An Online Experiment During COVID-19: Testing the Influences of Autonomy Support Toward Emotions and Academic Persistence

Students’ academic persistence is a critical component of effective online learning. Promoting students’ academic persistence could potentially alleviate learning loss or drop-out, especially during challenging time like the COVID-19 pandemic. Previous research indicated that different emotions and...

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Published inFrontiers in psychology Vol. 12; p. 747209
Main Authors Wang, Yurou, Zhang, Jihong, Lee, Halim
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Frontiers Media S.A 11.10.2021
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Abstract Students’ academic persistence is a critical component of effective online learning. Promoting students’ academic persistence could potentially alleviate learning loss or drop-out, especially during challenging time like the COVID-19 pandemic. Previous research indicated that different emotions and autonomy support could all influence students’ academic persistence. However, few studies examined the multidimensionality of persistence using an experimental design with students’ real-time emotions. Using an experimental design and the Contain Intelligent Facial Expression Recognition System (CIFERS), this research explored the dynamic associations among real-time emotions (joy and anxiety), autonomy support (having choice and no choice), self-perceived persistence, self-reliance persistence, and help-seeking persistence. 177 college students participated in this study online via Zoom during COVID-19 university closure. The results revealed that having choice and high intensity of joy could promote students’ self-reliance persistence, but not help-seeking persistence. Interestingly, students who perceived themselves as more persistent experienced more joy during experiment. The theoretical and practical implications on facilitating students’ academic persistence were discussed.
AbstractList Students’ academic persistence is a critical component of effective online learning. Promoting students’ academic persistence could potentially alleviate learning loss or drop-out, especially during challenging time like the COVID-19 pandemic. Previous research indicated that different emotions and autonomy support could all influence students’ academic persistence. However, few studies examined the multidimensionality of persistence using an experimental design with students’ real-time emotions. Using an experimental design and the Contain Intelligent Facial Expression Recognition System (CIFERS), this research explored the dynamic associations among real-time emotions (joy and anxiety), autonomy support (having choice and no choice), self-perceived persistence, self-reliance persistence, and help-seeking persistence. 177 college students participated in this study online via Zoom during COVID-19 university closure. The results revealed that having choice and high intensity of joy could promote students’ self-reliance persistence, but not help-seeking persistence. Interestingly, students who perceived themselves as more persistent experienced more joy during experiment. The theoretical and practical implications on facilitating students’ academic persistence were discussed.
Students' academic persistence is a critical component of effective online learning. Promoting students' academic persistence could potentially alleviate learning loss or drop-out, especially during challenging time like the COVID-19 pandemic. Previous research indicated that different emotions and autonomy support could all influence students' academic persistence. However, few studies examined the multidimensionality of persistence using an experimental design with students' real-time emotions. Using an experimental design and the Contain Intelligent Facial Expression Recognition System (CIFERS), this research explored the dynamic associations among real-time emotions (joy and anxiety), autonomy support (having choice and no choice), self-perceived persistence, self-reliance persistence, and help-seeking persistence. 177 college students participated in this study online via Zoom during COVID-19 university closure. The results revealed that having choice and high intensity of joy could promote students' self-reliance persistence, but not help-seeking persistence. Interestingly, students who perceived themselves as more persistent experienced more joy during experiment. The theoretical and practical implications on facilitating students' academic persistence were discussed.Students' academic persistence is a critical component of effective online learning. Promoting students' academic persistence could potentially alleviate learning loss or drop-out, especially during challenging time like the COVID-19 pandemic. Previous research indicated that different emotions and autonomy support could all influence students' academic persistence. However, few studies examined the multidimensionality of persistence using an experimental design with students' real-time emotions. Using an experimental design and the Contain Intelligent Facial Expression Recognition System (CIFERS), this research explored the dynamic associations among real-time emotions (joy and anxiety), autonomy support (having choice and no choice), self-perceived persistence, self-reliance persistence, and help-seeking persistence. 177 college students participated in this study online via Zoom during COVID-19 university closure. The results revealed that having choice and high intensity of joy could promote students' self-reliance persistence, but not help-seeking persistence. Interestingly, students who perceived themselves as more persistent experienced more joy during experiment. The theoretical and practical implications on facilitating students' academic persistence were discussed.
Author Wang, Yurou
Lee, Halim
Zhang, Jihong
AuthorAffiliation 1 Department of Educational Studies in Psychology, Research Methodology, and Counseling, The University of Alabama , Tuscaloosa, AL , United States
2 Department of Psychological and Quantitative Foundations, The University of Iowa , Iowa City, IA , United States
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– name: 1 Department of Educational Studies in Psychology, Research Methodology, and Counseling, The University of Alabama , Tuscaloosa, AL , United States
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CitedBy_id crossref_primary_10_1080_01443410_2025_2468735
crossref_primary_10_4236_psych_2024_154034
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This article was submitted to Educational Psychology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Psychology
Edited by: Johan Korhonen, Åbo Akademi University, Finland
Reviewed by: Francesca D’Errico, University of Bari Aldo Moro, Italy; Liuqing Wei, Hubei University, China
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Snippet Students’ academic persistence is a critical component of effective online learning. Promoting students’ academic persistence could potentially alleviate...
Students' academic persistence is a critical component of effective online learning. Promoting students' academic persistence could potentially alleviate...
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SubjectTerms academic persistence
anxiety
autonomy support
emotion
joy
online learning
Psychology
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Title An Online Experiment During COVID-19: Testing the Influences of Autonomy Support Toward Emotions and Academic Persistence
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