In a classroom, motivation can go up and down. New research points to the ways that students can make the learning environment better for themselves鈥攕imply by asking their professors. 海角论坛 professor Erika Patall became interested in this idea of agentic engagement鈥攖hat is, students鈥 proactive contributions toward what goes on in the classroom鈥攂ecause she had previously researched how teachers can support student autonomy.
鈥淚 was intrigued by this idea of agentic engagement because it can sometimes be hard to reach teachers,鈥 Patall says. She knew that teachers鈥 motivations are affected by what鈥檚 happening in the classroom and how their students respond, and she wanted to look 鈥渇or a way to shape the climate from the student鈥檚 perspective.鈥澨
Research shows, in general, that supporting students鈥 experience of autonomy motivates them to be engaged in the learning process and improves learning outcomes. , Patall鈥攁long with 海角论坛 researcher Joseph Vallin MAT 鈥17 and PhD candidates Jeanette Zambrano, Alana Kennedy and Nicole Yates鈥攅xplored how that works. Patall studied students in college STEM courses, attempting to train them to consider their motivations as malleable and the classroom environment as changeable and responsive to their actions.听
The process of agentic engagement sounds a lot more complicated than it looks in practice, Patall says. She explains that there are two elements: a belief component and a behavioral component. First, students must believe that their behaviors could change the classroom for the better. Second, students must behave agentically, asking questions, making suggestions, telling the instructor their preferences, or talking to their professor about what they need. 鈥淚t鈥檚 basically thinking about what you need for this to be a better experience and acting to help the instructor make that happen,鈥 she says.
The group studied the experiences of 706 college students in chemistry and physics classes and 359 students in psychology courses. The research included three small intervention studies in which students read articles and testimonials meant to persuade them of the benefits of asserting oneself in class, learned about strategies they could use in the classroom for being agentic, and engaged in writing exercises to help them internalize intervention ideas. When students filled out surveys at the end of the course, the studies found that the intervention were successful in changing students鈥 mindsets, compared with peers who didn鈥檛 complete the intervention. 鈥淚f their mindset changed, that predicted students being more agentic in the class and being more engaged in other ways,鈥 Patall says, which included their likelihood to continue in the subject.听
Patall鈥檚 studies also tried to home in on the experience of underrepresented minority students in STEM classes, to see if agentic engagement strategies could help them succeed in their classes. She found that the intervention worked about the same across gender and racial groups, but she鈥檚 still interested in digging deeper into how the interventions could be targeted to benefit certain groups.听
In the future, Patall plans to study engagement and motivation in high school students. She also wants to see if there are longitudinal benefits鈥攊f the strategy of being agentic in the classroom has lasting effects. Could it potentially change the course of a student鈥檚 academic career? Since the collegiate , Patall would like to know how these strategies impact the long-term course of a student鈥檚 work.听
And ultimately, she鈥檇 like to weave these student-centered interventions with ones that focus on teachers.听
鈥淪tudents can benefit from learning how to be agentic, but it breaks down and even can backfire when teachers aren鈥檛 responsive or discourage it in the first place,鈥 says Patall. That can be especially frustrating to students who feel as if they are trying to make the classroom a better environment for everybody, she says. 鈥淗ow do we create an interaction that includes both training teachers and training students?鈥澨
In the end, she says her research shows how students鈥 being equipped with a sense of control over their motivation and a belief that they can impact the classroom environment is important for bringing about positive outcomes. 鈥淎nything that researchers, parents and teachers can do to support that belief is going to be beneficial to students鈥 engagement in their learning,鈥 she says.