4.5 Article

The happy-fish-little-pond effect on enjoyment: Generalizability across multiple domains and countries

Journal

LEARNING AND INSTRUCTION
Volume 85, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.learninstruc.2023.101733

Keywords

Achievement emotions; Academic enjoyment; Happy -fish -little -pond effect; Multiple domains; Cross -national generalizability

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In this study, student-level achievement is found to positively predict academic enjoyment in math, science, and reading, while class-level achievement has a negative effect on enjoyment—the Happy-Fish-Little-Pond Effect. These results show relative universality across different academic domains and countries.
Academic enjoyment is an important educational construct given that it benefits students' engagement, persis-tence, wellbeing, and mental health. In this study, we examine two factors that determine this crucial emotion, namely student-and class-level achievement. Past research has been restricted to single-country or single-domain examinations of secondary school students, limiting generalizability of findings. To bridge this gap, we utilize the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study and the Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (TIMSS-PIRLS) combined 2011 data (N = 180,084 4th-grade students, 37 countries). Our results provide robust evidence that student-level achievement positively predicts enjoyment in math, science, and reading, while the effects of class-level achievement are negative-the Happy-Fish-Little-Pond Effect. These results showed relative universality across the domains and countries examined.

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