The Relation Between Students’ Intrinsic Reading Motivation and Book Reading in Recreational and School Contexts

In comparison with younger children, older students tend to be less motivated to read. A literature class that fails to motivate students is one aspect that has often been discussed in this regard. Using data from 405 German ninth graders, we examined how students’ book reading is related to intrins...

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Main Authors: Franziska Maria Locher, Sarah Becker, Maximilian Pfost
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-05-01
Series:AERA Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2332858419852041
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spelling doaj-906f60a57bd948dc834d64062626f3472020-11-25T03:25:09ZengSAGE PublishingAERA Open2332-85842019-05-01510.1177/2332858419852041The Relation Between Students’ Intrinsic Reading Motivation and Book Reading in Recreational and School ContextsFranziska Maria LocherSarah BeckerMaximilian PfostIn comparison with younger children, older students tend to be less motivated to read. A literature class that fails to motivate students is one aspect that has often been discussed in this regard. Using data from 405 German ninth graders, we examined how students’ book reading is related to intrinsic situational and intrinsic habitual reading motivation in and out of school. The books that students reported to have read were characterized by LIX readability and text type. Our results first showed that recreational reading motivation exceeded school reading motivation. Second, the reading of classic literature was a negative predictor of intrinsic situational reading motivation. Third, in the school context, students who read more difficult books were less motivated to read them. Fourth, analyses showed that individual book-reading experiences were linked to intrinsic habitual reading motivation. We discuss practical implications for book reading in and out of the literature class.https://doi.org/10.1177/2332858419852041
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Franziska Maria Locher
Sarah Becker
Maximilian Pfost
spellingShingle Franziska Maria Locher
Sarah Becker
Maximilian Pfost
The Relation Between Students’ Intrinsic Reading Motivation and Book Reading in Recreational and School Contexts
AERA Open
author_facet Franziska Maria Locher
Sarah Becker
Maximilian Pfost
author_sort Franziska Maria Locher
title The Relation Between Students’ Intrinsic Reading Motivation and Book Reading in Recreational and School Contexts
title_short The Relation Between Students’ Intrinsic Reading Motivation and Book Reading in Recreational and School Contexts
title_full The Relation Between Students’ Intrinsic Reading Motivation and Book Reading in Recreational and School Contexts
title_fullStr The Relation Between Students’ Intrinsic Reading Motivation and Book Reading in Recreational and School Contexts
title_full_unstemmed The Relation Between Students’ Intrinsic Reading Motivation and Book Reading in Recreational and School Contexts
title_sort relation between students’ intrinsic reading motivation and book reading in recreational and school contexts
publisher SAGE Publishing
series AERA Open
issn 2332-8584
publishDate 2019-05-01
description In comparison with younger children, older students tend to be less motivated to read. A literature class that fails to motivate students is one aspect that has often been discussed in this regard. Using data from 405 German ninth graders, we examined how students’ book reading is related to intrinsic situational and intrinsic habitual reading motivation in and out of school. The books that students reported to have read were characterized by LIX readability and text type. Our results first showed that recreational reading motivation exceeded school reading motivation. Second, the reading of classic literature was a negative predictor of intrinsic situational reading motivation. Third, in the school context, students who read more difficult books were less motivated to read them. Fourth, analyses showed that individual book-reading experiences were linked to intrinsic habitual reading motivation. We discuss practical implications for book reading in and out of the literature class.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2332858419852041
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