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Resumen de Boring but important: A self-transcendent purpose for learning fosters academic self-regulation.

David Scott Yeager, Marlone D. Henderson, David Paunesku, Greg M. Walton, Sidney D�Mello, Brian James Spitzer, Angela L. Duckworth

  • Many important learning tasks feel uninteresting and tedious to learners. This research proposed that promoting a prosocial, self-transcendent purpose could improve academic self-regulation on such tasks. This proposal was supported in 4 studies with over 2,000 adolescents and young adults. Study 1 documented a correlation between a self-transcendent purpose for learning and self-reported trait measures of academic self-regulation. Those with more of a purpose for learning also persisted longer on a boring task rather than giving in to a tempting alternative and, many months later, were less likely to drop out of college. Study 2 addressed causality. It showed that a brief, one-time psychological intervention promoting a self-transcendent purpose for learning could improve high school science and math grade point average (GPA) over several months. Studies 3 and 4 were short-term experiments that explored possible mechanisms. They showed that the self-transcendent purpose manipulation could increase deeper learning behavior on tedious test review materials (Study 3), and sustain self-regulation over the course of an increasingly boring task (Study 4). More self-oriented motives for learning�such as the desire to have an interesting or enjoyable career�did not, on their own, consistently produce these benefits (Studies 1 and 4). (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2014 APA, all rights reserved)


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