioral school engagement over the span of 1.5 years. In addition, social-but not individual-school self-concept was associated with the change in both dimensions of school engagement over time, such as it may intensify a student's decline in school engagement levels. This might be due to the fact that students with a high social school self-concept tend to increasingly emphasize competition and comparison and strive for high grades, which lowers students' school participation and identification in the long term.
Providing students with efficient instruction tailored to their individual characteristics in the cognitive and affective domains is an important goal in research on computer-based learning. This is especially important when seeking to enhance students' learning experience, such as by counteracting boredom, a detrimental emotion for learning. However, studies comparing instructional strategies triggered by either cognitive or emotional characteristics are surprisingly scarce. In addition, little research has examined the impact of these types of instructional strategies on performance and boredom trajectories within a lesson. In the present study, we compared the effectiveness of an intelligent tutoring system that adapted variable levels of hint details to a combination of students' dynamic, self-reported emotions and task performance (i.e., the experimental condition) to a traditional hint delivery approach consisting of a progressive, incremental supply of details following students' failures (i.e., the control condition). Linear mixed models of time-related changes in task performance and the intensity of boredom over two 1-h sessions showed that students (N = 104) in the two conditions exhibited equivalent progression in task performance and similar trajectories in boredom intensity. However, a consideration of students' achievement levels in the analyses (i.e., their final performance on the task) revealed that higher achievers in the experimental condition showed a reduction in boredom during the first session, suggesting possible benefits of using emotional information to increase the contingency of the hint delivery strategy and improve students’ learning experience.
Rooted in Eccles and colleagues' expectancy-value theory, this study aimed to examine how expectancies and different facets of task value combine to diverse profiles of motivational beliefs, how such complex profiles develop across a school year, and how they relate to gender and career plans. Despite abundant research on the association between gender and motivational beliefs, there is a paucity of knowledge regarding the gendered development of student motivational belief profiles in specific domains. Using latent-transition analysis in a sample of N = 751 ninth to tenth graders (55.9% girls), we investigated girls' and boys' development of motivational belief profiles (profile paths) in mathematics across a school year. We further analyzed the association between these profile paths and math-related career plans. The results revealed four motivational belief profiles: high motivation (intrinsic and attainment oriented), balanced above average motivation, average motivation (attainment and cost oriented), and low motivation (cost oriented). Girls were less likely than expected by chance to remain in the high motivation profile, while the opposite was true for boys. The math-relatedness of students' career plans was significantly higher in the "stable high motivation" profile path than in all other stable profile paths.
Germany historically responded to student diversity by tracking students into different schools beginning with grade 5. In the last decades, sociopolitical changes, such as an increase in "German-as-a-second-language" speaking students (GSL), have increased diversity in all tracks and have forced schools to consider forms of individualization. This has opened up the scientific debate in Germany on merits and limitations of individualization for different student groups within a tracked system and heterogeneous classes. The aim of the present exploratory study was to examine how individualized teaching (i.e., teacher self-reported individualized teaching practices and individual reference norm orientation) is related to student-perceived teaching quality. Additionally, we considered moderation effects of classroom composition in relation to achievement and proportion of GSL students. Longitudinal data came from 35 mathematics classes with 659 9th and 10th grade students. Results showed significant relation between teacher self-reported individualized teaching practices and individual reference norm orientation and monitoring. Regarding the composition effects, the proportion of GSL students in class moderated the relation between teacher self-reported individual reference norm orientation and cognitive activation. Our findings contribute to the growing body of evidence that classroom composition can differentially impact the relation between teachers' behaviors and students' perceptions of teaching quality.
Lesemotivation ist von Bedeutung für Leseleistung und ist interindividuell unterschiedlich ausgeprägt. Jedoch ist bislang wenig bekannt über Veränderungen unterschiedlicher Lesemotivationsmuster und die Bedeutung des Geschlechts, der Leseleistung und der Unterrichtsgestaltung für solche Veränderungen. Mittels dieser Erkenntnisse könnten adaptive Lernangebote ausgeweitet werden. Die vorliegende Längsschnittstudie greift diese Frage auf und untersucht basierend auf Daten von N = 1313 Lernenden (50,0 % Mädchen) in der 5. und 6. Jahrgangsstufe, wie sich Wertüberzeugungen und Leseselbstkonzept interindividuell unterschiedlich verändern. Latente Profilanalysen verweisen auf drei motivationale Muster zu beiden Zeitpunkten: ‚Geringer intrinsischer Wert‘, ‚Moderate Lesemotivation‘ und ‚Hohe Lesemotivation‘. Hohe Lehrkraftunterstützung trägt dazu bei, dass Lernende im Verlauf des fünften Schuljahres in das Profil ‚Hohe Lesemotivation‘ statt in das Motivationsprofil ‚Geringer intrinsischer Wert‘ wechseln. Mädchen und Lernende mit hoher Leseleistung wechseln eher in das Profil ‚Hohe Lesemotivation‘ statt in das Profil ‚Moderate Lesemotivation‘. Implikationen für Unterricht werden diskutiert.
