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Tài liệu The relationship between teachers' use of classroom assessment techniques and efl students' learning motivation a study in middle schools in ba ria vung tau a case student at chau thanh secondary school mast

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MINISTRY OF EDUCATION AND TRAINING BARIA-VUNGTAU UNIVERSITY THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN TEACHERS' USE OF CLASSROOM ASSESSMENT TECHNIQUES AND EFL STUDENTS' LEARNING MOTIVATION: A STUDY IN MIDDLE SCHOOLS IN BA RIA VUNG TAU Nguyễn Thị Thu Thủy Supervisor: Bùi Phú Hưng, PhD. Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts (Theory and Methodology of English Language Teaching) Faculty of Theory and Methodology of English Language Teaching School of International and Postgraduate Training Ba Ria- Vung Tau University Ba Ria Vung Tau, March 2022 Keywords Classroom assessment Diagnostic assessment Interactive assessment Learning motivation Performance assessment Scaffolding assessment Self-assessment The Relationship between Teachers' Use of Assessment Techniques and Students' Learning Motivation in EFL Classrooms: A Study in Middle Schools in Ba Ria Vung Tau i Abstract Given that proper classroom assessment promotes learning motivation, this study investigates how EFL teachers employed forms of classroom assessment and how these assessment forms are related to different types of learning motivation. Data were collected from classroom observations, questionnaires, and interviews at a grammar school and a regular school in Vietnam. First, we observed eight EFL secondary school classes to explore how these teachers assessed students in the classroom. Then, we administered a classroom assessment questionnaire and learning motivation to explore the correlation between classroom assessment and learning motivation. Finally, we conducted semistructured interviews to get in-depth information about such relationship. The results showed that the relationship between classroom assessment and learning motivation at the grammar school was generally strong although the teachers assessed students less often than those at the regular school. The students revealed that it was not the frequency but way of assessment that fostered their learning motivation. The results suggest an inclusion of training assessment techniques in teacher education programs and teachers' use of proper assessment techniques to enhance learning motivation. Keywords: classroom assessment, diagnostic assessment, interactive assessment, learning motivation, scaffolding The Relationship between Teachers' Use of Assessment Techniques and Students' Learning Motivation in EFL Classrooms: A Study in Middle Schools in Ba Ria Vung Tau ii TABLE OF CONTENTS Keywords .............................................................................................................................. i Abstract ................................................................................................................................ ii TABLE OF CONTENTS .................................................................................................... iii List of Figures ..................................................................................................................... vi List of Tables...................................................................................................................... vii List of Abbreviations......................................................................................................... viii Statement of Original Authorship ....................................................................................... ix Acknowledgements .............................................................................................................. x Chapter 1. Introduction ............................................................................................................ 1 1.1 Background .................................................................................................................... 1 1.2 Context ........................................................................................................................... 2 1.3 Purposes ......................................................................................................................... 3 1.4 Significance, Scope, and Definitions ............................................................................. 3 1.5 Organization of the Thesis ............................................................................................. 5 Chapter 2. Literature Review .................................................................................................. 6 2.1 Second Language Classroom Assessment ..................................................................... 6 2.1.1 The Importance of Second Language Classroom Assessment ............................... 6 2.1.2 Theorizing Second Language Classroom Assessment ........................................... 7 2.1.3 Main Components of Second Language Classroom Assessment Components ..... 7 2.2 Second Language Learning Motivation ......................................................................... 9 2.2.1 The Concept of Learning Motivation ..................................................................... 9 The Relationship between Teachers' Use of Assessment Techniques and Students' Learning Motivation in EFL Classrooms: A Study in Middle Schools in Ba Ria Vung Tau iii 2.2.2 Learning Motivation and Related Concepts ......................................................... 10 2.2.3 Motivation for Second Language Learning .......................................................... 12 2.3 Second Language Classroom Assessment and Learning Motivation .......................... 13 2.4 Previous Research ........................................................................................................ 