articleBritish Journal of Educational PsychologyJun 1, 2002Closed access

Choice is good, but relevance is excellent: Autonomy‐enhancing and suppressing teacher behaviours predicting students' engagement in schoolwork

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev · Department of Education

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Abstract

Results

Smallest Space Analyses indicated that both children and early adolescents can differentiate among three types of autonomy enhancing teacher behaviours - fostering relevance, allowing criticism, and providing choice - and three types of autonomy suppressing teacher behaviours - suppressing criticism, intruding, and forcing unmeaningful acts. Regression analyses supported the hypothesis concerning the importance of teacher behaviours that clarify the personal relevance of schoolwork. Among the autonomy-suppressing behaviours, 'Criticism-suppression' was the best predictor of feelings and engagement.

Conclusions

The findings underscore the active and empathic nature of teachers' role in supporting students' autonomy, and suggest that autonomy-support is important not only for early adolescents but also for children. Discussion of potential determinants of the relative importance of various autonomy-affecting teacher actions suggests that provision of choice should not always be viewed as a major indicator of autonomy support.

Citation impact

1,092
total citations
FWCI
9.71
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100%
References
41
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Psychology
  • Autonomy
  • Deci-
  • Relevance (law)
  • Criticism
  • Feeling
  • Social psychology
  • Developmental psychology
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