华东师范大学学报(教育科学版) ›› 2020, Vol. 38 ›› Issue (11): 1-20.doi: 10.16382/j.cnki.1000-5560.2020.11.001

• 特稿 •    下一篇

行为观、心理观与社会文化观:大学生学习投入研究的视域转移——兼论中国高校教学质量改进

尹弘飚   

  1. 香港中文大学教育学院,香港
  • 发布日期:2020-11-16
  • 基金资助:
    香港研究资助局一般研究拨款项目“多元视角下中国高校大学生数学学习投入的追踪研究”(CUHK 14618118)

The Behavioral, Psychological and Socio-cultural Perspectives of Student Engagement Research: Perspective Shift and its Implications for Improving the Quality of Teaching and Learning in Chinese Universities

Yin Hongbiao   

  1. Faculty of Education, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China
  • Published:2020-11-16

摘要: 当前主流的大学生学习投入研究秉承了行为观的视角,忽视了大学生学习投入行为和内部心理状态之间可能存在的差异,也难以看到大学生学习投入与特定社会文化脉络之间的关联。因此,大学生学习投入研究亟待研究视域的转移和多元视角的参与。作为一种心理观的解读,“动机与投入轮”为研究大学生学习投入提供了更为适当的理论框架和研究工具。三项依据“动机与投入轮”、针对中国大学生群体进行的实证研究结果分别表明:(1)中国大学生的学习投入可分为四种类型,其中两类学习者在学习动机和行为方面存在着“表里不一”的情况,且“适应不良但行为投入的学习者”集中反映了中国社会文化情境对大学生学习产生的影响。(2)尽管学习动机与投入行为之间的关系很大程度上符合英美学者已有的研究经验,但对中国大学生来说,适应不良的动机并不会削弱反而有可能激励他们积极投入学习,从而反映出大学生学习投入的文化依附性。(3)大学生课程经历会显著影响他们的学习动机与投入。依据课程经历各因子发挥的作用,可将其分为“理想指标”“反常指标”与“奇异指标”三个类别,其中后两类指标直接体现了中国高校教学的特征与积弊。改善中国大学生的学习投入和高校教学质量,教学管理者与教师应该澄清高等教育阶段“好的教学”的内涵,强调学生的独立性和自主学习,发挥评估促进教学的功能,同时留意中国文化与学校教育传统对教学的双重影响。上述三项研究虽从心理观出发,却有助于研究者看到大学生学习投入与社会文化情境之间的密切联系,且不忽视对学习投入行为的考察,因此使研究者有可能迈向整体观的大学生学习投入研究。

关键词: 学习投入, 动机与投入轮, 大学生, 质量保障, 高校教学

Abstract: The dominant research approach to student engagement in higher education follows a behavioral perspective, which neglects the possible discrepancies between students’ behavioral engagement and psychological status, making largely invisible the links between student engagement and specific socio-cultural contexts. Therefore, there is an urgent need for the research on student engagement in higher education to shift its views and include diverse perspectives. The Motivation and Engagement Wheel, a psychological perspective of student engagement, provides a more appropriate conceptual framework and research tools. Targeting Chinese university students, three empirical studies based on the Motivation and Engagement Wheel revealed a series of findings. First, there were four types of learners among Chinese university students according to their motivation and engagement, and two of them showed some discrepancies between their internal motivation and external behaviors. Those “maladaptive but engaged learners” typically reflect the influence of Chinese cultural and educational traditions on student engagement. Second, although the relationships between motivation and engagement largely echoed Anglo-American researchers’ previous findings, maladaptive motivation was found to sometimes facilitate, rather than impair Chinese university students’ engagement. These findings reflect the cultural specificity of student engagement in higher education. Third, students’ course experiences significantly influenced their motivation and engagement. According to the nature of effects, these course experience factors can be classified as ideal, paradoxical and weird indicators. The paradoxical and weird indicators mirror some characteristics and long-standing problems of university teaching and learning in China. To improve the quality of university teaching, academic affairs administrators and instructors should clarify the connotations of good teaching in higher education, attach more importance to the cultivation of students’ independence and self-regulated learning, and promote assessment for learning in university teaching. They also need to pay attention to the double-edge effects of Chinese cultural and pedagogical traditions on learning and teaching in higher education. Meanwhile, although the three studies follow a psychological perspective, they can not only help us identify the close associations between student engagement and the socio-cultural context in China, but also take account of students’ engagement behaviors, which makes it possible for researchers to conduct student engagement research from a holistic perspective in future.

Key words: student engagement, Motivation and Engagement Wheel, university students, quality assurance, learning and teaching in higher education