International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (May 2019)

Are Autonomously Motivated University Instructors More Autonomy-Supportive Teachers?

  • Maï Yasué,
  • Lucas Jeno,
  • Jody Langdon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.20429/ijsotl.2019.130205
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 2

Abstract

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We extended the research on autonomy-supportive teaching to universities and examined the relationships between autonomous motivation to teach and autonomy-supportive teaching. Autonomously motivated university instructors were more autonomy-supportive instructors. The freedom to make pedagogical decisions was negatively correlated with external motivation towards teaching. Participants indicated that large class sizes, high teaching loads, publication pressures, and a culture that undervalues effective undergraduate teaching undermined both student learning and their feelings of autonomy. Together these results presents a picture of a subset of university instructors who remained autonomously motivated to teach, irrespective of barriers they experienced from university administrators or policies.

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