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Nathan W. Zittergruen – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Building on recent research in high performance mindsets and their correlation to high performing people in the workplace, academic success as well as athletic performance, this study aimed to examine the happiness of high performing people. This study examines the relationship between the noncognitive skills of self-awareness, self-discipline,…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, High Achievement, Self Concept, Self Control
Bartimote-Aufflick, Kathryn; Bridgeman, Adam; Walker, Richard; Sharma, Manjula; Smith, Lorraine – Studies in Higher Education, 2016
In this review of 64 articles published since the year 2000, a strong association between self-efficacy and student learning outcomes was apparent. Self-efficacy is also related to other factors such as value, self-regulation and metacognition, locus of control, intrinsic motivation, and strategy learning use. The review revealed that university…
Descriptors: Evaluation, Educational Improvement, College Students, Self Efficacy

Heaton, Ronald C.; Duerfeldt, Pryse H. – Journal of Genetic Psychology, 1973
The personality constructs of self-esteem, self-reinforcement, and locus of control were found to be related in a sample of college students. (ST)
Descriptors: College Students, Locus of Control, Motivation, Personality Development

Bender, William N. – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1987
When temperament, self-concept, and locus of control were compared among learning-disabled (N=38) third- through sixth- graders and matched peers, a multivariate difference was demonstrated with specific univariate effects in task orientation and social flexibility, partially supporting the characterization of learning-disabled students as…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Intermediate Grades, Learning Disabilities, Locus of Control
Sutton, Rosemary E. – Assessment Update, 2005
Because assessment of student learning is mandated by accrediting bodies, many faculty and administrators feel coerced and so resist or even undermine assessment activities on campuses. In this article, the author describes how a prominent motivation theory called "self-determination theory" can be helpful in understanding the attitudes and…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Motivation, Self Determination, Locus of Control

Frasher, James M.; Frasher, Ramona S. – Journal of Educational Administration, 1981
Hypothesizes that the growing body of empirical data concerning attribution theory offers insight into the administrative process. To stimulate research to test this hypothesis, presents previous relevant research and a theory entitled Administrative Attribution Theory. Research questions applying the theory to educational administration are…
Descriptors: Administration, Attribution Theory, Educational Administration, Educational Research

Trope, Yaacov – Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 1980
Subjects were presented with tasks varying in the extent to which success was diagnostic of high ability and failure was diagnostic of low ability. Results supported the self-assessment theory--high achievement-motivated subjects were more interested in obtaining diagnostic information than in succeeding at difficult tasks. (Author/GDC)
Descriptors: Ability, Achievement Need, Difficulty Level, Foreign Countries
Deci, Edward L. – 1977
"Will" is defined in this paper as the capacity to decide how to behave based on a processing of relevant information. A sequence of motivated behavior begins with informational inputs or stimuli. These come from three sources: the environment, one's physiology, and one's memory. These inputs lead to the formation of motives or awareness of a…
Descriptors: Behavior Theories, Behavioral Sciences, Decision Making, Individual Power
Noland, Melody Powers; And Others – 1981
An attempt was made to determine what factors are important in a person's decision to engage in regular, vigorous activity. An Exercise Behavior Model was developed for the purpose of explaining exercise behavior. The model assumes that a person has four major predispositions or inclinations, which influence a readiness to exercise: (1) locus of…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attitudes, Behavior Patterns, Exercise
Ruback, R. Barry; Jurkovic, Gregory J. – 1981
Very little attribution research has examined subjects' self-attributions for important behaviors. When asked to identify reasons for committing criminal offenses, 60 institutionalized male delinquents cited primarily situational factors. This tendency to explain delinquent behavior appeared to be independent of chronological age, and indicative…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Age Differences, Attribution Theory, Correctional Institutions
Singer, Robert N. – 1976
In order to understand what motivates children to participate in or avoid engaging in physical activities, it is necessary to understand something about motivation. There are two sources of motivation. Intrinsic motivation comes from drives, psychological and physiological processes, and needs such as the desire for achievement and…
Descriptors: Achievement Need, Athletics, Behavior, Family Influence

Thomas, Adele – Review of Educational Research, 1979
Learned helplessness is a state of passivity and loss of persistence resulting from individuals' perceptions, over a period of time, that they cannot control outcomes of events nor can their efforts lead to attainment of goals. Research studies are reviewed and implications for the study of learning disabilities are evaluated. (MH)
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Educational Research, Expectation, Failure
Schunk, Dale H. – 1995
The self-regulation of attributions, beliefs concerning the causes of outcomes, is explored. An increasing body of research substantiates the idea that effective self-regulation depends on forming positive attributions that promote perceptions of competence and sustain motivation directed toward learning. Self-regulation refers to the process by…
Descriptors: Achievement, Attribution Theory, Beliefs, Competence
Lepper, Mark R. – 1973
Three experiments were conducted to examine the effects of providing extrinsic rewards for engaging in an activity on children's subsequent intrinsic interest in that activity. In each study, preschool children were asked to engage in an activity of initial intrinsic interest in individual experimental sessions. The children agreed to engage in…
Descriptors: Attention Span, Behavior Change, Classroom Techniques, Experiments
Hawkes, Brent B. – 1995
This document is a literature review discussing research on locus of control, particularly as it relates to early childhood education. Some measures of children's sense of locus of control are discussed, including the Optimism-Pessimism Test Instrument and the Stanford Preschool Internal-External Scale. A discussion of how an educator's sense of…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Cognitive Development, Early Childhood Education, Evaluation
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