When to Scaffold Motivational Self-Regulation Strategies for High School Students' Science Text Comprehension

Noting the important role of motivation in science students' reading comprehension, this 14-weeks quasi-experiment investigated the optimal timing for implementation of metamotivational scaffolding for self-regulation of scientific text comprehension. The “IMPROVE” metamotivational self-regulat...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tova Michalsky
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.658027/full
id doaj-a465640ab36f4454a616df29e722e45e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a465640ab36f4454a616df29e722e45e2021-05-14T06:04:37ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782021-05-011210.3389/fpsyg.2021.658027658027When to Scaffold Motivational Self-Regulation Strategies for High School Students' Science Text ComprehensionTova MichalskyNoting the important role of motivation in science students' reading comprehension, this 14-weeks quasi-experiment investigated the optimal timing for implementation of metamotivational scaffolding for self-regulation of scientific text comprehension. The “IMPROVE” metamotivational self-regulatory model (Introducing new concepts, Metamotivation questioning, Practicing, Reviewing and reducing difficulties, Obtaining mastery, Verification, and Enrichment) was embedded at three different phases of secondary students' engagement with scientific texts and exercises (before, during, or after) to examine effects of timing on groups' science literacy and motivational regulation. Israeli 10th graders (N = 202) in eight science classrooms received the same scientific texts and reading comprehension exercises in four groups. Three treatment groups received metamotivational scaffolding before (n = 52), during (n = 50), or after text engagement (n = 54). The control group (n = 46) received standard instructional methods with no metamotivational scaffolding. Pretests and posttests assessed science literacy, domain-specific microbiology knowledge, and metamotivation regulation. Intergroup differences were non-significant at pretest but significant at posttest. The “before” group significantly outperformed all other groups. The “after” group significantly outperformed the “during” group, and the control group scored lowest. Outcomes suggested delivery of metamotivational scaffolding as a potentially important means for promoting students' science literacy and effortful perseverance with challenging science tasks, especially at the reflection-before-action stage for looking ahead and also at the reflection-on-action stage for looking back. More theoretical and practical implications of this preliminary study were discussed to meet the growing challenges in science teaching schoolwork.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.658027/fullmetamotivation scaffoldingmotivational regulation strategiesscience literacyscience knowledgemicrobiology texts
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tova Michalsky
spellingShingle Tova Michalsky
When to Scaffold Motivational Self-Regulation Strategies for High School Students' Science Text Comprehension
Frontiers in Psychology
metamotivation scaffolding
motivational regulation strategies
science literacy
science knowledge
microbiology texts
author_facet Tova Michalsky
author_sort Tova Michalsky
title When to Scaffold Motivational Self-Regulation Strategies for High School Students' Science Text Comprehension
title_short When to Scaffold Motivational Self-Regulation Strategies for High School Students' Science Text Comprehension
title_full When to Scaffold Motivational Self-Regulation Strategies for High School Students' Science Text Comprehension
title_fullStr When to Scaffold Motivational Self-Regulation Strategies for High School Students' Science Text Comprehension
title_full_unstemmed When to Scaffold Motivational Self-Regulation Strategies for High School Students' Science Text Comprehension
title_sort when to scaffold motivational self-regulation strategies for high school students' science text comprehension
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Noting the important role of motivation in science students' reading comprehension, this 14-weeks quasi-experiment investigated the optimal timing for implementation of metamotivational scaffolding for self-regulation of scientific text comprehension. The “IMPROVE” metamotivational self-regulatory model (Introducing new concepts, Metamotivation questioning, Practicing, Reviewing and reducing difficulties, Obtaining mastery, Verification, and Enrichment) was embedded at three different phases of secondary students' engagement with scientific texts and exercises (before, during, or after) to examine effects of timing on groups' science literacy and motivational regulation. Israeli 10th graders (N = 202) in eight science classrooms received the same scientific texts and reading comprehension exercises in four groups. Three treatment groups received metamotivational scaffolding before (n = 52), during (n = 50), or after text engagement (n = 54). The control group (n = 46) received standard instructional methods with no metamotivational scaffolding. Pretests and posttests assessed science literacy, domain-specific microbiology knowledge, and metamotivation regulation. Intergroup differences were non-significant at pretest but significant at posttest. The “before” group significantly outperformed all other groups. The “after” group significantly outperformed the “during” group, and the control group scored lowest. Outcomes suggested delivery of metamotivational scaffolding as a potentially important means for promoting students' science literacy and effortful perseverance with challenging science tasks, especially at the reflection-before-action stage for looking ahead and also at the reflection-on-action stage for looking back. More theoretical and practical implications of this preliminary study were discussed to meet the growing challenges in science teaching schoolwork.
topic metamotivation scaffolding
motivational regulation strategies
science literacy
science knowledge
microbiology texts
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.658027/full
work_keys_str_mv AT tovamichalsky whentoscaffoldmotivationalselfregulationstrategiesforhighschoolstudentssciencetextcomprehension
_version_ 1721441319633551360