Situational interest, computer self‐efficacy and self‐regulation: Their impact on student engagement in distance education
University of Southern California · National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University
Abstract
Abstract This study investigates possible relationships among motivational and learning variables (interest, self‐efficacy and self‐regulation) and three types of student engagement (behavioural engagement, emotional engagement and cognitive engagement) in a distance education setting. Participants were 203 students enrolled in online classes in the fall semester of 2008 in the Schools of Gerontology and Engineering at a large research university in the south‐western USA, who completed an online survey assessing their levels of situational interest, computer self‐efficacy, self‐regulation and engagement in distance education. Situational interest and self‐regulation were found to be significantly correlated…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 38.49
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 50
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Situational ethics
- Psychology
- Student engagement
- Distance education
- Self-efficacy
- Cognition
- Computer-assisted web interviewing
- Social psychology
- Quality Education