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Educational and Psychological Measurement | 1992

The Academic Motivation Scale: A Measure of Intrinsic, Extrinsic, and Amotivation in Education

Robert J. Vallerand; Luc G. Pelletier; Marc R. Blais; Nathalie M. Brière; Caroline Senécal; Évelyne F. Vallières

A new measure of motivation toward education has been developed in French, namely the Echelle de Motivation en Education (EME). The EME is based on the tenets of self-determination theory and is composed of 28 items subdivided into seven sub-scales assessing three types of intrinsic motivation (intrinsic motivation to know, to accomplish things, and to experience stimulation), three types of extrinsic motivation (external, introjected, and identified regulation), and a motivation. The purpose of this investigation was to cross-culturally validate in English the EME. The EME was translated in English through appropriate methodological procedures and completed by university students. Results revealed that the English version of the scale renamed the Academic Motivation Scale (AMS), has satisfactory levels of internal consistency (mean alpha value = .81) and temporal stability over a one-month period (mean test-retest correlation = .79). In addition, results of a confirmatory factor analysis (LISREL) confirmed the seven-factor structure of the AMS. Finally, gender differences obtained with the EME were basically replicated with the AMS. In sum, the present findings provide adequate support for the factorial validity and reliability of the AMS and support its use in educational research on motivation.


Journal of Applied Sport Psychology | 1996

Toward a multidimensional definition of sportsmanship

Robert J. Vallerand; Paul Deshaies; Jean-Pierre Cuerrier; Nathalie M. Brière; Luc G. Pelletier

Abstract One major problem with research conducted on sportsmanship is the absence of an accepted definition. The purpose of this study was to attempt to derive a definition of sportsmanship by applying premises from social psychological theories and research. A major assumption of this perspective is that sportsmanship meanings and labels attached to given behaviors are learned through interpersonal interactions with various sport participants and that eventually a consensual agreement develops regarding the nature of sportsmanship. It thus follows that a meaningful definition of sportsmanship should be obtained through the athletes themselves. In this study, 1056 male and female athletes completed a questionnaire which contained various items pertaining to sportsmanship. Results from a factor analysis revealed the presence of 5 factors corresponding to the respect and concern for: a) ones full commitment toward sport participation, b) the rules and officials. c) social conventions, d) the opponent, as ...


Sex Roles | 1990

Significance, structure, and gender differences in life domains of college students

Marc R. Blais; Robert J. Vallerand; Nathalie M. Brière; Alain Gagnon; Luc G. Pelletier

The purpose of this study was to assess the significance and structure of life domains of college students and to explore the patterns of gender differences on different indices of significance. Four hundred fifty-seven college students rated 21 life domains in terms of degree of importance, frequency of involvement, and level of impact. They also responded to a measure of global life satisfaction. Gender differences on significance indices were investigated by means of three types of analyses. First, gender mean ratings on 21 life domains were compared via one-way multivariate analyses of variance. Second, the underlying dimensions of the 21 domains for each gender were compared via exploratory factor analyses. Third, the correlation patterns between perceived positive impact of each life domain and life satisfaction were calculated separately for men and women. Within-group comparisons revealed that men and women shared the same nine most significant domains: education, friends, biological needs, leisure, family, health, couple, esthetics, and physical activities. However, several gender differences were consistently found in the three types of analyses. The results indicated that although traditionally feminine domains are rated as more significant to women than men, traditional masculine domains were rated as equally significant by men and women. Domains considered sex role neutral (e.g., personal planning) were rated as more significant by women than men. In general, women appear to experience greater cognitive, affective, and behavioral aspects of significance in a wider spectrum of activities and as well perceive their general life satisfaction as deriving from a broader range of sources. Results also highlight the importance of assessing the degree of significance of life domains as an initial step in the development of multidimensional self-related constructs.


Journal of Social Psychology | 1990

Effect of Private Self-Consciousness and Success Outcome on Causal Dimensions

Nathalie M. Brière; Robert J. Vallerand

Abstract Recent research has shown that individuals high in private self-consciousness generally make more self-attributions following hypothetical outcomes than those low in private self-consciousness. The purpose of this study was to replicate and extend past research in assessing the attributional responses of such individuals in real outcome and no-outcome conditions. French-Canadian female college students (N = 62) performed an achievement task and were then informed that they had done well (success outcome) or were not informed at all (no outcome). The subjects then rated the perceived causal dimensions of the attributed cause of the outcome. Results of an ANOVA revealed the presence of an interaction. Subjects high in private self-consciousness who had been informed that they had done well (success outcome) made more internal, stable, and controllable attributions than subjects low in private self-consciousness. Subjects low in private self-consciousness tended to make more internal, stable, and co...


Journal of Sport & Exercise Psychology | 1995

Toward a New Measure of Intrinsic Motivation, Extrinsic Motivation, and Amotivation in Sports: The Sport Motivation Scale (SMS)

Luc G. Pelletier; Kim M. Tuson; Michelle Fortier; Robert J. Vallerand; Nathalie M. Brière; Marc R. Blais


Motivation and Emotion | 2001

Associations Among Perceived Autonomy Support, Forms of Self-Regulation, and Persistence: A Prospective Study

Luc G. Pelletier; Michelle Fortier; Robert J. Vallerand; Nathalie M. Brière


Educational and Psychological Measurement | 1993

On the Assessment of Intrinsic, Extrinsic, and Amotivation in Education: Evidence on the Concurrent and Construct Validity of the Academic Motivation Scale:

Robert J. Vallerand; Luc G. Pelletier; Marc R. Blais; Nathalie M. Brière; Caroline Senécal; Évelyne F. Vallières


Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science | 1989

Construction et validation de l'échelle de motivation en éducation (EME).

Robert J. Vallerand; Marc R. Blais; Nathalie M. Brière; Luc G. Pelletier


Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science | 1989

L'échelle de satisfaction de vie: validation canadienne française du «Satisfaction with Life Scale»

Marc R. Blais; Robert J. Vallerand; Luc G. Pelletier; Nathalie M. Brière


International Journal of Sport Psychology | 1995

Competitive and recreational sport structures and gender: a test of their relationship with sport motivation.

Michelle Fortier; Robert J. Vallerand; Nathalie M. Brière; Pierre Provencher

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Robert J. Vallerand

Université du Québec à Montréal

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Isabelle Green-Demers

Université du Québec en Outaouais

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Alain Gagnon

Université du Québec à Montréal

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