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Dive into the research topics where Stephanie V. Wormington is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephanie V. Wormington.


Journal of Experimental Education | 2014

Profiles of Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivations in Elementary School: A Longitudinal Analysis

Jennifer Henderlong Corpus; Stephanie V. Wormington

The authors used a person-centered, longitudinal approach to identify and evaluate naturally occurring combinations of intrinsic and extrinsic motivations among 490 third- through fifth-grade students. Cluster analysis revealed 3 groups, characterized by high levels of both motivations (high quantity): high intrinsic motivation but low extrinsic motivation (primarily intrinsic) and low intrinsic motivation but high extrinsic motivation (primarily extrinsic). Analyses of stability and change in cluster membership indicated that the primarily intrinsic cluster was most stable (76% stability) and the high-quantity cluster most precarious (45% stability) over the course of an academic year. Students in the primarily intrinsic cluster outperformed their peers in the other 2 clusters and showed the greatest increase in achievement over time.


Journal of Early Adolescence | 2013

Alcohol and Other Drug Use in Middle School: The Interplay of Gender, Peer Victimization, and Supportive Social Relationships

Stephanie V. Wormington; Kristen G. Anderson; Kristin L. Tomlinson; Sandra A. Brown

The current study examined the impact of supportive social relationships (i.e., teacher support, adult support, school relatedness) and peer victimization on middle school students’ substance use. Over 3,000 middle school students reported on alcohol, cigarette, and marijuana use, supportive social relationships, and instances in which they were the victim of aggressive behavior. Mixed-effects logit regression analyses revealed complementary patterns of results across types of substances. Students who perceived high levels of social support were less likely to report alcohol and drug use initiation, particularly at low levels of peer victimization. Gender moderated the negative effect of peer victimization, with highly victimized boys most likely to report alcohol, cigarette, and marijuana use. Results indicated a complex interplay of social influences and moderating variables in predicting early onset alcohol and other drug use, one that researchers should consider when studying adolescents’ decisions to use alcohol and other drugs.


Journal of Advanced Academics | 2013

Identification as Gifted and Implicit Beliefs About Intelligence An Examination of Potential Moderators

Kate E. Snyder; Michael M. Barger; Stephanie V. Wormington; Rochelle D. Schwartz-Bloom; Lisa Linnenbrink-Garcia

The current study investigated whether the developmental timing of a student’s identification as gifted (i.e., when a student is first identified) was associated with later implicit beliefs about intelligence, and whether this relation is moderated by academic ability. A sample of 1,743 high-ability college students reported on whether and when they had been identified as gifted, academic ability (SAT scores), and implicit beliefs of intelligence. Timing of identification was unrelated to implicit beliefs; academic ability was the only significant predictor. Higher ability students who had been previously identified as gifted at any point in time reported implicit beliefs more toward entity beliefs than relatively lower ability students who had also been identified; however, this effect was quite small. Implicit beliefs did not vary by ability level for nonidentified students. These findings suggest that identification as gifted at any age modestly (but not necessarily meaningfully) relates to implicit beliefs for high-ability students.


Journal of School Violence | 2016

Peer Victimization and Adolescent Adjustment: Does School Belonging Matter?

Stephanie V. Wormington; Kristen G. Anderson; Ashley Schneider; Kristin L. Tomlinson; Sandra A. Brown

Recent research highlights the role of peer victimization in students’ adjustment across a variety of domains (e.g., academic, social), but less often identifies potential mediating variables. In the current study, we tested for direct effects from peer victimization to adolescents’ academic behavior and alcohol use, as well as indirect effects through school belonging. Adolescents from two large samples (middle school: N = 2,808; high school: N = 6,821) self-reported on peer victimization, school belonging, academic outcomes (GPA, school truancy), and alcohol use (lifetime, past 30 days). Two-group structural equation models revealed (a) direct and indirect paths from peer victimization to academic functioning; (b) indirect, but not direct, effects through school belonging for lifetime drinking; and (c) direct and indirect effects from peer victimization to current drinking. Findings implicate school belonging as a mediator between peer victimization and important outcomes in adolescence.


Archive | 2016

Measuring Affect in Educational Contexts: A Circumplex Approach

Lisa Linnenbrink-Garcia; Stephanie V. Wormington; John Ranellucci

In this chapter, Linnenbrink-Garcia and her colleagues discuss the assessment of students’ affect based on a circumplex model. First an overview of circumplex models of affect is provided. Next, several approaches they employed in their own research using this approach (e.g., multi-item self-report scales assessing each dimension of the circumplex, bi-polar self-report items, observations) are described in order to highlight the respective strengths and weaknesses of these various methods. The authors conclude with more general remarks about the state of the field and suggestions for researchers, focusing on issues such as what forms of affect to measure, the level (trait vs. state) at which to assess affect, and consideration of other methods of assessment beyond self-report.