17 2.5 Conceptual Framework ................................................................................................ 22 2.6 Summary ...................................................................................................................... 23 Chapter 3. Research Methodology ........................................................................................ 24 3.1 Research Approach and Design ............................................................................... 24 3.2 Participants and Settings .......................................................................................... 24 3.3 Pilot Study ................................................................................................................ 25 3.4 Instruments ............................................................................................................... 25 3.5 Data Collection and Procedure ................................................................................ 26 3.6 Data Analysis ........................................................................................................... 27 3.7 Ethical Considerations ............................................................................................. 29 3.8 Research Reliability and Validity ............................................................................ 29 3.9 Researcher's Role ..................................................................................................... 30 3.10 Summary .................................................................................................................. 30 Chapter 4. Findings and Discussion ...................................................................................... 31 4.1 Findings ........................................................................................................................ 31 4.1.1 Preliminary Statistical Results .................................................................................. 31 4.1.2 Differences in L2 Classroom Assessment Practices between a Grammar School and Regular Junior Secondary School in Vietnam ................................................................... 34 4.1.3 Relationship between Second Language Classroom Assessment and Learning Motivation Reported by EFL Students in The Junior Secondary Schools ........................ 41 4.2 Discussion .................................................................................................................... 46 The Relationship between Teachers' Use of Assessment Techniques and Students' Learning Motivation in EFL Classrooms: A Study in Middle Schools in Ba Ria Vung Tau iv 4.2.1 Research Results in The Light of The Classroom Assessment Model in Relation to Learning Motivation........................................................................................................... 46 4.2.2 Discussion of The Classroom Assessment Techniques Used at The Two Junior Secondary Schools ............................................................................................................. 46 4.2.3 Discussion of The Relationship Between Classroom Assessment and Learning Motivation at The Two Junior Secondary Schools ............................................................ 48 4.3 Summary .................................................................................................................. 50 Chapter 5. Conclusions and Recommendations .................................................................... 52 5.1 Key Findings ............................................................................................................ 52 5.2 Contributions ............................................................................................................ 53 5.3 Limitations ............................................................................................................... 53 5.4 Recommendations .................................................................................................... 54 5.5 Suggestions For Further Studies .............................................................................. 54 References ............................................................................................................................. 55 Appendices ............................................................................................................................ 61 Appendix A: Classroom Assessment Questionnaire ......................................................... 61 Appendix B: Learning Motivation Questionnaire ............................................................. 65 Appendix C: Interview Protocol for Students .................................................................... 69 Interview Protocol for Teachers ......................................................................................... 71 The Relationship between Teachers' Use of Assessment Techniques and Students' Learning Motivation in EFL Classrooms: A Study in Middle Schools in Ba Ria Vung Tau v List of Figures Figure 2.1. Motivation, Effort, and Achievement (Adapted from Brookhart et al., 2006) ...........................................................................................................................................9 Figure 2.2. Conceptual Framework..................................................................................21 Figure 4.1 Sequential Equation Modelling of the Classroom Assessment Questionnaire .........................................................................................................................................30 Figure 4.2 Sequential Equation Modelling of the Learning Motivation Questionnaire .38 The Relationship between Teachers' Use of Assessment Techniques and Students' Learning Motivation in EFL Classrooms: A Study in Middle Schools in Ba Ria Vung Tau vi List of Tables Table 3.1. Description of Participants ............................................................................. 