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- Title
Mastery Motivation in Boys and Girls: The Role of Intrinsic Versus Extrinsic Motivation.
- Authors
Boggiano, Ann K.; Main, Deborah S.; Katz, Phyllis
- Abstract
This research tested the hypothesis that the importance of adult approval and feedback for females relative to males would render girls of elementary school age more likely go develop an extrinsic orientation in comparison to boys. Using S. Harter's Scale of Intrinsic versus Extrinsic Motivation [(1981), ‘A New Self-Report Scale of Intrinsic Versus Extrinsic Motivational Orientation in the Classroom: Motivational and Informational Components,’ Developmental Psychology Vol. 17, pp. 300-312], the data supported this hypothesis. Because of the assumed differential importance of controlling feedback from adults for females relative to males, a second study examined girls' and boys' preference for challenge as a function of adult controlling feedback and children's motivational orientation. The pattern of data supported the hypothesis that girls relative to boys show differential preferences for challenge, depending on the presence of type of adult feed back and motivational orientation in girls.
- Subjects
MOTIVATION (Psychology); SPATIAL orientation; PSYCHOLOGICAL feedback; EXPECTATION (Psychology); GENDER differences (Psychology); MENTAL age; SCHOOL children; CLASSROOM environment; FEMALES
- Publication
Sex Roles, 1991, Vol 25, Issue 9-10, p511
- ISSN
0360-0025
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/BF00290060