Achievement evaluation in school contexts may be considered as a kind of social judgement affected by social and moral determinants, since it is not merely an estimation of pupils’ accomplishment. Teachers’ judgments have been investigated, starting from the analysis of two theoretical approaches: the norm of internality (Dubois, 2003), and the attributional approach to social motivation (Weiner, 2006). In order to study the social valorization of internal explanations referring to effort in school context, an empirical research has been conducted. Our study investigates how teachers evaluate fictitious pupils, which are supposed to explain events by means of different types of causal explanations. According to our results, pupils providing effort-based explanations receive more positive judgments. Findings are discussed by considering effort as a key principle of school environments.
Matteucci M.C., Tomasetto C., Selleri P., Carugati F. (2008). Teacher judgments and pupils’ causal explanations: Social valorization of effort-based explanations in school context. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY OF EDUCATION, 23, 421-432.
Teacher judgments and pupils’ causal explanations: Social valorization of effort-based explanations in school context
MATTEUCCI, MARIA CRISTINA;TOMASETTO, CARLO;SELLERI, PATRIZIA;CARUGATI, FELICE
2008
Abstract
Achievement evaluation in school contexts may be considered as a kind of social judgement affected by social and moral determinants, since it is not merely an estimation of pupils’ accomplishment. Teachers’ judgments have been investigated, starting from the analysis of two theoretical approaches: the norm of internality (Dubois, 2003), and the attributional approach to social motivation (Weiner, 2006). In order to study the social valorization of internal explanations referring to effort in school context, an empirical research has been conducted. Our study investigates how teachers evaluate fictitious pupils, which are supposed to explain events by means of different types of causal explanations. According to our results, pupils providing effort-based explanations receive more positive judgments. Findings are discussed by considering effort as a key principle of school environments.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.