Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 7-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

University students’ motivation, engagement and performance in a large lecture-format general education course

University students’ motivation, engagement and performance in a large lecture-format general... We investigated how high-performers and low-performers differ with regard to motivation and engagement in a university-level, large-format general education geography course. One hundred and ten students participated in the study. A self-report measure was administered three times (at the beginning, middle and end of the semester). Performance data were obtained from final course grades. Results showed there were significant differences between the high- and low-performer groups in motivation but not in engagement. With regard to students’ perceptions of motivational aspects of the course, the low-performer group showed a significant decrease in attention but the high-performer group showed a significant increase. The relevance perceived by both groups decreased over time. The confidence and satisfaction of the low-performer group decreased whereas there was no change in those of the high-performer group throughout the semester. Findings as well as implications for teaching in a college large-format general education course are discussed. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Further and Higher Education Taylor & Francis

University students’ motivation, engagement and performance in a large lecture-format general education course

University students’ motivation, engagement and performance in a large lecture-format general education course

Journal of Further and Higher Education , Volume 41 (2): 14 – Mar 4, 2017

Abstract

We investigated how high-performers and low-performers differ with regard to motivation and engagement in a university-level, large-format general education geography course. One hundred and ten students participated in the study. A self-report measure was administered three times (at the beginning, middle and end of the semester). Performance data were obtained from final course grades. Results showed there were significant differences between the high- and low-performer groups in motivation but not in engagement. With regard to students’ perceptions of motivational aspects of the course, the low-performer group showed a significant decrease in attention but the high-performer group showed a significant increase. The relevance perceived by both groups decreased over time. The confidence and satisfaction of the low-performer group decreased whereas there was no change in those of the high-performer group throughout the semester. Findings as well as implications for teaching in a college large-format general education course are discussed.

Loading next page...
 
/lp/taylor-francis/university-students-motivation-engagement-and-performance-in-a-large-i7RMMLtfLl

References (54)

Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© 2015 UCU
ISSN
1469-9486
eISSN
0309-877X
DOI
10.1080/0309877X.2015.1070401
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

We investigated how high-performers and low-performers differ with regard to motivation and engagement in a university-level, large-format general education geography course. One hundred and ten students participated in the study. A self-report measure was administered three times (at the beginning, middle and end of the semester). Performance data were obtained from final course grades. Results showed there were significant differences between the high- and low-performer groups in motivation but not in engagement. With regard to students’ perceptions of motivational aspects of the course, the low-performer group showed a significant decrease in attention but the high-performer group showed a significant increase. The relevance perceived by both groups decreased over time. The confidence and satisfaction of the low-performer group decreased whereas there was no change in those of the high-performer group throughout the semester. Findings as well as implications for teaching in a college large-format general education course are discussed.

Journal

Journal of Further and Higher EducationTaylor & Francis

Published: Mar 4, 2017

Keywords: Motivation; cognitive engagement; general college education; needs assessment

There are no references for this article.