Understanding teacher judgments of student motivation: The role of (un-)available cues

Beck, J., Dutke, S., & Utesch, T.

Forschungsartikel (Zeitschrift) | Peer reviewed

Zusammenfassung

Background: Accurately judging student motivation enables individualized and student-centered instruction. However, teachers in school tend to judge student motivation inaccurately. Low availability of motivation-related cues, like mastery-approach goals and work-avoidance goals, may explain neglecting these cues in judging motivation. Instead, gender and academic achievement might be overly utilized because they are easily available. Aim: To test teachers’ utilization of highly and equally available cues when judging student motivation. Methods: In the first vignette experiment, pre-service and in-service teachers (N = 205) judged eight fictitious students’ motivation sequentially. Teachers received either achievement goal cues (EG1) or additionally gender and academic achievement cues (EG2), creating an information-adequate environment. In Experiment 2, newly recruited pre-service and in-service teachers (N = 213) evaluated the same vignettes in the same groups, but vignettes were presented simultaneously, and cues had to be memorized, resulting in an information-rich environment. Teachers then formed judgments based solely on their memorywithout further access to the vignettes. Results: When teachers judged student motivation sequentially, they strongly used mastery-approach goals and work-avoidance goals – regardless of whether other cues were available. In memory-based judgments, teachers primarily used gender and academic achievement. Conclusions: Results demonstrate that in information-rich environments where cues have to be memorized, teachers tend to overlook motivation-relevant cues. Instead, they focus moreon cues that do not inherently indicate motivation. These findings suggest that teachers could benefit from assessment environments, like formative assessment, that allow for the direct processing of available cues to better judge student motivation.

Details zur Publikation

FachzeitschriftLearning and Instruction
Jahrgang / Bandnr. / Volume95
Artikelnummer102029
StatusVeröffentlicht
Veröffentlichungsjahr2025
Sprache, in der die Publikation verfasst istEnglisch
DOI10.1016/j.learninstruc.2024.102029
Stichwörterjudgment; motivation; cue utilization; cue availability; bias

Autor*innen der Universität Münster

Beck, Jan Ulrich
Professur für Lernpsychologische Voraussetzungen für Erziehung und Unterricht (Prof. Dutke)
Dutke, Stephan
Professur für Lernpsychologische Voraussetzungen für Erziehung und Unterricht (Prof. Dutke)