Sustaining Primary Control Striving for Achievement Goals During Challenging Developmental Transitions: The Role of Secondary Control Strategies |
| |
Authors: | Jeremy M Hamm Tara L Stewart Raymond P Perry Rodney A Clifton Judith G Chipperfield Jutta Heckhausen |
| |
Institution: | 1. University of Manitoba umhamm8@cc.umanitoba.ca;3. Idaho State University;4. University of Manitoba;5. University of California , Irvine |
| |
Abstract: | Developmental transitions are imbued with ubiquitous uncertainties that undermine goal striving in many otherwise committed individuals. Our seven-month study examined whether cognitive selective secondary control strategies (motivation-focused thinking) facilitate the enactment of achievement goals among young adults experiencing the landmark school to university transition. Sequential regression analyses demonstrated that (a) achievement goals predicted selective secondary control, (b) selective secondary control predicted behavioral selective primary control striving, and (c) selective primary control predicted final course grades. Findings support Heckhausen et al.'s (2010
Heckhausen , J. ,
Wrosch , C. , &;
Schulz , R. ( 2010 ). A motivational theory of life-span development . Psychological Review , 117 , 32 – 60 .Crossref], PubMed], Web of Science ®] , Google Scholar]) proposition that selective secondary control bolsters selective primary control striving and enables goal attainment during difficult transitions. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|