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The beliefs that underlie autonomy-supportive and controlling teaching: A multinational investigation

Authors
Reeve, JohnmarshallVansteenkiste, MaartenAssor, AviAhmad, IkhlasCheon, Sung HyeonJang, HyungshimKaplan, HayaMoss, Jennifer D.Olaussen, Bodil StokkeWang, C. K. John
Issue Date
Feb-2014
Publisher
SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
Keywords
Motivating style; Teacher beliefs; Collectivism; Autonomy support; Antecedents of motivating style
Citation
MOTIVATION AND EMOTION, v.38, no.1, pp.93 - 110
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
MOTIVATION AND EMOTION
Volume
38
Number
1
Start Page
93
End Page
110
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/160716
DOI
10.1007/s11031-013-9367-0
ISSN
0146-7239
Abstract
We investigated the role of three beliefs in predicting teachers' motivating style toward students-namely, how effective, how normative, and how easy-to-implement autonomy-supportive and controlling teaching were each believed to be. We further examined national collectivism-individualism as a predictor of individual teachers' motivating style and beliefs about motivating style, as we expected that a collectivistic perspective would tend teachers toward the controlling style and toward positive beliefs about that style. Participants were 815 full-time PreK-12 public school teachers from eight different nations that varied in collectivism-individualism. All three teacher beliefs explained independent and substantial variance in teachers' self-described motivating styles. Believed effectiveness was a particularly strong predictor of self-described motivating style. Collectivism-individualism predicted which teachers were most likely to self-describe a controlling motivating style, and a mediation analysis showed that teachers in collectivistic nations self-described a controlling style because they believed it to be culturally normative classroom practice. These findings enhance the literature on the antecedents of teachers' motivating styles by showing that teacher beliefs strongly predict motivating style, and that culture informs one of these beliefs-namely, normalcy.
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