What teachers say and do to support students' autonomy during a learning activity.
University of Iowa · University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee
Abstract
Teachers with an autonomy-supportive style rely on different instructional behaviors to motivate their students than do teachers with a controlling style. In the present investigation, the authors tested which of these instructional behaviors actually correlated positively or negatively with students ’ autonomy. The authors used Deci, Spiegel, Ryan, Koestner, & Kauffman’s (1982) teacher–student laboratory paradigm to randomly assign 72 pairs of same-sex preservice teachers into the role of either teacher or student. From videotapes of the 10-min instructional episode, raters scored 11 hypothesized autonomy-supportive behaviors and 10 hypoth-esized controlling behaviors. Correlational analyses confirmed…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 23.64
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 60
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Autonomy
- Mathematics education
- Pedagogy
- Personal autonomy
- Social psychology
- Quality Education