Publication | Open Access
The influence of social achievement goals on academic engagement: a cross-sectional survey in a Namibian primary school
16
Citations
27
References
2020
Year
Academic EngagementSocial PsychologyEducational PsychologyEducationGoal SettingPsychologySocial SciencesElementary EducationAchievement Goal ResearchersStudent EngagementSelf-efficacy TheoryStudent MotivationAchievement GoalBehavioral SciencesStudent SuccessMotivationNamibian Primary SchoolEducational LeadershipSocial Achievement GoalsSecondary EducationAchievement Motivation
Achievement goal researchers have primarily focused on mastery and performance goals, while goals concerning the social reasons for wanting to achieve academically have only been minimally explored. The aim of the current study was to extend previous research, by investigating the influence of social achievement goals on different types of academic engagement. Namibian primary school students ( N = 117) answered questionnaires regarding their mastery, performance, and work avoidance achievement goals, their social achievement goals (i.e., affiliation, approval, concern, responsibility, status), and their academic engagement (i.e., behavioral, emotional, agentic). Hierarchical regression analyses, that controlled for the effects of mastery, performance, and work avoidance achievement goals, prior achievement, as well as grade-level, revealed that social achievement goals were able to account for a significant additional proportion of variance in engagement. Social status goals predicted behavioral engagement, while social concern goals predicted emotional and agentic engagement. Our findings indicate that social achievement goals are a distinct construct that can contribute to the current understanding of student motivation and academic engagement.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1