Facial reconstruction

Search LJMU Research Online

Browse Repository | Browse E-Theses

A Network Analysis of Control-Value Appraisals and Class-room-Related Enjoyment, Boredom, and Pride

Putwain, D and Daumiller, M (2023) A Network Analysis of Control-Value Appraisals and Class-room-Related Enjoyment, Boredom, and Pride. Education Sciences, 13 (3). ISSN 2227-7102

[img]
Preview
Text
A Network Analysis of Control-Value Appraisals and Class-room-Related Enjoyment, Boredom, and Pride.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.

Download (678kB) | Preview

Abstract

Control-Value Theory (CVT) proposes that discrete emotions arise from combinations of control-value appraisals of learning activities and outcomes. Studies have supported this proposition using factor analytic, and latent profile, analyses. Network analysis (NA), however, has not been widely used within the field of educational psychology or to investigate the propositions of CVT. In the present study we set out to examine how control-value appraisals related to three commonly experienced classroom emotions: enjoyment, boredom, and pride, using network analysis. In addition, we included positive and negative facets of value. The sample comprised 170 students (53.5% female) in the first year of secondary education who responded to survey items in a cross-sectional design. NA shows a two-dimensional graphical network of items (edges) and the relations between them (edges). In addition, statistical indices can be used to identify those nodes that show numerous or strong links to others or that bridge clusters (communities) of nodes. The NA showed that emotions and value (positive and negative) but not control cohered into distinct communities. Many, but not all edges, were in support of CVT; positive links between control/positive value and enjoyment and pride, and negative links for boredom; negative links between negative value and enjoyment and pride, and positive links for boredom. Three control-value nodes were particular influential, that lessons are important/valuable (positively) and that work requires too much time (negatively). Interventions and classroom instructional strategies that build value/importance and reduce perceptions of time cost may be particularly effective in facilitating positive emotions and reducing negative emotions.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: L Education > L Education (General)
Divisions: Education
Publisher: MDPI
SWORD Depositor: A Symplectic
Date Deposited: 21 Feb 2023 11:11
Last Modified: 07 Mar 2023 09:30
DOI or ID number: 10.3390/educsci13030239
URI: https://researchonline.ljmu.ac.uk/id/eprint/18947
View Item View Item