Login / Signup

Distance learning in higher education during COVID-19: The role of basic psychological needs and intrinsic motivation for persistence and procrastination-a multi-country study.

Elisabeth Rosa PelikanSelma KorlatJulia ReiterJulia HolzerMartin MayerhoferBarbara SchoberChristiane SpielOriola HamzallariAna UkaJiarui ChenMaritta VälimäkiZrinka PuharićKelechi Evans AnusionwuAngela Nkem OkochaAnastassia ZabrodskajaKatariina Salmela-AroUdo KäserAnja Schultze-KrumbholzSebastian WachsFinnur FriðrikssonHermína GunnþórsdóttirYvonne HöllerIkuko AoyamaAkihiko IeshimaYuichi TodaJon KonjufcaNjomza LlullakuReda GedutienėGlorianne Borg AxisaIrena Avirovic BundalevskaAngelka KeskinovaMakedonka RadulovicAleksandra Lewandowska-WalterJustyna Michałek-KwiecieńPiotr PlichtaJacek PyżalskiNatalia WalterCristina CăutișanuAna Iolanda VodaShang GaoSirajul IslamKai WistrandMichelle F WrightMarko Lüftenegger
Published in: PloS one (2021)
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, higher educational institutions worldwide switched to emergency distance learning in early 2020. The less structured environment of distance learning forced students to regulate their learning and motivation more independently. According to self-determination theory (SDT), satisfaction of the three basic psychological needs for autonomy, competence and social relatedness affects intrinsic motivation, which in turn relates to more active or passive learning behavior. As the social context plays a major role for basic need satisfaction, distance learning may impair basic need satisfaction and thus intrinsic motivation and learning behavior. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between basic need satisfaction and procrastination and persistence in the context of emergency distance learning during the COVID-19 pandemic in a cross-sectional study. We also investigated the mediating role of intrinsic motivation in this relationship. Furthermore, to test the universal importance of SDT for intrinsic motivation and learning behavior under these circumstances in different countries, we collected data in Europe, Asia and North America. A total of N = 15,462 participants from Albania, Austria, China, Croatia, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Iceland, Japan, Kosovo, Lithuania, Poland, Malta, North Macedonia, Romania, Sweden, and the US answered questions regarding perceived competence, autonomy, social relatedness, intrinsic motivation, procrastination, persistence, and sociodemographic background. Our results support SDT's claim of universality regarding the relation between basic psychological need fulfilment, intrinsic motivation, procrastination, and persistence. However, whereas perceived competence had the highest direct effect on procrastination and persistence, social relatedness was mainly influential via intrinsic motivation.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • emergency department
  • public health
  • depressive symptoms
  • data analysis
  • quantum dots
  • high resolution
  • deep learning
  • single molecule
  • simultaneous determination
  • molecularly imprinted