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Reciprocal associations between confidence in getting social support and academic expectancies and subjective task values : Stronger for first‐generation and transfer students

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2025

Autor:innen

Parrisius, Cora
von Keyserlingk, Luise
Rubach, Charlott
Yamaguchi‐Pedroza, Katsumi
Lee, Hye Rin
Spengler, Marion
Fischer, Christian
Heckhausen, Jutta
Eccles, Jacquelynne S.

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Open Access-Veröffentlichung
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Published

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British Journal of Educational Psychology. Wiley. ISSN 0007-0998. eISSN 2044-8279. Verfügbar unter: doi: 10.1111/bjep.12751

Zusammenfassung

Background Social support is assumed to play a key role in motivation at university, particularly for disadvantaged students, such as first-generation and community college transfer students. However, longitudinal research investigating reciprocal associations between social support and motivation is lacking.

Aims We examined such associations between confidence in getting support from faculty and peers and students' expectancies and subjective task values in their most difficult and most important course.

Sample Data stemmed from two cohorts of undergraduate students (n = 320/417 in Fall 2019/2020) at a diverse Southern Californian university.

Methods Students reported on their confidence in getting support and their expectancies and subjective task values at the beginning, in the middle and (only for motivation) at the end of the academic term.

Results Results indicated no differences in confidence in getting support based on university generation or transfer student status. Cross-lagged panel models provided some evidence for reciprocal associations between students' confidence in getting support and their expectancies and subjective task values. Findings were similar across the Fall 2019 and Fall 2020 cohorts, providing support for the generalizability across in-person vs. remote learning settings. Longitudinal associations tended to be stronger for first-generation and transfer students.

Conclusions Future research should, therefore, examine whether university programmes targeting social support are especially effective for disadvantaged students.

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Fachgebiet (DDC)
370 Erziehung, Schul- und Bildungswesen

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first-generation students, situated expectancy–value theory, social support, transfer students

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ISO 690GASPARD, Hanna, Cora PARRISIUS, Luise VON KEYSERLINGK, Charlott RUBACH, Katsumi YAMAGUCHI‐PEDROZA, Hye Rin LEE, Marion SPENGLER, Christian FISCHER, Jutta HECKHAUSEN, Jacquelynne S. ECCLES, 2025. Reciprocal associations between confidence in getting social support and academic expectancies and subjective task values : Stronger for first‐generation and transfer students. In: British Journal of Educational Psychology. Wiley. ISSN 0007-0998. eISSN 2044-8279. Verfügbar unter: doi: 10.1111/bjep.12751
BibTex
@article{Gaspard2025-02-26Recip-73151,
  title={Reciprocal associations between confidence in getting social support and academic expectancies and subjective task values : Stronger for first‐generation and transfer students},
  year={2025},
  doi={10.1111/bjep.12751},
  issn={0007-0998},
  journal={British Journal of Educational Psychology},
  author={Gaspard, Hanna and Parrisius, Cora and von Keyserlingk, Luise and Rubach, Charlott and Yamaguchi‐Pedroza, Katsumi and Lee, Hye Rin and Spengler, Marion and Fischer, Christian and Heckhausen, Jutta and Eccles, Jacquelynne S.}
}
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    <dcterms:abstract>Background
Social support is assumed to play a key role in motivation at university, particularly for disadvantaged students, such as first-generation and community college transfer students. However, longitudinal research investigating reciprocal associations between social support and motivation is lacking.

Aims
We examined such associations between confidence in getting support from faculty and peers and students' expectancies and subjective task values in their most difficult and most important course.

Sample
Data stemmed from two cohorts of undergraduate students (n = 320/417 in Fall 2019/2020) at a diverse Southern Californian university.

Methods
Students reported on their confidence in getting support and their expectancies and subjective task values at the beginning, in the middle and (only for motivation) at the end of the academic term.

Results
Results indicated no differences in confidence in getting support based on university generation or transfer student status. Cross-lagged panel models provided some evidence for reciprocal associations between students' confidence in getting support and their expectancies and subjective task values. Findings were similar across the Fall 2019 and Fall 2020 cohorts, providing support for the generalizability across in-person vs. remote learning settings. Longitudinal associations tended to be stronger for first-generation and transfer students.

Conclusions
Future research should, therefore, examine whether university programmes targeting social support are especially effective for disadvantaged students.</dcterms:abstract>
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