Showing posts with label classroom learning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label classroom learning. Show all posts

Tuesday, 15 February 2011

J & J (2005) - volition ( emotion and learning)

Hanna Jarvenjo & Sanna Jarvela (2005)

How students describe the sources of their emotional and motivational experiences during the learning process: A qualitative approach

Learning and Instruction 15, 465-480

Introduction

P466 ‘ In learning situations, individuals make personal appraisals of the situation’s meaning based on their former knowledge and experiences ( Fredrickson, 2001). ( from page 477 Emotional experiences arise when the students interpret the situation and begin to compare it to their former experiences, and to construct personal meanings (Fredrickson, 2001).These appraisals along with situational factors and the individual’s interpretations of them arouse emotions, which then need to be controlled, at least to some extent, to ensure meaningful goal directed behaviour’

‘Research on emotions has shown that students experience a rich variety of emotions in academic settings ( Schutz & De Cuir, 2002).

Schutz, D. H., & DeCuir, J. T. (2002). Inquiry on emotions in education. Educational Psychologist, 37(2), 125e134.

Results show that academic emotions are significantly related to student motivation, learning strategies, cognitive resources, self-regulation and academic achievement (Pekrun, Goetz, Titz, & Perry, 2002)

Pekrun, R., Goetz, T., Titz, W., & Perry, R. P. (2002). Academic emotions in students’ self-regulated

learning and achievement: a program of qualitative and quantitative research. Educational

Psychologist, 37(2), 91e105.

Also, not only do the emotions themselves vary, but also their sources. Learning situations instigate a variety of self-referenced, task-related and social emotions. However, even though there is a lot of research on the effects of emotional factors on classroom learning (see, e.g., Mayring & von Rhoeneck, 2003), there is hardly any research on these issues in technology-based classroom learning contexts.

Aim

1. The aim of this study was to identify the sources of emotional experiences in computer-supported inquiry learning. Specifically, we analysed the reasons the students give as sources of their emotional experiences

2. Another aim of the study was to analyze how the case students expressed and controlled their emotions in actual learning situations. by combining the interviews with the video data uur purpose was to illustrate the aspects of students’ behaviour that are not readily observable,

Framework – volition how is it used to strengthen motivation that in turn backs up goal-directed behaviours.

Learning context

Computer – supported inquiry projects in literature taking place over 12-24 lessons of 75 min duration based in a conventional Finnish classroom context. Students aged 12-15, 7 boys and 11 girls

Forum for knowledge construction discussion

Method

Interviews– students own attributions regarding the source of their emotions obtained through semi structured interviews

All 18 Students asked to describe their goals , learning strategies, interpretations of the learning environment and self-related beliefs and feelings during semi-structured interviews.

In the first phase of the data driven analysis, students’ different kinds of descriptions of their emotional expressions were identified. After several repeated coding sessions, five coding categories were formulated based on the dialectics of data and theory (Miles & Huberman, 1994). The categories were self, task, performance, context, and social (see Table 1).

Video data and case descriptions ( 2 students one boy and one girl

Process-orientated data collection. Working processes videotaped during ten lessons.

When the researcher was familiar with the data, she looked again at the videotapes with the transcriptions and wrote specific descriptions of the students’ emotional and motivational expressions and volitional behaviour. Finally, the descriptions of the two case students were made. Also, the case students’ interview data from the same project were used to complement the case descriptions

Findings

Interview data

Emotions attributed to

self (37%), context (32%), task(12%), performance(11%) social (8%)

What follows are some relevant extracts from the interview data – note p474 ‘students’ descriptions often included more than one source for their experienced emotions’

The self-category included descriptions of experiences that derive from the students’ former endeavours, their individual interests or general thoughts concerning the situation, as well as their personal motivational beliefs about themselves when confronted with the current learning context

Context in Example 7 in which the task requires writing and sharing the created theory in the learning environment and Student 7 does not understand how commenting on the other students’ work in the computer-supported learning environment helps him with his own project

The contextual element e the implemented inquiry learning model e emphasizes collaboration and sharing, and leads the student to situations where she has to share her ideas with other students. In any case, the main source for the student’s negative emotion is social instead of contextual, since she emphasizes the interaction with her classmates. The student feels anxious when the other students can read her notes in the computer-supported learning environment. The main source for the emotional experience is social although the situation was created by the inquiry model.

Combining interview data with video data

In the descriptions that follow the focus is on the expression of the emotions and how control of these emotional experiences varied in the different phases of the learning project and between the case students.

Despite the fact that for both these students 38% ( Ville) and 37%(Anna) of emotions were attributed to self, Anna talked about her emotional experiences in the interviews approximately as much as Ville, and her answers included emotional descriptions in all categories, compared to Ville’s, who did not have any performance descriptions there were some contrasts when it came to looking at the video data.

