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Journal ArticleDOI

A web of achieving in physical education: Goals, interest, outside-school activity and learning

01 Jan 2004-Learning and Individual Differences (The University of North Carolina at Greensboro)-Vol. 14, Iss: 3, pp 169-182
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the dynamics of the motivators as associated with organized outside-school physical activity experiences and learning outcomes and found that the students participating in organized outside school physical activities had a stronger ego-goal orientation and were more physically active in learning.
About: This article is published in Learning and Individual Differences.The article was published on 2004-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 34 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Experiential learning & Active learning.

Summary (3 min read)

1. Introduction

  • Among the many motivators for school learners, achievement goal orientations and interests have been recognized to have unique motivation impact on learning behavior and achievement (Harackiewicz & Sansone, 2000; Sansone & Smith, 2000).
  • Barron, Pintrinch, Elliot, & Thrash, 2002), the dual-goal structure has been observed repeatedly in the students’ perceptions of goals for learning (Kaplan & Middleton, 2002).
  • Exploring the dynamic interactive impact of goals, interest, and out-of-school experiences on learning in physical education will allow us to gain additional understanding about learner motivation and the functions of different motivators.
  • Students (N= 104) were randomly selected from two middle schools in the Washington–Baltimore metropolitan area.

2.2. The research setting

  • The schools were selected randomly from a pool that met the following two criteria: (a) the curriculum was in line with both national and state standards and (b) student learning was assessed using measurable means (skill and knowledge tests) in each content unit.
  • Among the school districts in the Washington–Baltimore metropolitan area, one was identified as having physical education programs most likely to meet the criteria, given its long-time tradition of emphasizing concept-based physical education from kindergarten to eighth grade.
  • Student grading was required to be based on the assessment of skill and knowledge acquisition.
  • Thus, the primary responsibility of physical education teachers was to teach physical education full time in their respective schools.
  • The meeting hours for these periods during a particular day varied according to the schools’.

2.3. 1. Achievement goal orientations

  • The students’ achievement goal orientations were measured using the 13-item (five-point scale) task and ego orientation in sport questionnaire (TEOSQ; Duda & Nicholls, 1992).
  • The task- and ego-goal dual subconstructs were validated through a factor analytical approach and were deemed valid.
  • The internal consistency coefficients (Cronbach α) were .82 and .89, respectively.
  • The activities included fitness exercises, individual sports, team sports, and rhythmic movement content such as dance.
  • To minimize the threat to internal validity that may derive from self-interpretations of ratings of personal interest (Tobias, 1994), the authors used a protocol to limit the possible self-interpretation in the survey.

2.3.3. Physical intensity

  • The students’ physical intensity in classes was measured using the Yamax Digiwalker, which recorded total steps each participant took during a lesson.
  • The literature has shown acceptable validity and reliability of physical intensity measures by the device (Bassett, 2000; Tudor-Locke & Myers, 2000; Welk, Corbin, & Dale, 2000).
  • In a pilot trial of the device for the study, the concurrent validity coefficients of the Digiwalker data ranged between .65 and .91, in accordance with heart rates recorded using the Polar Heart Rate Monitors.

2.3.4. Assessment outcome

  • The students’ performance assessments on skill tests and written exams given by the teachers in various instructional units were used as the indicator of their assessment outcomes.
  • The points were equally assigned to physical skill and knowledge tests, although the teachers usually used a predetermined weighting system to reflect their perception of importance in skill tests (e.g., serving test was weighed more than forearm pass test in volleyball).
  • The authors did not impose any additional achievement assessment to preserve the authenticity of the learning assessment.
  • The authors categorized all assessment scores into either skill or knowledge category.
  • Scores in the two categories were then aggregated and averaged on the 20-point scale to represent learner assessment outcome.

2.3.5. Out-of-school participation

  • Information on out-of-school physical activity experiences was gathered in a survey by asking the participants to indicate, with specific information (e.g., where, what, when, paid or unpaid), whether they took part in organized after-school physical activity programs.
  • Organized activity programs are more likely to nurture and develop particular motivators (goal orientations, personal interest) that the study was investigating.
  • Thus, the authors decided to use ―participation in organized out-of-school programs‖ as the grouping indicator for the data analysis.
  • The reader should take this grouping limitation into account when interpreting the findings.

