4.2 Article

Goal complexes: Integrating achievement goals as standards and self-attributed motives as reasons underlying goal pursuit

Journal

SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY OF EDUCATION
Volume 25, Issue 4, Pages 845-880

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11218-022-09699-2

Keywords

Self-attributed motives; Achievement goals; Goal complexes; Learning-related emotions; Engagement and burnout; Academic buoyancy

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This paper examines goal complexes that cross other-approach and other-avoidance goals with the approach-avoidance dimensions of Big Three motives as underlying reasons, and investigates the predictive utility of these goal complexes in relation to well-being and academic buoyancy.
Goal complexes, which are formed by pairing standards of competence strivings with their underlying reasons, are essential to an understanding of achievement goal regulation. This paper examines goal complexes that cross other-approach and other-avoidance goals with the approach-avoidance dimensions of Big Three motives as underlying reasons. 220 undergraduates participated in Study 1 which developed and validated the Self-Attributed Motive Scale to measure hope of success, fear of failure, hope of affiliation, fear of rejection, hope of power, and fear of loss of power. Additionally, 235 undergraduates participated in Study 2 where goal complexes were created by crossing the motive items developed in Study 1 with other-approach and other-avoidance goals. The predictive utility of the resultant goal complexes was examined in relation to positive well-being (positive learning-related emotions and engagement), negative well-being (negative learning-related emotions and burnout), and academic buoyancy. The contributions of the studies to the self-attributed motive and goal complex literatures are discussed.

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