Interest development: Arousing situational interest affects the growth trajectory of individual interest |
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Affiliation: | 1. The University of Sydney, Faculty of Education and Social work, Australia;2. The University of Melbourne, Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences, Australia;3. Kyushu Sangyo University, Language Education and Research Centre, Japan;1. German Institute for International Educational Research, Berlin, Germany;2. Institute for Educational Quality Improvement, Berlin, Germany;3. Leibniz Institute for Science and Mathematics Education, Kiel, Germany;4. Centre for International Student Assessment, Germany;5. Department of Educational Science, University of Bamberg, Germany |
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Abstract: | Interest has become a central topic in the educational-psychology literature and Hidi and Renninger’s (2006) four-phase model of interest development is its most recent manifestation. However, this model presently enjoys only limited empirical support. To contribute to our understanding of how individual interest in a subject develops in learners, two studies were conducted with primary school science students. The first study (N = 187) tested the assumption that repeated arousal of situational interest affects the growth of individual interest. Latent growth curve modeling was applied and the results suggest that the arousal of situational interest has a positive effect on the development of individual interest and significantly influences its growth trajectory. The second study tested the assumption that engaging students with interest-provoking didactic stimuli, such as problems, is critical to triggering situational interest and increasing individual interest. To test this assumption, four classes of primary school students (N = 129) were randomly assigned to two conditions in a quasi-experimental setup. The treatment condition received four situational-interest-inducing science problems as part of a course whereas the control condition did not, all other things being equal. The results of latent growth curve modeling revealed that only the group receiving problems experienced repeated arousal of situational interest and its related growth in individual interest. Implications for, and amendments to, the four-phase model of interest development are proposed. |
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Keywords: | Four-phase model of interest development Individual interest Situational interest arousal Problem-based learning |
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