AGENCY, COMMUNION, AND ACHIEVEMENT-MOTIVATION

Authors
Citation
A. Strage, AGENCY, COMMUNION, AND ACHIEVEMENT-MOTIVATION, Adolescence, 32(126), 1997, pp. 299-312
Citations number
25
Categorie Soggetti
Psychology, Developmental
Journal title
ISSN journal
00018449
Volume
32
Issue
126
Year of publication
1997
Pages
299 - 312
Database
ISI
SICI code
0001-8449(1997)32:126<299:ACAA>2.0.ZU;2-T
Abstract
This study examined the relationship among (1) two aspects of college students' self-concept-the degree to which they reported an agentic or communion, orientation, (2) two views of intelligence they might hold -entity and incremental, and (3) students' tendencies to report adopti ng attitudes and behaviors consistent with a mastery or learned-helple ss orientation. Results from a survey of a sample of 306 Introductory Psychology students indicate that: (1) an incremental view of intellig ence was associated with the adoption of mastery-oriented achievement attitudes and behaviors, while an entity view of intelligence was asso ciated with the adoption of learned-helpless attitudes and behaviors; (2) both agentic and communion orientations were associated with a mas tery orientation; (3) an agentic orientation was also associated with lower levels of learned-helpless attitudes and behaviors while a commu nion orientation was associated with higher levels of learned-helpless attitudes and behaviors; and (4) patterns in the correlations between agency and communion, on the one hand, and several indices of student s' self-confidence in academic arenas, on the other, further supported this asymmetry in the role agency and communion orientations appear t o play in determining college students' adjustment to academic challen ges.