Journal of Educational Psychology | 2018

Multiple Pathways to Success: An Examination of Integrative Motivational Profiles Among Upper Elementary and College Students

Lisa Linnenbrink-Garcia; Stephanie V. Wormington; Kate E. Snyder; Jan Riggsbee; Tony Perez; Adar Ben-Eliyahu; Nancy E. Hill

Two studies were conducted with distinct samples to investigate how motivational beliefs cohere and function together (i.e., motivational profiles) and predict academic adjustment. Integrating across motivational theories, participants (NStudy 1 = 160 upper elementary students; NStudy 2 = 325 college students) reported on multiple types of motivation (achievement goals, task value, perceived competence) for schooling more generally (Study 1) and in science (Study 2). Three profiles characterized by Moderate-High All, Intrinsic and Confident, and Average All motivation were identified in both studies. Profiles characterized by Very High All motivation (Study 1) and Moderate Intrinsic and Confident (Study 2) were also present. Across studies, the Moderate-High All and Intrinsic and Confident profiles were associated with the highest academic engagement and achievement. Findings highlight the benefit of integrating across motivational theories when creating motivational profiles, provide initial evidence regarding similarities and differences in integrative motivational profiles across distinct samples, and identify which motivational combinations are associated with beneficial academic outcomes in two educational contexts.


Journal of Applied Social Psychology | 2017

Productive procrastination: Academic procrastination style predicts academic and alcohol outcomes.

Erin C. Westgate; Stephanie V. Wormington; Kathryn C. Oleson; Kristen P. Lindgren

Productive procrastination replaces one adaptive behavior with another adaptive-albeit less important-behavior (e.g., organizing notes instead of studying for an exam). We identified adaptive and maladaptive procrastination styles associated with academic and alcohol outcomes in 1106 college undergraduates. Cluster analysis identified five academic procrastination styles-non-procrastinators, academic productive procrastinators, non-academic productive procrastinators, non-academic procrastinators, and classic procrastinators. Procrastination style differentially predicted alcohol-related problems, cravings, risk of alcohol use disorders, and GPA (all ps < .01). Non-procrastination and academic productive procrastination were most adaptive overall; non-academic productive procrastination, non-academic procrastination, and classic procrastination were least adaptive. Productive procrastination differed from other procrastination strategies, and maladaptive procrastination styles may be a useful risk indicator for preventative and intervention efforts.


Elementary School Journal | 2016

Creating Rich Portraits: A Mixed-Methods Approach to Understanding Profiles of Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivations

Jennifer Henderlong Corpus; Stephanie V. Wormington; Kyla Haimovitz

A person-centered, mixed-methods approach (self-report surveys, semistructured interviews, school records) was used to characterize and evaluate profiles of intrinsic and extrinsic motivations among 243 third- through eighth-grade students. Cluster analysis suggested four distinct profiles: high quantity (high intrinsic, high extrinsic), primarily intrinsic (high intrinsic, low extrinsic), primarily extrinsic (low intrinsic, high extrinsic), and low quantity (low intrinsic, low extrinsic) motivation. The primarily intrinsic profile showed the most adaptive pattern of responses; the primarily extrinsic and low quantity profiles, conversely, displayed similarly maladaptive patterns. Both quantitative and qualitative analyses suggested that particular combinations of intrinsic and extrinsic motivations may explain students’ academic and emotional functioning in school better than levels of each variable in isolation.


Teaching of Psychology | 2012

Promoting Comfort and Confidence With Conducting Research Through a Pluralistic Ignorance Project

Christopher M. Casey; Stephanie V. Wormington; Kathryn C. Oleson

This article documents a pluralistic ignorance project, which serves as an appropriate mid-level research experience for psychology students, and aims to foster students’ comfort and confidence with the research process. For the project, small groups of students utilized an established research paradigm to explore varied topics. After being assessed in a pilot study, the project was evaluated by a group of students enrolled in a social psychology course at various points throughout the assignment. Students reported broad enjoyment of the assignment and supported its future use. They also reported greater comfort and confidence with aspects of the research process (e.g., forming hypotheses, providing feedback to classmates). Data suggested the project has the potential to foster positive attitudes toward the research process, with potential long-term effects. Suggestions for customizing the pluralistic ignorance project are discussed.


Learning and Individual Differences | 2012

A Person-Centered Investigation of Academic Motivation and Its Correlates in High School.

Stephanie V. Wormington; Jennifer Henderlong Corpus; Kristen G. Anderson

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Kate E. Snyder

University of Louisville

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Tony Perez

Old Dominion University

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Cary J. Roseth

Michigan State University

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