Skip to main content
Article
Classroom Moivational Climate in Online and Face-to-Face Undergraduate Courses: The Interplay of Gender and Course Format
International Journal of E-Learning and Distance Education (2015)
  • Yan Yang, University of West Georgia
  • YoonJung Cho, Oklahoma State University - Main Campus
  • Angela Watson, Oral Roberts University
Abstract
 In this study, the role of gender and course format in college students’ perceptions of classroom motivational climate (i.e., sense of classroom community and perceived classroom goal structure) was examined. Participants were 722 college students from a variety of majors at a comprehensive Midwest American university. Female students felt a stronger sense of community and perceived lower levels of performance-approach goal structure in online classes than their male counterparts experienced. Male students perceived the face-to-face classes as being more communal and less performance-approach oriented than the females did. Further, both male and female students perceived a stronger mastery-approach classroom goal structure in face-to-face than in online classes. These findings suggest that instructors should consider the roles of gender and course format in designing instruction and creating motivational learning environments.
Keywords
  • Achivement goals,
  • sense of community,
  • education,
  • psychology,
  • motivation,
  • online learning,
  • sex differences
Publication Date
2015
Citation Information
Yan Yang, YoonJung Cho and Angela Watson. "Classroom Moivational Climate in Online and Face-to-Face Undergraduate Courses: The Interplay of Gender and Course Format" International Journal of E-Learning and Distance Education Vol. 30 Iss. 1 (2015) ISSN: 2292-8588, 1916-6818, 0830-0445
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/angela-watson/6/