Motivational profiles from a self-determination perspective: the quality of motivation matters.

M Vansteenkiste, E Sierens, B Soenens…�- Journal of�…, 2009 - psycnet.apa.org
M Vansteenkiste, E Sierens, B Soenens, K Luyckx, W Lens
Journal of educational psychology, 2009psycnet.apa.org
The present research complements extant variable-centered research that focused on the
dimensions of autonomous and controlled motivation through adoption of a person-centered
approach for identifying motivational profiles. Both in high school students (Study 1) and
college students (Study 2), a cluster analysis revealed 4 motivational profiles: a good quality
motivation group (ie, high autonomous, low controlled); a poor quality motivation group (ie,
low autonomous, high controlled); a low quantity motivation group (ie, low autonomous, low�…
Abstract
The present research complements extant variable-centered research that focused on the dimensions of autonomous and controlled motivation through adoption of a person-centered approach for identifying motivational profiles. Both in high school students (Study 1) and college students (Study 2), a cluster analysis revealed 4 motivational profiles: a good quality motivation group (ie, high autonomous, low controlled); a poor quality motivation group (ie, low autonomous, high controlled); a low quantity motivation group (ie, low autonomous, low controlled); and a high quantity motivation group (ie, high autonomous, high controlled). To compare the 4 groups, the authors derived predictions from qualitative and quantitative perspectives on motivation. Findings generally favored the qualitative perspective; compared with the other groups, the good quality motivation group displayed the most optimal learning pattern and scored highest on perceived need-supportive teaching. Theoretical and practical implications of the findings are discussed.
American Psychological Association