4.4 Article

Activity Achievement Emotions and Academic Performance: A Meta-analysis

期刊

EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY REVIEW
卷 33, 期 3, 页码 1051-1095

出版社

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10648-020-09585-3

关键词

Achievement emotions; Enjoyment; Anxiety; Boredom; Control-value theory; Academic achievement

资金

  1. Science of Learning Research Centre [19636]
  2. Australian Postgraduate Award scholarship [666493]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Achievement emotions, including enjoyment, anger, frustration, and boredom, are closely linked to academic performance, with enjoyment positively correlated and anger and boredom negatively correlated. The relationship with frustration is weak, and the impact of activity emotions on academic performance is stronger for secondary school students compared to primary school and college students.
Achievement emotions are emotions linked to academic, work, or sports achievement activities (activity emotions) and their success and failure outcomes (outcome emotions). Recent evidence suggests that achievement emotions are linked to motivational, self-regulatory, and cognitive processes that are crucial for academic success. Despite the importance of these emotions, syntheses of empirical findings investigating their relation with student achievement are scarce. We broadly review the literature on achievement emotions with a focus on activity-related emotions including enjoyment, anger, frustration, and boredom, and their links to educational outcomes with two specific aims: to aggregate all studies and determine how strongly related those emotions are to academic performance, and to examine moderators of those effects. A meta-analytical review was conducted using a systematic database of 68 studies. The 68 studies included 57 independent samples for enjoyment (N = 31,868), 25 for anger (N = 11,153), 9 for frustration (N = 1418), and 66 for boredom (N = 28,410). Results indicated a positive relation between enjoyment of learning and academic performance (rho = .27), whereas the relations were negative for both anger (rho = - .35) and boredom (rho = - .25). For frustration, the relation with performance was near zero (rho = - .02). Moderator tests revealed that relations of activity emotions with academic performance are stronger when (a) students are in secondary school compared with both primary school and college, and (b) the emotions are measured by the Achievement Emotions Questionnaires - Mathematics (AEQ-M). Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.

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