Achievement and engagement: How student characteristics influence teacher judgments

Journal articleResearchPeer reviewed

Publication data


ByJohanna Kaiser, Jan Retelsdorf, Anna Südkamp, Jens Möller
Original languageEnglish
Published inLearning and Instruction, 28
Pages73-84
Editor (Publisher)Elsevier
ISSN0959-4752, 1873-3263
DOI/Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.learninstruc.2013.06.001
Publication statusPublished – 2013

Teachers' judgments of student characteristics are affected not only by the characteristic in question, but also by other factors. This article presents three studies examining whether students' achievement influences teachers' judgments of their engagement (as a proxy for motivation) and vice versa. First, a field study was conducted with N = 52 teachers and N = 1135 students. Structural equation modeling revealed an effect of student achievement on teacher judgments of student engagement and an effect of student engagement on teacher judgments of student achievement—above and beyond the association of each student characteristic with teacher judgments of that characteristic. These results were then replicated in two experimental studies involving a computer simulation of an instructional situation, the Simulated Classroom, with N = 40 and N = 181 teacher candidates, respectively. The psychological determinants of the effects observed are discussed, as are their practical implications. [Editor]