Title of article
Challenge seeking: The relationship of achievement goals to choice of task difficulty level in ego-involving and neutral conditions
Author/Authors
Carolyn M. Jagacinski، نويسنده , , Shamala Kumar and IriniKokkinou، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
13
From page
310
To page
322
Abstract
We investigated Nicholls’ (Psychol Rev 91:
328–346, 1984) predictions concerning the impact of
achievement goals (manipulated and measured) on risktaking
behavior. Participants were given ego-involving or
neutral instructions and chose the difficulty levels for 10
nonverbal cognitive problems they performed. Consistent
with Nicholls’ prediction, a moderate level of difficulty
was initially preferred following neutral instructions. In
contrast, following ego-involving instructions, women
tended to select a lower level of difficulty and men a higher
level of difficulty, reflecting the fact that men reported
higher levels of perceived ability than women. Endorsements
of mastery- and performance-approach goals were
generally positively related to the levels of difficulty
selected across trials. Endorsement of performance-avoidance
goals was negatively related to the levels of difficulty
selected, but the relationship diminished in later trials.
During the later trials, participants given ego-involving
instructions selected higher levels of difficulty than those
given neutral instructions and men selected higher levels of
difficulty than women.
Keywords
Achievement goals Choice of difficulty Achievement motivation Dynamics of action Gender differences
Journal title
MOTIVATION AND EMOTION
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
MOTIVATION AND EMOTION
Record number
711633
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