Utility-Value Intervention in School: Students' Migration and Parental Educational Backgrounds as Moderators

A growing body of research suggests that utility-value interventions can promote students' academic motivation and achievement. Moreover, there is evidence that minimal interventions are particularly useful for ethnic minority and first-generation students at college. Whether this is also the c...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of experimental education 2022-04, Vol.90 (2), p.364-382
Hauptverfasser: Weidinger, Anne F., Gaspard, Hanna, Harackiewicz, Judith M., Paschke, Patrick, Bergold, Sebastian, Steinmayr, Ricarda
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container_issue 2
container_start_page 364
container_title The Journal of experimental education
container_volume 90
creator Weidinger, Anne F.
Gaspard, Hanna
Harackiewicz, Judith M.
Paschke, Patrick
Bergold, Sebastian
Steinmayr, Ricarda
description A growing body of research suggests that utility-value interventions can promote students' academic motivation and achievement. Moreover, there is evidence that minimal interventions are particularly useful for ethnic minority and first-generation students at college. Whether this is also the case with high school students belonging to minorities and having low parental educational background, is unclear. In a double-blind randomized field experiment with N = 439 academic-track students from 9th grade in Germany, we investigated whether a short version of an established utility-value intervention (i.e., quotations evaluation intervention) would promote the students' utility, attainment, and intrinsic values in math and their math test performance after the intervention. Moreover, we investigated if such short-term intervention effects were moderated by students' migration background and parental educational background. We found significant positive main effects of the intervention on the students' utility and attainment values in math compared to a control group. The effect on attainment value was especially pronounced for students with migration background whose parents held no university entrance certificate. We discuss the practical relevance of these findings and highlight challenges for future research in this field.
doi_str_mv 10.1080/00220973.2020.1855407
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subjects Academic achievement
College students
Control Groups
Educational Background
Elementary school students
Expectancy-value theory
Foreign Countries
Grade 9
High School Students
Intervention
mathematics
Mathematics Achievement
Mathematics Tests
Migrants
Migration
migration background
Motivation
Parent Background
Parent educational background
parental educational background
Secondary school students
Student Motivation
Students
task value
title Utility-Value Intervention in School: Students' Migration and Parental Educational Backgrounds as Moderators
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