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STUDENTS’ ACHIEVEMENTS IN A STATISTICS COURSE IN RELATION TO MOTIVATIONAL ASPECTS AND STUDY BEHAVIOUR
Author(s) -
Luc Budé,
Margaretha W. J. van de Wiel,
Tj. Imbos,
Math J. J. M. Candel,
Nick J. Broers,
Martijn P. F. Berger
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
statistics education research journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1570-1824
DOI - 10.52041/serj.v6i1.491
Subject(s) - psychology , attribution , path analysis (statistics) , expectancy theory , affect (linguistics) , lisrel , social psychology , causal model , statistics , structural equation modeling , mathematics , communication
The present study focuses on motivational constructs and their effect on students’ academic achievement within an existing statistics course. First-year Health Sciences students completed a questionnaire that measures several motivational constructs: dimensions of causal attributions, outcome expectancy, affect, and study behaviour, all with respect to statistics. The results showed that when the cause of negative events was perceived as uncontrollable, outcome expectancy was negative. When the cause of negative events was perceived as stable, affect toward statistics was negative. Furthermore, negative affect toward statistics and limited study behaviour led to unsatisfactory achievements. Path analysis (Lisrel) largely confirmed the causal relations in a model that was based on attributional and learned helplessness theories. The consequences of these findings for statistics education are discussed. First published May 2007 at Statistics Education Research Journal Archives

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