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Identified versus introjected approach and introjected avoidance motivations in school and in sports: The limited benefits of self-worth strivings.
Authors:Assor  Avi; Vansteenkiste  Maarten; Kaplan  Avi
Abstract:On the basis of self-determination theory (Ryan & Deci, 2000), the authors examined whether 2 different types of introjected motivation—an avoidant type aimed at avoiding low self-worth and an approach type aimed at attaining high self-worth—are both associated with a less positive pattern of correlates relative to identified motivation—acting because one identifies with the value of the action. Two studies focusing on the academic and sports domains (N = 1,222) showed that children and adolescents differentiated between the 2 types of introjected motivation. Although introjected avoidance motivation was associated with a more negative pattern of affective and performance correlates than was introjected approach motivation, identified motivation was associated with a much more positive pattern of correlates than both types of introjected motivation. Furthermore, being high on introjected approach motivation did not yield any benefits even when combined with high identified motivation. Results suggest that past findings portraying introjected motivation as being less desirable than identified motivation cannot be ascribed to the avoidance component of introjected motivation. Findings are consistent with the view that even an approach-oriented introjected motivation has very limited benefits when compared with identified motivation. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
Keywords:introjected motivation  identified motivation  approach and avoidance motivation  self-esteem motivation  self-determination theory  sport performance motivation  academic achievement motivation
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