2.4. Data collection

  • The participants’ responses to the TEOSQ, personal interest, out-of-school activity participation, and other demographic information were collected in two prior-to-class sessions in a quiet classroom adjacent to the gymnasium.
  • Physical intensity data were collected in two randomly selected instructional lessons (not introduction or assessment lessons) in each of the following content units: dancing, fencing, fitness club, gymnastics, multigames, and volleyball.
  • During these lessons, each participant wore a Yamax Digiwalker to measure the number of steps that he/she took.
  • Skill test and written exam grades were collected from the teachers after the instruction, for a unit was officially complete.
  • All data collection was conducted by the researchers.

2.5. Data analysis

  • Goal orientation data were reduced according to the construct subscales (Duda & Nicholls, 1992).
  • Out-ofschool physical activity data were reduced into participation and nonparticipation.
  • Personal interest data were reduced using principal component analysis.
  • Skill and written test grades were aggregated and averaged to represent assessment outcomes in these content units.
  • The association between goal orientations, interest, physical intensity, and achievement was examined using the Pearson Product–Moment.

3. Results

  • As reported in Table 1, the principal component analysis reduced the participants’ personal interests into a fourcategory structure.
  • The results of the Pearson Product–Moment Correlation Analysis are reported in Table 2.
  • In addition to task orientation, physical intensity correlated with contact sport, alternate games, and other.
  • In the MANOVA, in after-school physical activity was used as the factor, and the measures of goals, interest, physical intensity, and assessment outcome were the dependent variables.
  • Further comparisons, reported in Table 4, revealed that the participant students had stronger ego orientation,.

4. Discussion

  • The study was designed to investigate the extent to which goal orientations, personal interest, and measurable learning outcomes (a) were dynamically associated and (b) differed in terms of learners’ out-of-school physical activity participation experiences.
  • Based on the analyzed data, the authors attempt to address the research questions in (a) a web of motivators and learning outcome and (b) a reality check on out-of-school connections.

4. 1. The web of motivators and outcomes

  • The correlation analysis showed a weak relationship between goal orientations and learning outcomes.
  • Their purposes of action may determine the dynamics of behavior.
  • According to Butler (2000), when in an information-seeking context such as learning, students are most likely to engage in actions that may result in acquiring information relevant to the motivators that they adapt to.
  • In other words, learners are likely to strive to achieve to either satisfy their superior ability (ego orientation), to demonstrate their mastery of the skill (task orientation), or to fulfill their personal interest.
  • The authors argue, consequently, that learners’ motivated actions in physical education lessons may not necessarily result in learning achievement that meets the curriculum goals or standards.

4.2. A reality check on out-of-school connections

  • The MANOVA results indicated that participation in organized out-of-school physical activity programs led to a stronger ego-goal orientation and to higher interest in contact sports (including other activities) and physical intensity in physical education lessons.
  • As Windchill (2002) summarized, for instance, learner alternative conceptions (or misconceptions) acquired from out-ofschool sources can be difficult for the teacher to adapt to, manage, and deal with in teaching, where most learner alternative conceptions are found inconsistent with the specified learning standards of the curriculum.
  • Participant and nonparticipant students did not differ in assessment outcome measures (F= 1.16, P=.28), and yet, the participant students demonstrated a higher in-class physical intensity level (F = 5.21, P=.03).
  • Further studying the impact of out-of-school physical activity programs on learning in physical education appears to be imperative from an achievement motivation perspective, too.
  • The actual motivation effects of the motivators may rely on the learner, the learning environment, and expected learning outcome.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A study of U.S. schools was carried out over four years as discussed by the authors, where trained investigators went into more than 1,000 classrooms in 38 elementary and secondary schools in seven different sections of the United States.
Abstract: This is an account of the largest on-the-scene study of U.S. schools ever undertaken. Called A Study of Schooling' and carried on over 4 years, trained investigators went into more than 1,000 classrooms in 38 elementary and secondary schools in seven different sections of the United States. These schools were located in urban, rural, and suburban areas. The investigators talked to teachers, students, administrators, school board officials, parents, and other members of the community. The result is this landmark report, written by one of the country's most astute and experienced educators. His message is one of cautious optimism, despite the extensive problems uncovered, and he provides a realistic agenda for improvement. This report will be a rich and stimulating resource for all those concerned with the education of our youth.

896 citations

Dissertation
01 Jan 2005
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a method to solve the problem of "uniformity" and "uncertainty" in the context of education.iii.iiiiii.
Abstract: iii

150 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors synthesize 186 empirical studies focusing on continuity and discontinuity in students' learning across school and out-of-school contexts, and find that continuity can be the result of different educational intentions, but it also occurs as a given.

