4.4 Review

Motivation-Achievement Cycles in Learning: a Literature Review and Research Agenda

Journal

EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY REVIEW
Volume 34, Issue 1, Pages 39-71

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10648-021-09616-7

Keywords

Learning; Motivation; Academic achievement; Reciprocal; Review

Funding

  1. Jacobs Foundation Science of Learning pilot grant [2019 1329 00]
  2. European Research Council (ERC) [716736]
  3. European Research Council (ERC) [716736] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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The relationship between motivation and academic achievement is reciprocal, but further research is needed to understand the various features and mechanisms of this relationship, as well as to guide future interventions.
The question of how learners' motivation influences their academic achievement and vice versa has been the subject of intensive research due to its theoretical relevance and important implications for the field of education. Here, we present our understanding of how influential theories of academic motivation have conceptualized reciprocal interactions between motivation and achievement and the kinds of evidence that support this reciprocity. While the reciprocal nature of the relationship between motivation and academic achievement has been established in the literature, further insights into several features of this relationship are still lacking. We therefore present a research agenda where we identify theoretical and methodological challenges that could inspire further understanding of the reciprocal relationship between motivation and achievement as well as inform future interventions. Specifically, the research agenda includes the recommendation that future research considers (1) multiple motivation constructs, (2) behavioral mediators, (3) a network approach, (4) alignment of intervals of measurement and the short vs. long time scales of motivation constructs, (5) designs that meet the criteria for making causal, reciprocal inferences, (6) appropriate statistical models, (7) alternatives to self-reports, (8) different ways of measuring achievement, and (9) generalizability of the reciprocal relations to various developmental, ethnic, and sociocultural groups.

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