Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
365174 Learning and Individual Differences 2012 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

The aim of this study was to examine students' (N = 579) achievement goal orientation profiles, the temporal stability of these profiles across the transition to upper secondary education, and profile differences in academic well-being (i.e., school value, school burnout, schoolwork engagement, satisfaction with educational choice). By means of latent profile analysis, four groups of students with distinct motivational profiles were identified: indifferent, success-oriented, mastery-oriented, and avoidance-oriented. Motivational profiles were relatively stable across the transition; half of the students displayed identical profiles over time and most of the changes in the group memberships were directed towards neighboring groups. Regarding group differences, indifferent and avoidance-oriented students showed less adaptive patterns of motivation and academic well-being than did mastery- and success-oriented students. Both mastery- and success-oriented students were highly engaged in studying and found their schoolwork meaningful, although success-oriented students' stronger concerns with performance seemed to make them more vulnerable to school burnout.

► Developmental dynamics between motivation and academic well-being explored. ► Four groups of students with different achievement goal orientation profiles found. ► Students' motivational profiles relatively stable across an educational transition. ► Profiles associated with different patterns of academic well-being. ► Success-oriented students highly engaged but susceptible to exhaustion at school.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Developmental and Educational Psychology
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