95 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined change in students' situational interest as a function of student and task characteristics and found that students working with the more concrete version of the simulation reported an increase in their interest while the opposite was true for students working in the more abstract version.
Abstract: In this study we examined change in students’ situational interest as a function of student and task characteristics. Fifth- and sixth-graders (n = 52) were assigned to one of two task conditions that used a different version of a science simulation. The versions differed in how concrete vs. abstract the simulation elements were. Students’ prior knowledge, achievement goal orientations, and subject-specific interest were assessed before the task and situational interest was measured repeatedly in different phases of the task. Post-task performance was assessed 1 day after the task. The results showed different mean-level changes in situational interest in the two task conditions; students working with the more concrete version of the simulation reported increase in their interest while the opposite was true for students working with the more abstract version. The ratings of situational interest were nevertheless rather stable over time, regardless of the task condition. Students’ situational interest at the beginning of the task was predicted by mastery-intrinsic goal orientation and subject-specific interest. Post-task performance was predicted by prior knowledge and the task condition; students working in the more concrete task condition performed better. The importance of acknowledging both individual characteristics and task elements in the emergence of students’ situational interest is discussed.

86 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The findings reinforced the value of using workbooks to facilitate cognitive knowledge learning in physical education, but raised questions about the direct function of situational interest on engaging students in cognitive learning.

77 citations

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TL;DR: The authors used confirmatory factor analysis to examine between-domain relations of self-efficacy, task-value, and achievement goal orientations among Korean middle and high school students, and found consistent patterns of relations were observed in four different academic domains within each age group.
Abstract: The author used confirmatory factor analysis to examine between-domain relations of self-efficacy , task-value, and achievement goal orientations among 424 Korean middle and high school students. AH motivational constructs demonstrated strong subject specificity in both age groups. Strengths of betweendomain associations differed substantially by individual constructs. Performance-approach and performance-avoidance goals were highly correlated across domains, whereas task-value and mastery goals were more distinct across domains. Self-efficacy perceptions were moderately correlated across subjects. High school students' academic motivation was more differentiated than that of middle school students. Within-domain interrelations among these motivation constructs were generally consistent with previous research. More important, consistent patterns of relations were observed in four different academic domains within each age group.

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TL;DR: In this article, a hierarchical model of intrinsic and extrinsic motivation in sport and exercise is proposed, with self-efficacy as a determinant and an outcome of exercise.
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TL;DR: Recommendations for using electronic pedometers to objectively quantify physical activity (specifically ambulatory activity) for research and surveillance as well as clinical and program applications are suggested.
Abstract: Researchers and practitioners require guidelines for using electronic pedometers to objectively quantify physical activity (specifically ambulatory activity) for research and surveillance as well as clinical and program applications. Methodological considerations include choice of metric and length of monitoring frame as well as different data recording and collection procedures. A systematic review of 32 empirical studies suggests we can expect 12,000–16,000 steps/day for 8–10-year-old children (lower for girls than boys); 7,000–13,000 steps/day for relatively healthy, younger adults (lower for women than men); 6,000–8,500 steps/day for healthy older adults; and 3,500–5,500 steps/day for individuals living with disabilities and chronic illnesses. These preliminary recommendations should be modified and refined, as evidence and experience using pedometers accumulates.

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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the relation between each person and particular subject content over time and the impact of these on behavior, and provide a particular kind of wide-angle lens for thinking about intrinsic motivation because it addresses problem solving, information processing, and control with respect to particular engagement over time.
Abstract: Publisher Summary Study of intrinsic motivation refers to elicited attention for content in the sense of enjoyment, curiosity, and so forth, but no assumption can be made about the level of content knowledge. Individual interest, on the other hand, refers to an ongoing and deepening relation of a person to particular subject content that does, in fact, have qualities of full engagement and task orientation. Individual interest and intrinsic motivation do appear to describe similar outcomes. These include the enjoyment of focused and continued engagement in a task for the sake of the task itself, the pursuit of challenge, and the desire for mastery. For individual interest, these outcomes are linked to particular person–subject content relations. For intrinsic motivation, these outcomes apply more generally to human behavior, in the moment (situational interest) and over time (individual interest). As such, individual interest might be considered to provide a developmental context for thinking about intrinsic motivation. It focuses on the relations between each person and particular subject content over time and the impact of these on behavior. Individual interest provides a particular kind of wide-angle lens for thinking about intrinsic motivation because it addresses problem solving, information processing, and control with respect to particular engagement over time. Furthermore, both internal and external factors contribute to its development. Well-developed individual interest cannot develop without the continued challenges that stem from modeling, opportunities to apprentice, and interaction with others.

548 citations