21 Table 3.2 Classroom Assessment Questionnaire ............................................................ 22 Table 3.3 Learning Motivation Questionnaire ................................................................ 22 Table 4.1 Confirmatory Factor Analysis Results of Classroom Assessment Questionnaire .............. 28 Table 4.2 Confirmatory Factor Analysis Results of Learning Motivation Questionnaire .........................................................................................................................................29 Table 4.3 MANOVA Results of Classroom Assessment at Two Schools...................... 31 Table 4.4 MANOVA Results of Learning Motivation at the Grammar and Regular School .............................................................................................................................. 39 Table 4.5 Results from Pearson Correlation Analysis .................................................... 40 The Relationship between Teachers' Use of Assessment Techniques and Students' Learning Motivation in EFL Classrooms: A Study in Middle Schools in Ba Ria Vung Tau vii List of Abbreviations CFA: confirmatory factor analysis CM: classroom anxiety in motivation) DI: diagnostic assessment EFL: English as a foreign language EM: efforts in motivation IO: interactional-observational assessment L2: second language LM: linguistic efficacy in motivation M: Mean PE: performance assessment SD: standard deviation SDT: Self-Determination Theory SM: student attitudes in motivation SU: scaffolding or supportive assessment The Relationship between Teachers' Use of Assessment Techniques and Students' Learning Motivation in EFL Classrooms: A Study in Middle Schools in Ba Ria Vung Tau viii Statement of Original Authorship The work contained in this thesis has not been previously submitted to meet requirements for an award at this or any other higher education institution. To the best of my knowledge and belief, the thesis contains no material previously published or written by another person except where due reference is made. Signature: Date: The Relationship between Teachers' Use of Assessment Techniques and Students' Learning Motivation in EFL Classrooms: A Study in Middle Schools in Ba Ria Vung Tau ix Acknowledgements Throughout the writing of this dissertation, I have received a great deal of support and assistance. I would first like to thank my supervisor, Bui Phu Hung, PhD., whose expertise was invaluable in formulating the research questions and methodology. His insightful feedback pushed me to sharpen my thinking and brought my work to a higher level. I also owe thanks to the examiners in my oral thesis defense who gave me constructive feedback to improve the writing of this thesis. I would like to acknowledge English teachers and students at the surveyed high schools in Ba Ria Vung Tau for their patient support and for all of the opportunities I was given to my research. In addition, I would like to thank my parents for their wise counsel and sympathetic ear. They are always there for me. Finally, I could not have completed this dissertation without the support of my friends who provided stimulating discussions as well as happy distractions to rest my mind outside of my research. The Relationship between Teachers' Use of Assessment Techniques and Students' Learning Motivation in EFL Classrooms: A Study in Middle Schools in Ba Ria Vung Tau x Chapter 1. Introduction This chapter attempts to make an introduction to the thesis. It first describes the background and context of the study. Then, it presents the aims or purposes for which the study is conducted, in which research questions are raised. Next, it provides a description of the significance and scope of the study and definitions of the key terms used throughout the thesis before it finally presents how the thesis is organized. 1.1 Background Recent research shows the importance of classroom assessment. Classroom assessment is defined to the instructor's use of activities and artefacts to understand learners and the learning process (Gan et al., 2019), measure academic achievements, identify learners' problems, and provide feedback (Brown & Harries, 2013). Regular assessment can make learners be conscious of their achievement and learning and develop their learning strategies, which, in a long run, result in students' knowledge and inclination (Brookhart et al., 2006). Appropriate use of assessment techniques may also promote the learning outcomes and learners' satisfaction (Stiggins, 2005). While tests generally bring out immediate results, classroom assessment is considered a vehicle leading to long-term consequences (Brookhart et al., 2006). In second language (L2) education, classroom assessment results can provide information about learners' L2 skills, linguistic competencies, and L2 performance, from which teachers and students develop plans to achieve the expected learning outcomes. Purpura (2016) proposed that L2 assessment is a transdisciplinary area that aims to change L2 classroom practices and develop L2 assessment theories. It has been noted in assessment literature that it is a powerful tool to foster learning motivation (Brookhart, 1997; Brookhart et al., 2006). However, "Brookhart's theoretical perspective has not been tested in the L2 assessment context" (Gan et al., 2019) and has been modified recently (Brookhart, 2004; Brookhart & Durkin, 2003). In education, a growing body of research has attempted to explain students’ attitudes and performance by applying Brookhart’s (1997) model about the relationship between classroom assessment and motivation. These studies make a common conclusion that Chapter 1. Introduction 1 classroom assessment techniques can be used by teachers to motivate students to learn. In Brookhart’s perspective, teachers may consider the aims of the assessment to choose appropriate assessment tasks and techniques (Hao & Johnson, 2013). As a result, students make better effort in learning and change their perspectives on classroom assessment (Brookhart et al., 2006; Harlen & Crick, 2003). 