Expectancy Value Theory:
Racializing Values in Motivation Theory Using Racial Opportunity
Cost
Chris
Seals
Michigan
State University
Abstract
Expectancy value theory (EVT) of motivation is used to better
understand student cognitive processes and achievement. The theory has expanded
to be more inclusive of various motivational experiences since its origin in
1964 by John Atkinson. However, the work can be further expanded to examine how
EVT can better conceptualize achievement behavior for underrepresented
students. Racial opportunity cost (ROC_ Chambers et al., 2014) has similarities
that overlap with EVT, but uses constructs having to do with racism to define
the student experience. In this conceptual paper, I used those same constructs
to redefine the four value types of EVT. This exposes the gap, in theory, by
using constructs from ROC to nuance values so they can be applied directly to
the educational experience of underrepresented and urban students. This paper
shows that racializing the motivational experience of underrepresented students
is complex and influences all elements within the EVT model.
Keywords:
expectancy value theory,
motivation
Introduction
Human behavior is
impacted by many factors. Some factors include where you are from or what groups you identify with, and even when
those factors are shared between two people, itÕs only human for those two
people to still have varying behaviors. In the field of education, there are
several major theories of motivation that are used in research to evaluate and
interpret student motivations and behaviors, and these theories have vastly
different approaches concerning the explanation of behavior and the inner
mechanisms of human decision making. Some of these theories in motivation
include attribution theory, ability beliefs, achievement goal theory,
self-determination theory, and expectancy value theory. The use of these
theories has been both effective and successful in the research community, but
with a racial academic achievement gap that still looms over our education
system (Becker & Luthar, 2002), it brings to question how effective these
theories have been when studying underrepresented students of color.
To
discuss how students of color fit or do not fit into every theory in motivation
would be too dire of a task for this paper. While the use of different
motivation theories is dynamic in evaluating and understanding behaviors of
students from all backgrounds, there are, however, nuanced elements of the
underrepresented student groupsÕ experience that are not fully considered when
studying the motivation of these populations. The purpose of this paper is to
expand Expectancy Value Theory (EVT), so that it can be directly used to
analyze the experience of underrepresented students of color in educational
settings. In this paper, I first discuss the basic background of both EVT and
Racial Opportunity Cost (ROC) by Chambers, Huggins, Locke, & Fowler (2014),
and how I came to bring these two theories together. Next, I use the
theoretical model of ROC to reframe the four subjective value types of EVT. I
go on to share how racially nuanced value types can be developed in research
and practice.
The broader goal of this paper is to
blatantly use the lens of underrepresented students of color to broaden the implications of EVT. Using this reframed theory
could be very effective in understanding the educational needs of K_12 &
higher education students who are not in the dominant or White ethnic group,
therefore, helping educators better serve urban and underrepresented students.
Linking
Motivation to the Racial Experience
Expectancy value theory (EVT) is a theory of
motivation, where John Atkinson (1964) described variables that linearly
produce oneÕs behavior or motivation. EVT includes two variables that produce
oneÕs behavior (Wigfield & Eccles, 2000). Expectancy is the first variable, which is described as the belief
about how well you can do on an upcoming task (Wigfield & Ecclees, 2000),
and the second variable, value, is the
personÕs desire for accomplishment in a task or the importance of achieving the
task.
When EVT was created, social and cultural aspects were not taken
into consideration (Parsons & Goff, 1978), therefore the oppressions,
views, and needs of underrepresented students of color are not theoretically
integrated within expectancy value theory. The value component of EVT, however,
has been studied more in-depth since the theory originated. Wigfield and Eccles
(2000) discuss four types of task values, including (a) cost beliefs (effort cost), the perceived negative consequence of
engaging in an activity, (b) utility
value, the perceived future usefulness, (c) attainment value, the perceived importance in completing a task,
and (d) intrinsic value, the
enjoyment someone has from an activity or their overall interest in the subject
(Trautwein, 2012).
