Measuring Internet-Specific Reading Motivation and Engagement in an Academic Domain

The purpose of this study was to develop and test a new measure of motivation and engagement when reading for academic purposes on the Internet. Confirmatory factor analysis of the scores of 386 Norwegian pre-service teachers showed that a seven-factor model including the positive reading motivation...

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Main Authors: Christian Brandmo, Ivar Bråten
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cappelen Damm Akademisk NOASP 2021-01-01
Series:Nordic Journal of Literacy Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://nordicliteracy.net/index.php/njlr/article/view/2215/5069
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spelling doaj-fc9c6ec051bd4c85999fabffdd3036db2021-01-28T13:41:15ZengCappelen Damm Akademisk NOASPNordic Journal of Literacy Research2464-15962021-01-0171214410.23865/njlr.v7.2215njlr.v7.2215Measuring Internet-Specific Reading Motivation and Engagement in an Academic DomainChristian BrandmoIvar BråtenThe purpose of this study was to develop and test a new measure of motivation and engagement when reading for academic purposes on the Internet. Confirmatory factor analysis of the scores of 386 Norwegian pre-service teachers showed that a seven-factor model including the positive reading motivation and engagement constructs of intrinsic reading motivation, perceived competence in reading, valuing of reading, and dedication to reading, as well as the negative reading motivation and engagement constructs of perceived difficulty of reading, devaluing of reading, and avoidance of reading, fit the data well. Moreover, regression analyses showed that these reading motivation and engagement constructs contributed to time spent on the Internet for academic purposes and academic achievement over and above gender, educational level, teaching practice, and total time spent on the Internet. Taken together, these findings provide preliminary evidence for the construct validity of the measure. The discussion highlights how this measure may be used in future research on the roles of reading motivation and engagement in Internet reading contexts.https://nordicliteracy.net/index.php/njlr/article/view/2215/5069reading on the internetreading motivation and engagementpre-service teachersconfirmatory factor analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christian Brandmo
Ivar Bråten
spellingShingle Christian Brandmo
Ivar Bråten
Measuring Internet-Specific Reading Motivation and Engagement in an Academic Domain
Nordic Journal of Literacy Research
reading on the internet
reading motivation and engagement
pre-service teachers
confirmatory factor analysis
author_facet Christian Brandmo
Ivar Bråten
author_sort Christian Brandmo
title Measuring Internet-Specific Reading Motivation and Engagement in an Academic Domain
title_short Measuring Internet-Specific Reading Motivation and Engagement in an Academic Domain
title_full Measuring Internet-Specific Reading Motivation and Engagement in an Academic Domain
title_fullStr Measuring Internet-Specific Reading Motivation and Engagement in an Academic Domain
title_full_unstemmed Measuring Internet-Specific Reading Motivation and Engagement in an Academic Domain
title_sort measuring internet-specific reading motivation and engagement in an academic domain
publisher Cappelen Damm Akademisk NOASP
series Nordic Journal of Literacy Research
issn 2464-1596
publishDate 2021-01-01
description The purpose of this study was to develop and test a new measure of motivation and engagement when reading for academic purposes on the Internet. Confirmatory factor analysis of the scores of 386 Norwegian pre-service teachers showed that a seven-factor model including the positive reading motivation and engagement constructs of intrinsic reading motivation, perceived competence in reading, valuing of reading, and dedication to reading, as well as the negative reading motivation and engagement constructs of perceived difficulty of reading, devaluing of reading, and avoidance of reading, fit the data well. Moreover, regression analyses showed that these reading motivation and engagement constructs contributed to time spent on the Internet for academic purposes and academic achievement over and above gender, educational level, teaching practice, and total time spent on the Internet. Taken together, these findings provide preliminary evidence for the construct validity of the measure. The discussion highlights how this measure may be used in future research on the roles of reading motivation and engagement in Internet reading contexts.
topic reading on the internet
reading motivation and engagement
pre-service teachers
confirmatory factor analysis
url https://nordicliteracy.net/index.php/njlr/article/view/2215/5069
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AT ivarbraten measuringinternetspecificreadingmotivationandengagementinanacademicdomain
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