1.2 Context Within the past several decades, there has been a significant shift toward the use of assessment and its integration into the curriculum, which has piqued the public's attention. In this context, the introduction of a variety of evaluation methods in foreign language instruction has become more critical in recent years. According to Farhady (2006), "assessment has experienced a paradigm change from a discrete-point component-based viewpoint to a task-based, performance-oriented approach" in recent years (p.3). Classroom assessment, which incorporates a variety of methodologies, may improve teaching and learning by allowing students to apply their knowledge in a more focused manner. Furthermore, Anderman (2020) affirmed that to support the effectiveness of learning, assessment techniques should be employed as "assessment for learning". Knight (2009) also pointed out that when students fully grasp their learning goals and progress toward those learning objectives through assessment, they are more motivated to continue their studying. In the same line, Ryan and Deci (2020) argue that teachers can make better judgments on how to differentiate and grade learning experiences in the classroom when they clearly understand how effectively their students learn language. Motivation, a concept in psychology, interprets the causes of achievements and failure (Guilloteaux & Dörnyei, 2008). In recent decades, language learning motivation constructs have been developed and investigated. It is a driving force for ongoing learning process. Brophy (2004) and Pintrich and Schunk (2002) introduced strategies for teachers to motivate learners and learning. Other researchers (e.g., Alison & Halliwell, 2002; Dörnyei, 2006) also developed guidelines for motivating students in L2 classrooms. In Vietnam, classroom assessment is a problematic issue. Assessment may influence students' emotions. Vietnamese students are sensitive to how feedback is given. They may feel uncomfortable when they receive negative feedback. It is the self-oriented Chapter 1. Introduction 2 culture that makes them feel uncomfortable to give and receive feedback. When they feel that the environment is unsafe, they may refuse to provide or reject feedback (Thanh & Gillies, 2010). Like many other places in Vietnam, some middle schools in Ba Ria Vung Tau (BRVT) offer no alternatives to foreign languages. English is the only option, and students generally expose low L2 learning motivation, resulting in their low engagement in learning activities and low academic achievements. English language teachers have implemented different teaching strategies to promote students’ learning motivation, including the use of classroom assessment techniques. However, there is no study exploring the use of classroom assessment techniques in EFL classrooms and its impacts on students’ learning motivation. 1.3 Purposes Although classroom assessment and motivation have been vastly explored in the international literature, what forms of L2 classroom assessment are related to what types of learning motivation in Asian EFL contexts are underexplored. Regarding the importance of L2 classroom assessment learning motivation, it is crucial to investigate and compare the relationship between L2 English classroom assessment and learning motivation in junior secondary school classrooms in Vietnam. This study explores the classroom assessment practices and their relationship with learning motivation in two different contexts in Vietnam: grammar school and regular (traditional public) school. It attempts to address the following questions: RQ1. Are there any differences in L2 classroom assessment practices between a grammar school and regular junior secondary school in Vietnam? RQ2. How does the use of classroom assessment techniques influence different aspects of learning motivation of EFL students in these Vietnamese junior secondary schools? 1.4 Significance, Scope, and Definitions In terms of significance, it is expected that the current study generates both theoretical and practical contributions. Firstly, the current study’ research findings enrich the literature concerning the use of classroom assessment techniques in the Vietnamese EFL context. Secondly The findings of the study will be very useful not only to the researcher but also to the teachers who are teaching English at middle schools, Ba Ria Vung Tau. In Chapter 1. Introduction 3 more details, the research findings expectedly reveal the effects of using different types of classroom assessment techniques which have been currently used in English classrooms to determine whether the use of classroom assessment techniques is appropriate for English teaching and learning in the EFL context in Vietnam. In particular, the measurement of impacts of assessment techniques on students’ learning motivations will provide empirical evidence supporting the changes in using assessment techniques for the improvement in quality of English learning and teaching. This study did not investigate classroom assessment practices in relation to learning motivation at all junior secondary schools in Vietnam. It confined itself to examining and comparing the practices of L2 classroom assessment and learning motivation in seventhgrade classes at two schools of different types, namely grammar school and regular school, in Ba Ria Vung Tau Province, Vietnam. Furthermore, although there are many types of classroom assessment techniques the current study only focused on five types, including diagnostic, scaffolding, interactive-observational, self-assessment, and performance assessment techniques. Meanwhile, aspects of learning motivations included in the study include classroom anxiety, linguistic efficacy, student attitude, and efforts. In this study, the term L2 classroom assessment refers to how teachers assess students' learning and competencies in the second language classroom. Learning motivation is defined as students' motivation to learn a language as a second or foreign language. Different types of classroom assessment are defined as follows: 1) Diagnostic assessments are sets of written questions (multiple choice or short answer) that assess a learner's current knowledge base or current views on a topic/issue to be studied in the course (Black, & Wiliam, 2009). 