TY - GEN
T1 - Student motivation and engagement in mathematics, science, and English : multilevel modelling
AU - Martin, Andrew J.
AU - Marsh, Herbert W.
PY - 2005
Y1 - 2005
N2 - ![CDATA[Across mathematics, science, and English school subjects, the present study explores a number of issues relevant to the multilevel nature of motivation and engagement and the personal and contextual factors that predict them. Among a sample of 1,701 junior and middle high school students, it examines (a) the extent to which motivation and engagement vary at student, class, and school levels and (b) the extent to which student gender, teacher gender, and grade impact on student motivation and engagement. In relation to the latter, it was of particular interest to determine how motivation and engagement differentially function for boys and girls taught by male or female teachers. Using multilevel modelling procedures (MLwiN), findings demonstrate that the bulk of variance in motivation and engagement occurs at the student level. Relatively few measures yielded significant class-level variance and the bulk of significant class-level variance was found for mathematics. Relatively few significant main effects emerged. Most of them were in girls' favour and all pertained to mathematics and science. Of particular importance, motivation and engagement did not vary substantially for boys and girls as a function of the teacher's gender. Findings are discussed in terms of the implications for educational intervention and for current thinking and theorising about student motivation and engagement.]]
AB - ![CDATA[Across mathematics, science, and English school subjects, the present study explores a number of issues relevant to the multilevel nature of motivation and engagement and the personal and contextual factors that predict them. Among a sample of 1,701 junior and middle high school students, it examines (a) the extent to which motivation and engagement vary at student, class, and school levels and (b) the extent to which student gender, teacher gender, and grade impact on student motivation and engagement. In relation to the latter, it was of particular interest to determine how motivation and engagement differentially function for boys and girls taught by male or female teachers. Using multilevel modelling procedures (MLwiN), findings demonstrate that the bulk of variance in motivation and engagement occurs at the student level. Relatively few measures yielded significant class-level variance and the bulk of significant class-level variance was found for mathematics. Relatively few significant main effects emerged. Most of them were in girls' favour and all pertained to mathematics and science. Of particular importance, motivation and engagement did not vary substantially for boys and girls as a function of the teacher's gender. Findings are discussed in terms of the implications for educational intervention and for current thinking and theorising about student motivation and engagement.]]
KW - motivation in education
KW - sex differences in education
KW - teacher-student relationships
UR - http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/36348
M3 - Conference Paper
BT - Australian Association for Research in Education 2005 conference papers
PB - Australian Association for Research in Education
T2 - Australian Association for Research in Education. Conference
Y2 - 2 December 2012
ER -