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Self-construal and students’ math self-concept, anxiety and achievement: An examination of achievement goals as mediators

2014, Luo, Serena Wenshu, Hogan, David, Tan, Liang See, Kaur, Berinderjeet, Ng, Pak Tee, Chan, Melvin Chee Yeen

This study examines the role of self-construal in student learning by testing a mediation model: through math achievement goals, self-construal predicts math self-concept and anxiety, which further predict math achievement. A sample of 1196 students from 104 Singapore secondary classes took a survey and a math achievement test. The results from multi- group structural equation modeling supported measurement invariance and equal path coefficients in the mediation model between boys and girls. Interdependent self-construal predicted positively mastery approach and avoidance goals, through which interdependent self-construal had a positive total indirect effect on math anxiety. Independent self-construal predicted positively mastery approach, performance approach and performance avoidance goals, and through the two approach goals, high independent self-construal was associated with high math self-concept. Overall, self-construal was not associated with math achievement. The findings enhance our understanding of achievement motivation from a sociocultural perspective and help explain East Asian students’ relatively higher anxiety and lower self-concept in comparison with their Western counterparts reported in international studies.