Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: http://hdl.handle.net/10259/10143
Título
Perceived Difficulty of School Science and Cost Appraisals: a Valuable Relationship for the STEM Pipeline?
Autor
Publicado en
Research in Science Education. 2022, V. 52, n. 2, p. 553–565
Editorial
Springer
Fecha de publicación
2022-04
ISSN
0157-244X
DOI
10.1007/s11165-020-09963-5
Abstract
The lack of students interested in pursuing science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM)-related careers calls for studies that identify variables affecting their career decisions. By drawing on recent conceptualizations of the cost domain first introduced in the expectancy-value theory of achievement motivations, this study investigated whether the perceived difficulty of school science predicted and affected elementary school students (N = 245) task effort and loss of valued alternatives experienced while engaging in a science-related course. Hierarchical multiple regression analysis revealed that students’ perceived difficulty significantly predicted levels of cost experienced when studying science. Likewise, multi-factor ANOVAs revealed that students perceiving school science as a difficult subject reported significantly higher levels of task effort and loss of valued alternatives related to studying science. These findings suggest that the attitudinal dimensions of perceived difficulty play a promising role in the development of cost in science, which has valuable implications for repairing the leaky STEM pipeline.
Palabras clave
Expectancy-value
Loss of valued alternatives
Task effort
Perceived difficulty
Regression analysis
Materia
Psicología
Psychology
Enseñanza
Teaching
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