This study examined the relations between teacher-reported classroom management self-efficacy, stu-dent-reported teaching quality and students' enjoyment in mathematics. Data were collected from German ninth and tenth-grade students (N = 779) and their teachers (N = 40) at the beginning and the middle of the school year. Multilevel models showed that teachers' self-efficacy at time 1 significantly and positively related to class-level monitoring and relatedness at time 2. Class-level relatedness at time 2 was significantly and positively associated with enjoyment at time 2. Teacher-reported self-efficacy at time 1 was indirectly related to enjoyment at time 2 through relatedness at time 2.
The social context plays a decisive role in the formation of the academic self-concept (ASC) and has been widely studied as the big-fish-little-pond-effect (BFLPE). This effect describes that comparable talented students in high-achieving school settings have a lower ASC compared to equally talented students attending low-achieving settings. Past research has focused on students’ domain-specific ASC, while little is known about the relation of achievement-related classroom compositions and the various facets of ASC. Additionally, BFLPE-research has been critiqued to build its theoretical frame on social comparison theory, without providing sufficient empirical support. To address this gap, we analyzed how the single student’s social, criterial, absolute, and individual ASC relate to class-level achievement of 8th graders. Applying Multilevel Structural Equation Modeling (MLSEM) we found that all facets of ASC were significantly related to average-class achievement, while student’s social ASC revealed the strongest associated. The results reveal explicitly that average-class achievement is strongly related to social comparison processes.
Emotionen von Lehrkräften gelten als wichtige Voraussetzung für eine effektive Unterrichtsgestaltung (Sutton & Wheatley, 2003), für das emotionale Erleben Lernender im Unterricht (Frenzel, Goetz, Lüdtke, Pekrun, & Sutton, 2009; Tam et al., 2019), aber auch für die Leistung Lernender (Kunter et al., 2013). Wie auch motivationale und kognitive Merkmale prägen die Emotionen von Lehrkräften folglich das berufliche Handeln von Lehrkräften maßgeblich (Kunter & Holzberger, 2014). Ein profundes Verständnis der Konsequenzen von Lehreremotionen für die Lehr-Lernprozesse von Schülerinnen und Schülern ist daher von zentraler Bedeutung, um Bedingungen erfolgreichen Unterrichtens zu verstehen. Verschiedene empirische Arbeiten haben vor diesem Hintergrund die Wirkungen einzelner...
Die Reflexion praktischer Unterrichtserfahrungen ermöglicht es Lehramtsstudierenden theoretische Wissensaspekte und praxisrelevante Erkenntnisse miteinander zu verknüpfen. Die vorliegende Studie untersucht die Bedeutung des Mediums der Reflexion (eigenes Video vs. fremdes Video vs. Protokoll) sowie der Art der reflektierten Unterrichtssituation (positiv vs. herausfordernd) für die Reflexionsprozesse Lehramtsstudierender. Darüber hinaus wird untersucht, auf welchen Ebenen (Basal‑, Sicht- und Tiefenstrukturen) das Unterrichtsgeschehen reflektiert wird. Datengrundlage der quasi-experimentellen Studie sind Unterrichtsreflexionen von 55 Lehramtsstudierenden, die inhaltsanalytisch ausgewertet wurden. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass Lehramtsstudierende die Tiefenstrukturen des Unterrichts reflektieren, wenn die Reflexion von Situationen, die als positiv erlebt wurden, anhand fremder Unterrichtsvideos geschieht. Bei der Reflexion von herausfordernden Unterrichtssituationen werden Tiefenstrukturen sowohl anhand von fremden Videos als auch anhand von Protokollen reflektiert. Die Implikationen der Ergebnisse für die Lehrkräftebildung werden im Hinblick auf die Reflexion von Unterrichtspraxis diskutiert.