Publication | Closed Access
Utility value interventions in a college biology lab: The impact on motivation
24
Citations
51
References
2019
Year
Science EducationBehavioral Decision MakingEducational PsychologyEducationWriting AssessmentUtility Value InterventionsPsychologyUtility ValueStem EducationStudent MotivationStudent LearningLanguage StudiesLab ReportsLearning SciencesMotivationEducational TestingWriting StudiesHigher EducationInstructionEducational AssessmentAbstract Science WritingAchievement MotivationSelf-regulated LearningCollege Biology Lab
Abstract Science writing, such as lab reports, allows students to form a meaningful understanding of scientific concepts. However, students often view scientific writing as unimportant and utilize surface level approaches when completing writing assignments. The current study implemented three experimental interventions (directly‐communicated, self‐generated, and hybrid) aligned with prior literature and designed to improve the utility value of lab reports in college settings. Participants ( n = 1,002) were recruited from 43 lab sections of an introductory biology course at a large southeastern university. Measures of subjective task value (utility value, attainment value, cost, and intrinsic value) were collected pre‐, mid‐, and post‐intervention. The self‐generated and hybrid groups exhibited higher self‐reported utility value by posttest compared to the control group. Requiring students to generate their own utility value toward a task, followed by a written reflection, increases students' maintained and situational interest for biology laboratory reports.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1