Ville ( male student) ‘ he expresses his non-task orientation and frustration by shaking his head and talking to himself e.g. non, non, no . “he lays his head on his desk and mumbles to himself

Anna ( female student) ‘almost never expresses her feelings by talking or using gestures

Conclusions

‘The cases of Anna and Ville illustrate the importance of volitional control. Anna had good self-regulation skills and she managed to control her emotional reactions and action towards the goal during the whole project. The analyses of the interviews and video data showed that she was able to highlight the motivational aspects of the task, as can be seen in Example 14, and she also seemed to be able to maintain focus and effort toward the goals despite distractions.

Ville’s working improved after he managed to control his emotions. When the goal became clearer, he was able to better regulate his actions. At the end of the project he seemed to take more responsibility for his own learning, and even if he still expressed his emotions and got distracted from time to time, he managed to return to work after the distractions much more easily.

‘Anna and Ville’s cases demonstrate how emotions can be controlled during the learning process. As Ville showed during the first part of the project, if the emotions overcome the control efforts, learning and cognitive actions become impossible. Cognitive actions may also indicate emotional control, as can be seen in Ville’s Example 14, where writing the computer notes is used as both a cognitive strategy and for controlling the emotional state.’

Learning through discussion

In this study there were surprisingly few responses in the social-category, even though the pedagogical model and computer-supported learning environment emphasized collaboration and knowledge sharing. It seems that social sources for emotional experiences are difficult to investigate and identify from the data, even though students seem to recognize the social aspects of the learning situation. It could be that emotions caused by social sources are so private that students do not want to disclose them.

Monday, 8 March 2010

Learning & Emotion in the Classroom Hascher

Learning and Emotion: perspectives for theory and research

Hascher,T (2010)

European Educational Research Journal, 9, 1, 13-28.

Comments on the fragmentation of emotion research ( ? as applied to learning) , p13 ‘The presentation gives an overview of the state of the art, developing a general framework for theory and research’

Three characteristics of emotion

Many different definitions of emotion and many similar terms, mood, feeling, affect,

However maybe we can agree on the following 3 characteristics

P14

(i) ‘An emotion is an affective reaction, which can be determined and described relatively precisely and can be attributed to a cause or an incident.

(ii) ‘The experience of an emotion (in a learning context) .is related to situations which are of importance to an individual’

(iii) As soon as an emotion is experienced, this emotion becomes the centre of the awareness for the person also leading to an increased self-awareness. Emotions can hardly be denied. They can be disguised towards others but rarely towards oneself.

i.e. Schulz et al (2006,p345) ‘emotions are ways of being’ ‘holistic episodes that include physiological, psychological and behavioural aspects’ i.e. they are interrelated with cognition & behaviour. Therefore there are 5 components to an emotion namely, affect, related thoughts, expression, motivation ( impulse for action) and physiological.

Measuring emotion should reflect this multicomponent approach therefore at least 8 indicators, valence, arousal level(activating/deactivation), intensity, duration, frequency, time dimension ( e.g retrospective like relief, orientated to another person like sympathy, context) Remember also for some there is a distinction between trait & state emotions.

How does emotion impact on learning?

Most theories based on experimental research on mood induction

Three theoretical approaches

(i) mood-congruence hypothesis ( Bower, 1981). Based ( at the time) on the idea of cognitive networsk, that p15 ‘ architecture of the brain is organized by associations and semantic similarities, the more similar and the stronger the association, the closer the location of the information and the easier the activation ( ? still in date?)

(ii) Schwatz (1990) mood has information potential ‘ a person interprets their mood and reacts positively in a positive mood and aversively in a negative mood’.

(ii) Integration of mood information with cognition ( (ii) implies behaviour) gives mood dependent cognitive styles.

Functions of emotions for school learning

In a school context positive emotions/mood can be counter productive unless attention is focused. On the other hand in the right conditions + emotions can enhance creativity. Negative emotions tend to lead the individual to self focus. Cognitive and motivational factors can impact on the effect of emotion on learning. i.e. they act as mediators. Teachers can impact on these mediating factors. Context and learning material also carry emotional potential.

How to approach the study of emotion on learning

Experimental – about control not analysis

P18 ‘each learner has their own learning history’

P18 ‘ it has to be taken explicitly into account that the same emotion from a different origin serves identical or even similar functions and has an identical or similar impact on school learning ( KRO- what is the evidence for this?)

Therefore author studied ‘ the emotional phenomenology of everyday school life’ based on 1300 diary entries from 58 adolescent students showed attribution of emotion to teacher 38%, subject (26%), peers 15% and school 26/27 %.

P19 ‘ so far , the only emotion that is well investigated is anxiety’ + effect is that people become more activated with anxiety, a negative effect is that they worry. i.e. p20 ‘ different components of one emotion can serve different functions’ however ‘ frequent experience of an emotion can lead to a form of habituation….. these so-called affective tendencies or trait emotions are probably more influential on learning that a sort term emotional episode’ in the case of anxious traits a student can become hyper vigilant to a certain cue’

Author formulates 3 aspects of special importance for future research in the context of school learning.

(i) how can the process of learning and instruction (KRO and also construction) be modelled in an integrative way i.e. flow of the teacher-learner process

(ii) which functions do the different qualities of emotions have for the learning process?

(iii) what are the mediator variables ( KRo also how do they mediate/)