Enhancing Students' Engagement by Increasing Teachers' Autonomy Support |
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Authors: | Reeve Johnmarshall Jang Hyungshim Carrell Dan Jeon Soohyun Barch Jon |
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Affiliation: | (1) University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa;(2) University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin;(3) American College Testing, Iowa City, Iowa |
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Abstract: | Engagement refers to the behavioral intensity and emotional quality of a person's active involvement during a task. Recognizing the benefits highly engaged people experience, we tested whether classroom teachers could incorporate the relatively foreign concept of autonomy support into their motivating styles as a way to promote their students' engagement during instruction. Teachers in an experimental group and teachers in a delayed-treatment control group received information and guidance consistent with self-determination theory on how to support students' autonomy. Over a series of 3 classroom observations, trained raters scored each teacher's autonomy support and 2 measures of their students' engagement–task involvement and influence attempts. Trained teachers displayed significantly more autonomy-supportive behaviors than did nontrained teachers. Further, the more teachers used autonomy support during instruction, the more engaged were their students. This was true on both measures of engagement. |
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Keywords: | autonomy autonomy support engagement high school teachers self-determination |
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