Attitude versus Aptitude: Is Intelligence or Motivation More Important for Positive Higher-Educational Outcomes?

This longitudinal study explores the relationships among a set of student input and environmental throughput variables in predicting output human capital skills acquisition and academic achievement at a large Canadian university. The framework for exploring these relationships is referred to as the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of adolescent research 2000-01, Vol.15 (1), p.58-80
Hauptverfasser: Côté, James E., Levine, Charles G.
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container_title Journal of adolescent research
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creator Côté, James E.
Levine, Charles G.
description This longitudinal study explores the relationships among a set of student input and environmental throughput variables in predicting output human capital skills acquisition and academic achievement at a large Canadian university. The framework for exploring these relationships is referred to as the integrated paradigm of student development. To our surprise, it was found that the input intelligence quotient was negatively related to output human capital skills and to various measures of adjustment to this university setting. In contrast, a measure of input motivation for personal and intellectual development best predicted output skills acquisition and academic achievement, independent of intelligence quotient. Although these counterintuitive findings may be sample- and university-specific, the instrument package representing the integrated paradigm of student development appears to provide a useful diagnostic battery for evaluating how well different types of students make the transition to different types of university settings.
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subjects Academic Achievement
Adjustment
Adolescent Development
Attitudes
Canada
College Students
Educational Attainment
Educational Sociology
Foreign Countries
High School Graduates
Higher Education
Human Capital
Intellectual Development
Intelligence
Intelligence Quotient
Job Skills
Late Adolescents
Longitudinal Studies
Motivation
Outcomes of Education
Predictor Variables
Social psychology
Student Adjustment
Student Attitudes
Student Development
Student Motivation
Universities
title Attitude versus Aptitude: Is Intelligence or Motivation More Important for Positive Higher-Educational Outcomes?
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