2) Scaffolding assessment is the process that teachers and learners use in the teaching process to provide feedback to adjust the teaching and learning process to improve the learner’s achievement towards teaching output goals (Black, & Wiliam, 2009). 3) Interactive-observational assessment involves obtaining evaluative information through direct observation (Stronge, 2018). 4) Self-assessment requires students to reflect on their own work and judge how well Chapter 1. Introduction 4 they have performed in relation to the assessment criteria (Black, & Wiliam, 2009). 5) Performance assessment is a test in which the test taker actually demonstrates the skills the test is intended to measure by doing real-world tasks that require those skills, rather than by answering questions asking how to do them (Black, & Wiliam, 2009). 1.5 Organization of the Thesis This thesis has six main chapters followed by references and appendices. After this Chapter One, which introduces the background of the study, Chapter Two reviews related literature in L2 classroom assessment and learning motivation. Chapter Three describes how the current study was conducted. Chapter Four provides the necessary findings to answer the questions and discusses the findings by using the relevant perspectives in the literature. Chapter Five makes a conclusion and gives recommendations. The next chapter presents a literature review. Chapter 1. Introduction 5 Chapter 2. Literature Review The present chapter provides the main theoretical perspectives on second language classroom assessment and learning motivation. It first presents the basic concepts in second language classroom assessment by theorizing the field. Then, learning motivation, which is mainly an important concept in education, is presented with edgecutting research results and proposals in applied linguistics. The chapter ends with a presentation of the research gap after it presents the potential relationship between classroom assessment and learning motivation from examining the research results about the Vietnamese context and other places in the world. 2.1 Second Language Classroom Assessment 2.1.1 The Importance of Second Language Classroom Assessment Classroom assessment refers to a process engaging teachers and students to diagnose students' problems and improvements, measure students' achievements, and give feedback (Brown & Harries, 2013). Dorans (2012) argued that the classroom assessment process employs a variety of kinds of evidence, including evidence from classroom tests and quizzes, short-term and long-term student performance assessment, informal observations, dialogue with students (classroom talk), student self- and peer assessment, and results from computer-based learning programs. Classroom assessment methods are more closely linked with students' instruction experience than many other educational assessment methods because the student is the learner and the examinee. Thus, the current perspectives have arisen that classroom assessment can best be understood in the context of how students learn (Bransford et al., 2000; Pellegrino et al., 2001). In this regard, Stiggins (2005) and Stefanou and Parkes (2003) suggested a relationship between classroom assessment and learning environment in which the teacher, learning environment, and students' characteristics influence the learning progress. Effective classroom assessment is used by teachers and students to articulate learning targets, collect feedback about where students are in relation to those targets, and prompt adjustments to instruction by teachers, as well as changes to learning processes and revision of work products by students. Chapter 2. Literature Review 6 2.1.2 Theorizing Second Language Classroom Assessment The recent interest in applying constructivist/ sociocultural theory in L2 education has brought about radical innovations in classroom assessment practices (Turner & Purpura, 2016). While classroom-based assessment remains an argumentative issue, Brookhart (2004) and McMillan (2013) proposed the use of classroom assessment to improve the learning process, which has been being recently applied in L2 education in the hope that it directly affects students’ learning and academic results (Brookhart, 2004; McMillan, 2013). Agreeing with the aforementioned perspective, researchers (e.g., Black & Wiliam, 1998; Stiggins, 2005) posit that classroom-based assessment can help engage students in learning in a way that students are engaged in the assessment tasks required or delivered by the teacher. Students, in turn, can exhibit some change in their learning strategies and behaviors, efficacy, competences so that they can become independent and responsible learners, which is the ultimate education objective (Stefanou & Parkes, 2003). As suggested by Hattie and Timperley (2007) and McMillan (2013), classroom assessment is a dynamic and cyclical process in which the teacher can collects evidence to understand learners and learning, from which the teacher can improve their teaching. Also, students can base on the assessment results to know if they are reaching their established goals and how much more effort they need to make to achieve their expected goals. Carless (2019) and Swaffiled (2011) conceptualized that classroom-based assessment includes teacher feedback, formal and informal, in an interactive or dialogic process in which the assessor can be the teacher or a peer(s). That is, the classroom is a social setting in which peer assessment and teacher assessment provide opportunities to enhance the learning process in which students are the center of the classroom activities. Consequently, the commonly perceived benefits of classroom assessment practices include not only offering opportunities for meaningful task engagement that leads to the use of effective learning strategies and development of higher-order skills but also fostering a potentially more positive motivation and self-regulation for students than other forms of assessment. 