Perez, Cromley, and
Kaplan (2014) encouraged more research about the role of cost beliefs in
motivation and they used academic identity to
understand motivation. My interests lead me to read about racial opportunity
cost (ROC) which explores the consequences that students of color face to
pursue educational success in a predominantly White normed school structure
(Chambers, et al. 2014). Throughout my read, I noticed that the authors of ROC
do not label themselves as motivation researchers but were using ethnic/racial
identity to explain the behavior of students, instead of using academic
identity, like Perez et al. (2014).
Chamber et al. (2014)
inspired me to take a second look at EVT and compare ROC specifically to the
concept of cost beliefs. Though cost beliefs consider the negative consequences
of engaging in an act, it does not share the racialized lens and nuanced
framework that supports ROC (see Table 1). Wigfield, Tonks & Eccles (2004)
suggests that more work must be done on the value constructs of EVT, so they
can be developed for use in different cultures. In summary, the focus of this
paper is to reframe the value component of expectancy value theory so that
specific needs and challenges that underrepresented students face will be
considered when using EVT to assess and view their academic experiences.
Table 1
Comparing EVT to ROC
|
EVT |
ROC |
Is a theory |
_ |
_ |
Used to discuss and understand the behaviors &
experiences of students in an educational setting. |
_ |
_ |
Used on all student populations |
_ |
|
Originally normed from dominantly White student group
population |
_ |
|
Created for students of color |
|
_ |
Considers values of students |
_ |
_ |
Directly addresses expectancy of students |
_ |
|
Directly addresses needs and experiences of students of
color |
|
_ |
Used for students of all grade levels |
_ |
|
Used for college level students |
|
_ |
Used as measurements/scales in research |
_ |
|
Racially
Nuancing the Values of EVT
Racial
opportunity cost especially focuses on the relationship between student and
his/her school climate and culture while specifically exploring the price
African American and Latino students pay to pursue educational success in a
predominantly White normed school structure (Chambers et al., 2014). ROC is
effective at detailing the experience of the underrepresented student because
it is derived from four assertions that provide it with a racially sensitive
detailed lens. The four assertions can be summarized as (a) the expectations
that the dominant society places on a person of color conflicting with
expectations from their own racial/ethnic community,
(b) intersectionality, which is the crossroads of oneÕs identity so that the
student is not only using oneÕs race to describe their identity, (c) academic
persistence in relationship to the school climate and elements outside of the
classroom that impact studentsÕ success, and (d) mental and emotional bearing
that students of color carry when having to navigate a white middle class
normed education system.
Next in this paper, I
use this framework of ROC to racially nuance the four value types of EVT.
Racially nuanced values do not lose meaning or purpose from their original
meaning, they rather broaden their scope to include aspects suggested by the
ROC theory.
Cost Beliefs
ÒCost refers to what an
individual has to give up to do a taskÓ (Wigfield et al., 2004, p. 172). As
mentioned before, ROC explores the price that students pay to pursue
educational success. Despite being the concept that directly links EVT to ROC,
cost beliefs only loosely consider all the racialized costs that play a role
when an underrepresented student of color is pursuing an academic goal in a
White normed education system.
The
four assertions of ROC give emphasis to oppression, racial identity,
stereotypes, and the mental/emotional impact of these factors, which shall be emphasized
in EVT. When considering cost beliefs of an underrepresented student, the
values of his/her racial subculture, culture of minority racial/ethnic group,
may clash with the values of the White normed education system. A clash in
values between two systems (i.e. school, community, family) may put the student
in a position where they have to make a choice of which value system to
ascribe. Making a choice however means that the student may be abandoning the
other value system that they are apart of. Leaving one value system behind
comes with a consequence, and this is not always fully considered in the study of cost beliefs.
Examples of students who
suffered from the described consequence is highlighted in the study by
Chambers, et al. (2014), where the authors interviewed 18 African American and
Latino high achieving students. Many of those students discussed the difficulty
of taking high-level courses because they were one of very few students of
their race who were taking honors courses. They reported feelings of isolation
and a lack of belonging, which harm intellectual achievement (Walton &
Cohen, 2007) and perception of well_being, playing a serious role in the
education of the student. The students from the study by Chambers et al. (2014)
are living with the consequence and paying the cost of educational success.
