Probing for the multiplicative term in modern expectancy–value theory: A latent interaction modeling study

Artikel in FachzeitschriftForschungbegutachtet

Publikationsdaten


VonUlrich Trautwein, Herbert W. Marsh, Benjamin Nagengast, Oliver Lüdtke, Gabriel Nagy, Kathrin Jonkmann
OriginalspracheEnglisch
Erschienen inJournal of Educational Psychology, 104(3)
Seiten763-777
Herausgeber (Verlag)American Psychological Association
ISSN0022-0663, 1939-2176
DOI/Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1037/a0027470
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht – 08.2012

In modern expectancy–value theory (EVT) in educational psychology, expectancy and value beliefs additively predict performance, persistence, and task choice. In contrast to earlier formulations of EVT, the multiplicative term Expectancy × Value in regression-type models typically plays no major role in educational psychology. The present study used latent moderated structural equation modeling to explore whether there is empirical support for a multiplicative effect in a sample of 2,508 students at the end of secondary education. Expectancy and four facets of value beliefs (attainment, intrinsic, and utility value as well as cost) predicted achievement when entered separately into a regression equation. Moreover, in models with both expectancy and value beliefs as predictor variables, the expectancy component as well as the multiplicative term Expectancy × Value were consistently found to predict achievement positively. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2013 APA, all rights reserved)