An Individual Differences Measure of Attributions That Affect Achievement Behavior

Attributing a negative achievement outcome (e.g., failing a test) to causes that are personally uncontrollable and stable elicits a low expectancy of future success, feelings of hopelessness in that domain, and reduced behavioral efforts to succeed. Thus, a tendency to make such attributions (i.e.,...

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Main Authors: N. C. Higgins, Mitchell R. P. LaPointe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2012-12-01
Series:SAGE Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244012470110
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spelling doaj-b93b9939ef6d48b8a60091bdaf4e4a452020-11-25T01:20:36ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open2158-24402012-12-01210.1177/215824401247011010.1177_2158244012470110An Individual Differences Measure of Attributions That Affect Achievement BehaviorN. C. Higgins0Mitchell R. P. LaPointe1 St. Thomas University, Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, CanadaAttributing a negative achievement outcome (e.g., failing a test) to causes that are personally uncontrollable and stable elicits a low expectancy of future success, feelings of hopelessness in that domain, and reduced behavioral efforts to succeed. Thus, a tendency to make such attributions (i.e., dysfunctional academic attributional style ) is an individual differences variable that puts people at risk. Two studies examine the factor structure and predictive validity of the Academic Attributional Style Questionnaire (AASQ). Study 1 (using two independent samples) found that the AASQ is a factorially valid measure of functional and dysfunctional attributional styles. In Study 2, during repeated failure in an academic task, the success expectancies, hopefulness, and behavioral persistence of students with a dysfunctional attributional style were lower than those of students with a functional attributional style. These findings modify the attributional theory of achievement motivation (Weiner, 1985) by positing an individual differences moderator variable (i.e., attributional style) and extend attributional research on at-risk students.https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244012470110
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author N. C. Higgins
Mitchell R. P. LaPointe
spellingShingle N. C. Higgins
Mitchell R. P. LaPointe
An Individual Differences Measure of Attributions That Affect Achievement Behavior
SAGE Open
author_facet N. C. Higgins
Mitchell R. P. LaPointe
author_sort N. C. Higgins
title An Individual Differences Measure of Attributions That Affect Achievement Behavior
title_short An Individual Differences Measure of Attributions That Affect Achievement Behavior
title_full An Individual Differences Measure of Attributions That Affect Achievement Behavior
title_fullStr An Individual Differences Measure of Attributions That Affect Achievement Behavior
title_full_unstemmed An Individual Differences Measure of Attributions That Affect Achievement Behavior
title_sort individual differences measure of attributions that affect achievement behavior
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open
issn 2158-2440
publishDate 2012-12-01
description Attributing a negative achievement outcome (e.g., failing a test) to causes that are personally uncontrollable and stable elicits a low expectancy of future success, feelings of hopelessness in that domain, and reduced behavioral efforts to succeed. Thus, a tendency to make such attributions (i.e., dysfunctional academic attributional style ) is an individual differences variable that puts people at risk. Two studies examine the factor structure and predictive validity of the Academic Attributional Style Questionnaire (AASQ). Study 1 (using two independent samples) found that the AASQ is a factorially valid measure of functional and dysfunctional attributional styles. In Study 2, during repeated failure in an academic task, the success expectancies, hopefulness, and behavioral persistence of students with a dysfunctional attributional style were lower than those of students with a functional attributional style. These findings modify the attributional theory of achievement motivation (Weiner, 1985) by positing an individual differences moderator variable (i.e., attributional style) and extend attributional research on at-risk students.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244012470110
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