Title of article
Achievement Goals and Persistence Across Tasks: The Roles of Failure and Success
Author/Authors
Georgios D. Sideridis & Avi Kaplan ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
23
From page
429
To page
451
Abstract
The focus of this study is on the role of achievement goals in students’ persistence. The authors administered 5 puzzles to 96 college students: 4 unsolvable and 1 relatively easy (acting as a hope probe). They examined whether and how persistence may deteriorate as a function of failing the puzzles, as well as whether and how persistence may rebound after an event of success. Time spent engaging in the task comprised the dependent variable persistence (representing a behavioral aspect of engagement). Results suggested that mastery-oriented students persisted significantly longer compared with performance approach–oriented, performance avoidance–oriented, and amotivated students across failure trials. However, performance approach–oriented students were more likely to rebound after experiencing success. Qualitative data provided insights into the affective processes that accompanied engagement with the task.
Keywords
motivation , goal orientation , success , failure , achievement goal theory , performance goals
Journal title
The Journal of Experimental Education
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
The Journal of Experimental Education
Record number
708804
Link To Document