WHO IS WILLING TO TAKE LOW-STAKES ASSIGNMENTS?
WHO IS WILLING TO TAKE LOW-STAKES ASSIGNMENTS?
Author(s): Mari-Liis Mägi, Liina Adov, Olev Must, Karin TähtSubject(s): Essay|Book Review |Scientific Life
Published by: Teaduste Akadeemia Kirjastus
Keywords: higher education; low-stake assignements; academic motivation; self-evaluations; gender differences
Summary/Abstract: The main purpose of this study is to explore which students of Estonian higher education institutions are willing to take low-stakes tests which have no direct consequences for them. Altogether 603 first-year undergraduates from different institutions of higher education participated in the study – 46.3 per cent of them took the low-stakes cognitive test. Female students were more willing to participate in the survey. Test-takers, compared to the students who did not take the low-stakes test measuring mental ability, had lower levels of self-evaluation and higher results in national examinations taken at the end of high school. Substantial differences between genders emerged. For male students, previous performance predicted test-taking activity, whereas no variables predicted test-taking activity in female students. When predicting test results, paradoxical relationships with motivation appeared – female students who had higher levels of motivation had lower results in the low-stakes test. It is important to take into account that when interpreting low-stakes tests significant differences could be overlooked when genders are considered together.
Journal: TRAMES
- Issue Year: XVII/2013
- Issue No: 4
- Page Range: 417-432
- Page Count: 16
- Language: English