2009
DOI: 10.1007/s10648-009-9107-x
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A Review of Self-Report and Alternative Approaches in the Measurement of Student Motivation

Abstract: Within psychological and educational research, self-report methodology dominates the study of student motivation. The present review argues that the scope of motivation research can be expanded by incorporating a wider range of methodologies and measurement tools. Several authors have suggested that current study of motivation is overly reliant on self-report measures, warranting a move toward alternative approaches. This review critiques self-report methodology as a basis for examining alternative conceptuali… Show more

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Cited by 173 publications
(100 citation statements)
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References 110 publications
(254 reference statements)
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“…In the most natural situation, random, individual, and group interviews with the children were conducted in accordance with semi-structured interviews adopted by Fulmer, & Frijters, (2009) [52] and Guthrie et al (2007) [15]. From interviewing with young children, researcher collected the information to do further analysis in understanding how children fall in love with reading and how they are satisfied with the classroom aesthetic reading environment arranged by teachers to modify details and thinking of this research.…”
Section: Interview Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the most natural situation, random, individual, and group interviews with the children were conducted in accordance with semi-structured interviews adopted by Fulmer, & Frijters, (2009) [52] and Guthrie et al (2007) [15]. From interviewing with young children, researcher collected the information to do further analysis in understanding how children fall in love with reading and how they are satisfied with the classroom aesthetic reading environment arranged by teachers to modify details and thinking of this research.…”
Section: Interview Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A consistency motif may have played a part in the students' response-giving, and we do not have access to other measures or observations that can verify the student's self-reports. Future studies may employ an integrated approach, combining self-report measures with other measurement techniques, as recently advised (Fulmer & Frijters, 2009).…”
Section: Study Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although Likert scales have been predominant in motivation research, they have been criticized for their risks to result in imprecise findings mainly due to the problematic assumption that they provide interval-level measurement. Multi-method approaches using self-reports and behavioural measures should be encouraged in future motivational studies (for a detailed discussion, see Fulmer & Frijters, 2009). Fourth, despite the availability of a very large pool of data and the good reliability values of the three scales measuring the beliefs about school learning, the instrument used in the present study should be replicated in future studies with samples coming from different social and educational contexts where school learning is valued differently.…”
Section: Limitations and Future Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%