2.1.3 Main Components of Second Language Classroom Assessment Components Shepard (2000), Pearson (2004), and Hao and Johnson (2013) hold a strong belief about Chapter 2. Literature Review 7 the advantages of performance assessment. It "measures abilities and skills of wider range and is more aligned with those skills required in the real world" and requires highorder thinking (Hao & Johnson, 2013, p. 54). To assess student performance of four language skills, the teacher can use performance assessment and portfolios (Pearson, 2004), gap-fill exercises, end-of-unit tests, authentic materials (Goetze et al., 2010; Nicholson & Tunmer, 2010), and multiple-choice tests (Shepard, 2000). There are criticisms against using the multiple-choice format because it focuses on isolated discrete items and rules (Hambleton & Murphy, 1992; Wolf et al., 1991) and does not require students to think of the appropriateness of tests and tasks (Pearson, 2004). Turner and Purpura's (2016) proposal of classroom assessment based on the sociocultural theory hypothesizes that the teacher should facilitate and mediate the learning process by using scaffolding techniques. Accordingly, classroom assessment can be formal or informal, aiming to promote the learning process. Swaffield (2011) also introduced principles for assessment for learning. The teacher should understand students' current competencies and progress by engaging them in social interaction and metacognition process. James et al. (2007) also argued that assessment should focus on learning, aim to develop learners' self-regulation, and elicit learning. Teachers and learners may feel "constrained by a policy context that encourages rushed curriculum coverage, teaching to the test and a tick box culture" (James et al., 2007, p. 216). Some researchers (e.g., Double et al., 2020; Edwards, 2013) argued for the power of peer assessment. The experimental research results by Double et al., (2020) showed that peer assessment could positively influence students' academic achievement. In language education, peer assessment can provide opportunities for interactive, cooperative, and self-directed learning (Edwards, 2013, p. 730). Students may be benefited more from serving as assessors and being assessed by giving and receiving oral and written feedback and grading than they only receive comments and have their works graded by others passively (Reinholz, 2016). Student self-assessment has been encouraged by educational researchers. Students can evaluate their own academic abilities (Brown & Harries, 2013, p. 368) and learning processes by using a wide variety of mechanisms and techniques (Panadero et al., 2016, p. 804). Previous research showed benefits of self-assessment, including self-monitoring Chapter 2. Literature Review 8 (Epstein et al., 2008, p. 5), self-regulating, self-correcting, and promoting learning to achieve goals and objectives (Andrade, 2010). Thanh and Gillies (2010) explored the practice of peer assessment in Vietnam and effective ways to engage Vietnamese students in peer assessment. Data collected from observations, a questionnaire, and interviews indicated that Vietnamese students were willing to get involved in group work only when they found support from other group members. As students reported negative attitudes towards criticisms, the researchers recommended: "to make peer assessment more adaptive to Vietnamese context" (p. 81). In other words, peer assessment practice is context sensitive. 2.2 Second Language Learning Motivation 2.2.1 The Concept of Learning Motivation Motivation is a psychological attribute that directs human desire and behavior towards success (Lodhi et al., 2019; MacIntyre, 2002). Motivation has two main types: intrinsic and extrinsic (Ryan & Deci, 2000). While the inherent type is defined as an internal genuine desire for learning and achievement, extrinsic motivation drives learning in response to an external stimulus, such as rewards or publishment. According to Dörnyei (2006), L2 motivation is influenced by learners' attitudes, interethnic contact, and linguistic self-confidence. Recent educational research has explored learning or student motivation. Accordingly, student motivation or learning motivation refers to all the internal factors that motivate students to study and practice to achieve goals. Every student entering the course of acquiring knowledge and skills has ambitions, dreams, and has specific goals for themselves to achieve during their years of study at the school. Those are the factors that motivate students to learn (Harandi, 2015). The factors that motivate students to learn today can be identified from students' activities, behaviors, and attitudes as desire to get good academic results and win a scholarship, desire to study so that they can get a job with high income and high status in society later, learning to assert yourself to satisfy long- cherished dreams and ambitions, and learning to contribute, to do useful things for the society. Regarding the difficulty in identifying learning motivation, some researchers (e.g., Brookhart et al., 2006; Harlen & Crick, 2003) outline the four main inherent Chapter 2. Literature Review 9
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