Literature DB >> 27893248

Can student engagement serve as a motivational resource for academic coping, persistence, and learning during late elementary and early middle school?

Ellen A Skinner1, Jennifer R Pitzer1, Joel S Steele1.   

Abstract

How children and youth deal with academic challenges and setbacks can make a material difference to their learning and school success. Hence, it is important to investigate the factors that allow students to cope constructively. A process model focused on students' motivational resources was used to frame a study examining whether engagement in the classroom shapes students' academic coping, and whether coping in turn contributes to subsequent persistence on challenging tasks and learning, which then feed back into ongoing engagement. In fall and spring of the same school year, 880 children in 4th through 6th grades and their teachers completed measures of students' engagement and disaffection in the classroom, and of their re-engagement in the face of obstacles and difficulties; students also reported on 5 adaptive and 6 maladaptive ways of academic coping; and information on a subset of students' classroom grades was collected. Structural analyses, incorporating student-reports, teacher-reports, and their combination, indicated that the model of motivational processes was a good fit for time-ordered data from fall to spring. Multiple regressions examining each step in the process model also indicated that it was the profile of coping responses, rather than any specific individual way of coping, that was most centrally connected to changes in engagement and persistence. Taken together, findings suggest that these internal dynamics may form self-perpetuating cycles that could cement or augment the development of children's motivational resilience and vulnerability across time. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved).

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Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27893248     DOI: 10.1037/dev0000232

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Psychol        ISSN: 0012-1649


  8 in total

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Authors:  Patricia T Garrett-Peters; Irina L Mokrova; Robert C Carr; Lynne Vernon-Feagans
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2019-03-25

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Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2022-05-14       Impact factor: 4.614

3.  Emotional Intelligence and Academic Engagement in Adolescents: The Mediating Role of Self-Esteem.

Authors:  Ana Belén Barragán Martín; María Del Carmen Pérez-Fuentes; María Del Mar Molero Jurado; África Martos Martínez; María Del Mar Simón Márquez; Maria Sisto; José Jesús Gázquez Linares
Journal:  Psychol Res Behav Manag       Date:  2021-03-15

4.  Construction and validity evidence of a scale for coping with difficult social academic interpersonal situations.

Authors:  Adriana Benevides Soares; Luciana Mourão; Fátima Almeida Maia; Humberto Claudio Passeri Medeiros; Marcia Cristina Monteiro; Roberta de Souza Nogueira Barros; Pedro Vítor Souza Rodrigues
Journal:  Psicol Reflex Crit       Date:  2018-09-03

5.  Temperamental Sensitivities Differentially Linked With Interest, Strain, and Effort Appraisals.

Authors:  Anna Maria Rawlings; Anna Tapola; Markku Niemivirta
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2021-01-08

6.  Pathways from self-disclosure to medical coping strategy among adolescents with moderate and major depression during the COVID-19 pandemic: A mediation of self-efficacy.

Authors:  Yan Wu; Jing Shao; Dawei Zhang; Yongna Wang; Shufen Wang; Zhiren Wang; Yanhua Qu; Jianing Gu
Journal:  Front Psychiatry       Date:  2022-09-02       Impact factor: 5.435

7.  Impact of cognitive-behavioral motivation on student engagement.

Authors:  Maninder Singh; P S James; Happy Paul; Kartikeya Bolar
Journal:  Heliyon       Date:  2022-07-03

8.  The prevalent anxiety disorders among elementary students in Bandung, Indonesia.

Authors:  Susanti Niman; Deo Kumala Dewa; Maria Yunita Indriarini
Journal:  J Public Health Res       Date:  2021-05-31
  8 in total

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