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Featured researches published by Brad Papworth.


American Educational Research Journal | 2014

Boarding School, Academic Motivation and Engagement, and Psychological Well-Being: A Large-Scale Investigation

Andrew J. Martin; Brad Papworth; Paul Ginns; Gregory Arief D. Liem

Boarding school has been a feature of education systems for centuries. Minimal large-scale quantitative data have been collected to examine its association with important educational and other outcomes. The present study represents one of the largest studies into boarding school conducted to date. It investigates boarding school and students’ motivation, engagement, and psychological well-being (e.g., life satisfaction, interpersonal relationships)—controlling for sociodemographic, achievement, personality, and school covariates. The main sample comprised 5,276 high school students (28% boarding students; 72% day students) from 12 high schools in Australia. A subsample of 2,002 students (30% boarding students; 70% day students) had pretest data, enabling analyses of gains or declines in outcomes across the school year. Results indicated predominant parity between boarding and day students on most outcome factors, some modest positive results favoring boarding students, and no notable differences in gains or declines on outcomes between boarders and day students over the course of one academic year. Implications for researchers, the boarding sector, parents, and students are discussed.


Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment | 2015

Motivation and Engagement in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Australia, and China: Testing a Multi-Dimensional Framework

Andrew J. Martin; Kai Yu; Brad Papworth; Paul Ginns; Rebecca J. Collie

This study explored motivation and engagement among North American (the United States and Canada; n = 1,540), U.K. (n = 1,558), Australian (n = 2,283), and Chinese (n = 3,753) secondary school students. Motivation and engagement were assessed via students’ responses to the Motivation and Engagement Scale–High School (MES–HS). Confirmatory factor analysis using Mplus found good fit for each of the four samples. Multi-group invariance tests demonstrated comparable factor structure, reliability, distributional properties, and correlations with a set of validational factors across the four groups. Results hold implications for international assessment of motivation and engagement, research, and data analysis.


Educational Psychology | 2017

Young people’s academic buoyancy and adaptability: a cross-cultural comparison of China with North America and the United Kingdom

Andrew J. Martin; Kai Yu; Paul Ginns; Brad Papworth

Abstract We investigated academic buoyancy (a response to challenge) and adaptability (a response to change) among a sample of 12–16-year-olds in China (N = 3617) compared with same-aged youth from North America (N = 989) and the United Kingdom (UK; N = 1182). We found that Chinese students reported higher mean levels of buoyancy and adaptability. We also found that correlations between buoyancy and adaptability, and between these two factors and motivation and engagement outcomes, were significantly higher for Chinese students than for North American and UK samples. In path analyses, buoyancy and adaptability positively and significantly predicted motivation and engagement (typically at p < .001) in all three regions; however, buoyancy effects were significantly stronger for the Chinese students.


Archive | 2013

The role of academic buoyancy in Aboriginal/Indigenous students’ educational intentions: Sowing the early seeds of success for post-school education and training

Andrew J. Martin; Paul Ginns; Brad Papworth; Harry Nejad

Abstract Purpose Aboriginal students experience disproportionate academic disadvantage at school. It may be that a capacity to effectively deal with academic setback and challenge (academic buoyancy) can reduce the incidence of academic adversity. To the extent that this is the case, academic buoyancy may also be associated with positive educational intentions. This study explores the role of academic buoyancy in Aboriginal students’ post-school educational intentions. Methodology/approach The survey-based study comprises Aboriginal (N = 350) and non-Aboriginal (N = 592) high school students in Australia. Findings Academic buoyancy yielded larger effect sizes for Aboriginal than non-Aboriginal students’ educational intentions – particularly in senior high school when educational intentions are most likely to translate into post-school educational behaviour. Social and practical implications Post-school education is one pathway providing access to social opportunity. Any thorough consideration of students’ passage into and through post-school education must first consider the bases of students’ academic plans and, by implication, their decision to pursue further study. Identifying factors such as academic buoyancy in this process provides some specific direction for practice and policy aimed at optimizing Aboriginal students’ academic and non-academic development. Originality/value of chapter Academic buoyancy is a recently proposed construct in the psycho-educational literature and has not been investigated among Aboriginal student populations. Its role in relation to post-school educational intentions is also a novel empirical contribution for both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal students alike.


Educational Psychology | 2017

Academic buoyancy mediates academic anxiety’s effects on learning strategies: an investigation of English- and Chinese-speaking Australian students

Rebecca J. Collie; Paul Ginns; Andrew J. Martin; Brad Papworth

Abstract A primary goal our study was to explore whether relations between academic anxiety and students’ use of a range of learning strategies (memorisation, elaboration, personal best [PB] goals and cooperation) were mediated by academic buoyancy. We were also interested in extending knowledge of anxiety and its role in students’ learning strategy use. Given mixed findings regarding the impact of language spoken at home on psycho-educational factors, our third aim involved investigating the extent to which relationships were moderated by language (English vs. Chinese-speaking). The sample consisted of n = 380 English-speaking and Chinese-speaking (Mandarin and Cantonese) Australian high school students, with groups (n = 190 each) matched on age and gender, and controlling for parental education and prior academic achievement. We found mediation effects of academic buoyancy across the four learning strategies. In addition, anxiety was positively associated with memorisation, elaboration and PB goals in the mediation analyses. Mediation effects were broadly similar across the two languages; however, there were some significant differences across the two groups. Findings hold relevance for future research on academic buoyancy’s nomological network, the role of language spoken at home in the academic process and the design of interventions addressing academic buoyancy and academic anxiety.


Learning and Individual Differences | 2015

Real-time motivation and engagement during a month at school: Every moment of every day for every student matters

Andrew J. Martin; Brad Papworth; Paul Ginns; Lars-Erik Malmberg; Rebecca J. Collie; Rafael A. Calvo


Learning and Individual Differences | 2016

Students' interpersonal relationships, personal best (PB) goals, and academic engagement ☆

Rebecca J. Collie; Andrew J. Martin; Brad Papworth; Paul Ginns


Instructional Science | 2014

Student Learning Theory Goes (Back) to (High) School.

Paul Ginns; Andrew J. Martin; Brad Papworth


Journal of Research in Personality | 2014

Structural and concurrent validity of the International English Mini-Markers in an adolescent sample: Exploring analytic approaches and implications for personality assessment.

Paul Ginns; Andrew J. Martin; Gregory Arief D. Liem; Brad Papworth


Learning and Individual Differences | 2017

Motivation and engagement: Same or different? Does it matter?

Andrew J. Martin; Paul Ginns; Brad Papworth

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Andrew J. Martin

University of New South Wales

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Rebecca J. Collie

University of New South Wales

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Kai Yu

Beijing Normal University

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Gregory Arief D. Liem

Nanyang Technological University

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