Dataset for: University students' beliefs about errors predict their willingness to take academic risks
Author(s) / Creator(s)
Hübner, Vanessa
Other kind(s) of contributor
Pfost, Maximilian
Abstract / Description
Dataset and codebook used in: Hübner, V., & Pfost, M. (2022). University students’ beliefs about errors predict their willingness to take academic risks. Frontiers in Education, 7. https://doi.org/10.3389/feduc.2022.992067
Students’ beliefs about errors have become a field of interest within higher education research. Studies show that these are associated with students’ GPA as well as their learning strategies. Whether students’ beliefs about errors are associated with their willingness to engage in learning situations in which making errors is likely, is still an open question. To address this research gap, we measured error beliefs on three dimensions (affect, cognition, and behavior) on a sample of N = 159 university students. Applying stepwise linear regression and using academic risk taking as dependent variable for learning behavior that is characterized by a risk of making errors, this article shows that beliefs about errors influence students’ willingness to engage in error-prone situations within seminar settings. Students who do not show negative affect after making errors tend to take more academic risks within seminar settings, and students who are behaviorally apt to work with their errors take less academic risks. In contrast, beliefs about errors do not seem to relate to students’ engagement in academic risks in front of their peers. These results contribute to a deeper understanding of the role of students’ beliefs about their errors for educational dynamics and processes. They also offer implications for practitioners such as promoting strategies for emotional regulation following errors.
Keyword(s)
academic risk taking goal orientation academic self-concept error beliefs higher educationPersistent Identifier
Date of first publication
2022-10-26
Publisher
PsychArchives
Is referenced by
Citation
-
Huebner_Pfost_2022_raw-data.savSPSS data file - 12.08KBMD5: c299e8fbac7502f1f4bfdef3b9b46dbaDescription: Raw data (SPSS)
-
Huebner_Pfost_2022_raw-data.csvCSV - 18.61KBMD5: f4f788ca731935cbfd3f767fe714ec08Description: Raw data (CSV)
-
Hübner_Pfost_2022_codebook.pdfAdobe PDF - 186.83KBMD5: cc51250c5e0f7d3f7075482255f001e3Description: Codebook for the supplemented dataset
-
22022-10-26During the review process of the manuscript, an additional stepwise linear regression and additional variables (information on gender and age) were added.
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)Hübner, Vanessa
-
Other kind(s) of contributorPfost, Maximilian
-
PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2022-10-26T15:09:57Z
-
Made available on2022-07-12T07:28:43Z
-
Made available on2022-10-26T15:09:57Z
-
Date of first publication2022-10-26
-
Abstract / DescriptionDataset and codebook used in: Hübner, V., & Pfost, M. (2022). University students’ beliefs about errors predict their willingness to take academic risks. Frontiers in Education, 7. https://doi.org/10.3389/feduc.2022.992067en
-
Abstract / DescriptionStudents’ beliefs about errors have become a field of interest within higher education research. Studies show that these are associated with students’ GPA as well as their learning strategies. Whether students’ beliefs about errors are associated with their willingness to engage in learning situations in which making errors is likely, is still an open question. To address this research gap, we measured error beliefs on three dimensions (affect, cognition, and behavior) on a sample of N = 159 university students. Applying stepwise linear regression and using academic risk taking as dependent variable for learning behavior that is characterized by a risk of making errors, this article shows that beliefs about errors influence students’ willingness to engage in error-prone situations within seminar settings. Students who do not show negative affect after making errors tend to take more academic risks within seminar settings, and students who are behaviorally apt to work with their errors take less academic risks. In contrast, beliefs about errors do not seem to relate to students’ engagement in academic risks in front of their peers. These results contribute to a deeper understanding of the role of students’ beliefs about their errors for educational dynamics and processes. They also offer implications for practitioners such as promoting strategies for emotional regulation following errors.en
-
Review statusunknownen
-
SponsorshipPublication fees supported by Open-Access-Fund, University of Bamberg.en
-
Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/7052.2
-
Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.8303
-
Language of contenteng
-
PublisherPsychArchivesen
-
Is referenced byhttps://doi.org/10.3389/feduc.2022.992067
-
Is related tohttps://www.psycharchives.org/handle/20.500.12034/7051.2
-
Is related tohttps://doi.org/10.3389/feduc.2022.992067
-
Keyword(s)academic risk takingen
-
Keyword(s)goal orientationen
-
Keyword(s)academic self-concepten
-
Keyword(s)error beliefsen
-
Keyword(s)higher educationen
-
Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
-
TitleDataset for: University students' beliefs about errors predict their willingness to take academic risksen
-
DRO typeresearchDataen