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A multilevel approach to motivational climate in physical education and sport settings: An individual or a group level construct?

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Autor
Papaioannou, A.; Marsh, H. W.; Theodorakis, Y.
Fecha
2004
Materia
multilevel hierarchical modeling
motivational goal orientation
variance components
person-environment fit
teacher effects
ACADEMIC SELF-CONCEPT
ACHIEVEMENT GOALS
ATTRIBUTIONS
ORIENTATIONS
TERMINOLOGY
PREDICTION
ISSUES
Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
Psychology, Applied
Psychology
Sport Sciences
Mostrar el registro completo del ítem
Resumen
Motivational climate is inherently a group-level construct so that longitudinal, multilevel designs are needed to evaluate its effects on subsequent outcomes. Based on a large sample of physical education classes (2,786 students, 200 classes, 67 teachers), we evaluated the effects of classroom motivational climate (task-involving and ego-involving) and individual goal orientations (task and ego) on individual students' outcomes (intrinsic motivation, attitudes, physical self-concept, and exercise intentions) collected early (T1) and late (T2) in the school year. Using a multilevel approach, we found significant class-average differences in motivational climate at T1 that had positive effects on T2 outcomes after controlling T1 outcomes. Although there was no support for a "compatibility hypothesis" (e.g., that task oriented students were more benefited by task-involving motivation climates), the stability of goal orientations was undermined by incompatible climates.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11615/31800
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  • Δημοσιεύσεις σε περιοδικά, συνέδρια, κεφάλαια βιβλίων κλπ. [19735]
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