Optimal challenge, intrinsic motivation, and failure-avoidant behavior: how to put joy and success back in learningShow full item record
Title | Optimal challenge, intrinsic motivation, and failure-avoidant behavior: how to put joy and success back in learning |
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Author | West, Sylvia Wandell-Conner |
Date | 1993 |
Genre | Dissertation |
Degree | Doctor of Philosophy |
Abstract | Past failures debilitates intrinsic motivation of failure-avoidant individual for future tasks. Presenting 9 impossible Tangrams in a classroom setting, failure-avoidant students were asked to solve as many puzzles as they could in 20 minutes. Following their failure, students were assigned to either a relevant-choice, irrelevant-choice, perceived-choice, or no-choice condition. Students had unlimited time to solve as many of 27 solvable Tangrams as they liked from three difficulty levels. Performance, persistence, and self-report of enjoyment measured intrinsic motivation. No significant differences emerged among the irrelevant-choice, perceived-choice, and no-choice group. Students who had the relevant choice to select their optimal challenge performed better, persisted longer, and enjoyed the task more than did students who had no relevant-choice. When required to solve a final Tangram, the relevant choice group still performed and persisted significantly better than the groups without relevant choice. |
Link | https://repository.tcu.edu/handle/116099117/34809 |
Department | Psychology |
Advisor | Cole, Steven G. |
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Doctoral Dissertations [1526]
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