Goal structures represent classroom characteristics that are supportive of students’ motivation. However, goal structures and their relations with students’ motivation have not yet been investigated in the context of vocational education. The present study aims at closing this gap. We investigated the relation between mastery goal structures and the two motivational outcomes mastery goals and self-efficacy in a sample of 1434 Austrian vocational students (64.3% female) in five subjects (accounting, business administration, English, German, and mathematics). Furthermore, we tested whether the relation between mastery goals and these two motivational outcomes is (partially) mediated by students’ perceptions of the practical relevance of instruction in these subjects. Results from multilevel models revealed that goal structures were positively related to mastery goals at the individual student level for all subjects, and for English at the classroom level as well. At both levels, the indirect effect of mastery goal structures on mastery goals mediated by practical relevance was statistically significant for several subjects. In addition, mastery goal structures were positively related to self-efficacy at the individual student level in accounting and at the classroom level in mathematics. Practical relevance mediated the effect of mastery goal structures on self-efficacy in mathematics at the classroom level. Implications of the results for research in vocational education and educational practice are discussed.
CITATION STYLE
Bardach, L., Popper, V., Hochfellner, E., & Lüftenegger, M. (2019). Associations between vocational students’ perceptions of goal structures, mastery goals, and self-efficacy in five subjects—practical relevance as a potential mediator. Empirical Research in Vocational Education and Training, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40461-019-0084-0
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