Title of article
Incentivizing education: Seeing schoolwork as an investment, not a chore
Author/Authors
Destin، نويسنده , , Mesmin and Oyserman، نويسنده , , Daphna، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
4
From page
846
To page
849
Abstract
Most American children expect to attend college but because they do not necessarily spend much time on schoolwork, they may fail to reach their imagined “college-bound” future self. The proposed identity-based motivation model helps explain why this gap occurs: Imagined “college-bound” identities cue school-focused behavior if they are salient and feel relevant to current choice options, not otherwise. Two studies with predominantly low-income and African American middle school students support this prediction. Almost all of the students expect to attend college, but only half describe education-dependent (e.g., law, medicine) adult identities. Having education-dependent rather than education-independent adult identities (e.g., sports, entertainment) predicts better grades over time, controlling for prior grade point average (Study 1). To demonstrate causality, salience of education-dependent vs. education-independent adult identities was experimentally manipulated. Children who considered education-dependent adult identities (vs. education-independent ones) were eight times more likely to complete a take-home extra-credit assignment (Study 2).
Keywords
Socioeconomic status , Possible selves , motivation , social cognition , Race , Future identity , Academic achievement
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Record number
1959523
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