• 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