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Achievement Goals in Social Interactions: Learning with Mastery vs. Performance Goals
Authors:Céline Darnon  Fabrizio Butera  Judith M. Harackiewicz
Affiliation:(1) Laboratoire de Psychologie Sociale de Grenoble-Chambéry, Université Pierre Mendès France, Grenoble, France;(2) Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, USA;(3) Present address: Laboratoire de Psychologie Sociale et Cognitive, Université Blaise Pascal, Clermont-Ferrand, France;(4) Institut des Sciences Sociales et Pédagogiques, Université de Lausanne - Anthropole, CH 1015 Lausanne, Suisse (Switzerland)
Abstract:
Little work has studied achievement goals in social interaction situations. The present experiment aimed at contributing to this matter by showing the potential of social interaction (in particular disagreement) to moderate the effects of achievement goals on learning. Participants were led to think they interacted with a partner, sharing opinions about a text that they were studying. Mastery and performance goals were manipulated. During the “interaction,” they received either disagreement or agreement from this bogus partner. Results showed that a condition in which mastery goals were induced led to better learning than a performance goal condition only when the partner disagreed. No differences between goal conditions were observed when the partner agreed. Implications for achievement goal research are discussed. Part of this work was conducted during Céline Darnon’s doctoral dissertation under the supervision of Fabrizio Butera, and was written during Céline Darnon’s post-doctorate at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA, thanks to a Fulbright fellowship.
Keywords:Mastery goals  Performance goals  Social interactions  Conflict  Learning
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