Carol L. Omelich
University of California, Berkeley
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Featured researches published by Carol L. Omelich.
Anxiety Stress and Coping | 1988
Martin V. Covington; Carol L. Omelich
Abstract The history of research on achievement striving has been characterized by the development of several separate lines of inquiry in relative isolation, one from the other. Three themes are most notable: research on need achievement (motivation), formulations of test anxiety (emotion), and the exploration of information-processing (cognitive) factors with special attention given to the organization of effective study skills. In the absence of a unified approach to an understanding of achievement behavior, research has been largely confined to attempts to establish simple one-to-one correspondences between various organizing constructs, say, test anxiety, and the achievement outcomes they are thought to influence. For instance, a veritable flood of studies beginning at the turn of the century has demonstrated the existence of a negative relationship between level of anxiety arousal and performance across a variety of testing and assessment conditions (for a review, see Heinrich & Spielberger, 1982). ...
Motivation and Emotion | 1986
Martin V. Covington; Carol L. Omelich; Ralf Schwarzer
Recent research suggests that anxiety is not a single, unified reaction to perceived threat, but rather a cluster of interrelated factors whose relationships to performance change as the individual progresses from one test event to another. This study investigated the presumed linkages between traitlike predispositions to perceive threat and achievement performance, as mediated by statelike anxiety arousal on a longitudinal basis (Perceived Threat → Anxiety Arousal → Impaired Performance). College students were administered self-report questionnaire measures during a preenrollment period, after the first two midterms, and following the last two midterms in a general psychology course. Four performance measures and 26 motivational indicators were fitted to a 10-factor latent model using LISREL model-fitting techniques. Path-analytic interpretations of this structural model provided little evidence for the commonly held view that traitlike threat perceptions mediate performance via statelike anxiety reactions. Far more promising, theoretically, are those influences on test performance stemming from the self-attributional, cognitive domain. Overall, the findings support a recent reinterpretation of achievement anxiety as stemming from the disruptive effects of diminished ability perceptions (and hence, impaired personal worth), rather than from the interfering influence of diffused emotional arousalper se.
Journal of Educational Psychology | 1979
Martin V. Covington; Carol L. Omelich
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 1979
Martin V. Covington; Carol L. Omelich
Journal of Educational Psychology | 1984
Martin V. Covington; Carol L. Omelich
Journal of Educational Psychology | 1979
Martin V. Covington; Carol L. Omelich
Journal of Educational Psychology | 1981
Martin V. Covington; Carol L. Omelich
Journal of Educational Psychology | 1987
Martin V. Covington; Carol L. Omelich
Journal of Educational Psychology | 1985
Martin V. Covington; Carol L. Omelich
Journal of Educational Psychology | 1984
Martin V. Covington; Carol L. Omelich