This article reports the dispositional profile of 880 Masters students in Australia, based on their responses to an online survey. Learners’ dispositional attributes form the foundations for learning behaviour and therefore academic outcomes. The profile of the cohort overall was as expected for an elite academic group, yet there was substantial variation between individuals. Cluster analysis identified three groups of students with meaningfully different dispositional profiles. These profiles related to academic achievement, with participants’ academic achievement most closely related to their epistemic attributes. It is argued that students at the Masters level typically possess the agentic attributes necessary for effective self-regulation. Epistemic attributes are therefore more relevant for differentiating between higher and lower achieving students at this level. The importance of sophisticated epistemic attributes is in line with the stated goals of postgraduate education around the world. Collectively, this evidence supports the explicit teaching of metacognitive and epistemic skills within postgraduate coursework degrees.
Purpose Learners’ dispositional attributes form the foundations for their learning behaviour and therefore academic outcomes. This study aims to explore the dispositional attributes of postgraduate learners in coursework programs, and to understand the relationships between dispositional attributes and academic achievement at this level. Design/methodology/approach This study profiled the dispositions towards learning of 880 Master’s students in Australia, reported in an online survey. Statistical analysis was used to explore the possibility of underlying dispositional dimensions and latent clusters of participants within the cohort. Findings The profile of the cohort overall was as expected for an elite academic group, yet there was substantial variation between individuals. Cluster analysis identified three groups of students with meaningfully different dispositional profiles. Exploratory factor analysis revealed two underlying dispositional dimensions, representing epistemic and agentic attributes. Epistemic attributes were most closely related to academic achievement. Practical implications It is argued that students at Master’s level typically possess the agentic attributes necessary for effective self-regulation. At this level, therefore, epistemic attributes are more relevant for differentiating between higher and lower achieving students. The attainment of sophisticated epistemic attributes is in line with the stated goals of postgraduate education. This supports the explicit teaching of metacognitive and epistemic skills within postgraduate degrees. Originality/value This study contributes a detailed analysis of Master’s students’ dispositional profiles. Two underlying dispositional dimensions are identified, representing agentic and epistemic attributes. The importance of epistemic attributes for postgraduate academic achievement identifies an opportunity for targeted interventions to raise the quality of learning at this level.
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