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How Students Create Motivationally Supportive Learning Environments for Themselves: The Concept of Agentic Engagement

Authors
Reeve, Johnmarshall
Issue Date
8월-2013
Publisher
AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
Keywords
achievement; agency; agentic engagement; autonomy support; student engagement
Citation
JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY, v.105, no.3, pp.579 - 595
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY
Volume
105
Number
3
Start Page
579
End Page
595
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/102564
DOI
10.1037/a0032690
ISSN
0022-0663
Abstract
The present study introduced "agentic engagement" as a newly proposed student-initiated pathway to greater achievement and greater motivational support. Study 1 developed the brief, construct-congruent, and psychometrically strong Agentic Engagement Scale. Study 2 provided evidente for the scale's construct and predictive validity, as scores correlated with measures of agentic motivation and explained independent variance in course-specific achievement not otherwise attributable to students' behavioral, emotional, and cognitive engagement. Study 3 showed how agentically engaged students create motivationally supportive learning environments for themselves. Measures of agentic engagement and teacher-provided autonomy support were collected from 302 middle-school students in a 3-wave longitudinal research design. Multilevel structural equation modeling showed that (a) initial levels of students' agentic engagement predicted longitudinal changes in midsemester perceived autonomy support and (b) early-semester changes in agentic engagement predicted longitudinal changes in late-semester autonomy support. Overall, these studies show how agentic engagement functions as a proactive, intentional, collaborative, and constructive student-initiated pathway to greater achievement (Study 2) and motivational support (Study 3).
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