4.6 Review

Curricular fit perspective on motivation in higher education

Journal

HIGHER EDUCATION
Volume 83, Issue 4, Pages 729-745

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10734-021-00699-3

Keywords

Motivation; Higher education; Alignment; Curricular fit; Motivation to learn; Motivation to perform

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This article introduces a curricular perspective that emphasizes the importance of alignment between curriculum objectives and assessment in students' motivation. In reality, there is often a cognitive and operant misalignment between assessments and objectives, leading to a focus on assessed learning rather than all learning tasks. As a result, students may be more motivated to concentrate their efforts on assessed learning in order to perform well on assessments.
In this article, we present a curricular perspective that can be used to understand students' focus on assessment in higher education. We propose that the degree of alignment between the objectives and assessment of the curriculum plays a crucial role in students' motivation. In case of perfect alignment, all objectives have an equitable probability of being assessed. Thus, all learning contributes to performance equitably. Consequently, the motivation to perform and the motivation to learn should result in the same learning behaviour and performance. However, in reality, a certain degree of cognitive and operant misalignment of the assessment with the objectives is present. Hence, some objectives will not need to be mastered in order to pass certain assessments. Consequently, a distinction arises between assessed and unassessed learning, and only the assessed learning contributes to performance. Thus, the probability of performing well on assessments is higher when students focus their effort on the assessed learning only, instead of dividing their effort between the assessed and unassessed learning. Therefore, students who are motivated to perform have a motivation that fits in a misaligned curriculum. The article concludes with implications of this curricular fit perspective for assessment practices, as well as for motivational research.

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