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Autonomy-supportive teaching: Its malleability, benefits, and potential to improve educational practice

Authors
Reeve, JohnmarshallCheon, Sung Hyeon
Issue Date
2-1월-2021
Publisher
ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
Citation
EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGIST, v.56, no.1, pp.54 - 77
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGIST
Volume
56
Number
1
Start Page
54
End Page
77
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/50160
DOI
10.1080/00461520.2020.1862657
ISSN
0046-1520
Abstract
Autonomy-supportive teaching is the adoption of a student-focused attitude and an understanding interpersonal tone that enables the skillful enactment of seven autonomy-satisfying instructional behaviors to serve two purposes-support intrinsic motivation and support internalization. Using self-determination theory principles and empirical findings, researchers have developed and implemented numerous teacher-focused and methodologically-rigorous interventions to provide teachers with the professional developmental experience they need to learn how to become more autonomy supportive. The findings from 51 autonomy-supportive teaching interventions (including 38 randomized control trials) collectively show that (1) teachers can learn how to become more autonomy supportive during instruction (autonomy-supportive teaching is malleable) and, once learned, (2) this greater autonomy-supportive teaching produces a wide range of educationally important student, teacher, and classroom climate benefits (autonomy-supportive teaching is beneficial). Recognizing this, the article shows how the recent surge in autonomy-supportive intervention research has advanced the conceptual understanding of the nature of autonomy-supportive teaching and clarified its potential to improve educational practice.
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