This type of racialized cost must be considered in the study of cost beliefs,
showing that day-_to_day decisions that are influenced by a studentÕs
perception of cost value can be rooted in much deeper racial phenomena.
I used the previous example to illustrate how complex cost beliefs
can be for a student of color. There is, however, more to consider when
analyzing the cost beliefs of an underrepresented student. The
intersectionality, or multiple endorsed identity groups, makes an experience
convoluted. A student could be juggling the value systems of more than two
groups making the costs potentially higher,
if forced to choose between groups. This alone could impact behavior and
decision-making. The same can be said about the external and the school environments,
which also socialize the underrepresented student in a way that endorses
choices that may not be analogous to White normed educational success. Finally,
there is a mental and emotional impact that a student feels because of managing
these mentioned factors. The cost seems to compound because of these additional
racialized factors, and it comes with psychological strain on the student.
Prior to reading the
remaining racialized values, it is important to view Figure 1. Figure 1
represents EVT in a model that illustrates the inner working mental process of
a student regarding making and acting on a choice. Cost beliefs, attainment
value, and utility value are under the subjective
task value component of the EVT model, so there are many items that are
considered before the student assesses the value of the task. Some of those
items include studentÕs perceptions, cultural environment, studentÕs aptitude,
and more. This means that these items influence how a person values a task or
task goal. Though these components are part of the model, the racially
oppressed experience of a student cannot simply fall into one of the boxes in
Figure 1. Instead, that experience starts with cultural milieu and circulates throughout the entire EVT model.
Figure 1.
Expectancy Value Theory Model
Note: (Wigfield et al., 2004, p. 170)
Cultural milieu of the EVT model (see Figure 1) refers to
social environment including stereotypes, gender roles, and characteristics
that are shared and perpetuated by the culture and by structured institutions
(i.e. government, religion, school). Cultural milieu influences every component
in the model, directly and indirectly, and is where cultural beliefs are shared
and cultural norms are practiced. The racialized lens begins here, because race
is embedded in the structures and discourses that guide daily practices
(Taylor, 1999). This racialized cultural milieu then influences the socializersÕ beliefs and behaviors, the previous related experiences of the student,
and the studentÕs perception of the
social world around him/her and their place in that world (i.e. gender roles,
stereotypes). Within these four components of the model, the student is
impacted by (a) their racial identity, along with other intersectional
identities (b) the differences in their racial subculture versus the dominant
culture and, (c) socializers in those settings, prior to determining value. Specifically, the racially influenced
components impact the subjective task
values and expectations of success,
which directly impact achievement related
choices of the student, within the EVT model (Figure 1).
Utility
ÒUtility value or
usefulness, refers to how a task fits into an individualÕs future plansÓ
(Wigfield et al., 2004, p. 171). Utility value is often a means to an end, so a
student may choose to not invest in their chemistry work if they do not see how
it relates to their future career or hobbies.
Fordham & Ogbu (1986) discussed African American students who perceive
limited future job opportunities and lack academic motivation as a result. This
is an example of low utility value that guides us to question why an
underrepresented student of color may perceive low usefulness of school
success. When studying utility value one must explore the purpose of schooling
from the point of view of the student. Intersectionality could play a strong
role in determining the use of a task when race, gender, socioeconomic status,
or age is taken into consideration. A low SES student may have a different
immediate usefulness for mathematics compared to his/her affluent counterpart.
Or since African American students face stereotype threat in academic settings
(Cook, Purdie_Vaughns, Garcia & Cohen, 2012), they may evaluate the
usefulness of STEM related courses differently than their White counterparts.
Both are examples of the importance of identity and culture when determining
utility value. Lastly, Wigfield et al. (2004) make the point that utility value
ties to a studentÕs personal goals and views of self. Ethnic racial identity is
connected to how a person views self and the world around him/her (Lee, 2014).
Wigfield et al. (2004) discuss how a person who lives in a collectivist culture may look at usefulness in a way that helps
the community. Racial minority students may also look at usefulness in a
different way, but instead, usefulness may be perceived as something that could
be a protectant in a stereotypically threatening environment (i.e. school).
Attainment
Attainment
value is the Òimportance of doing well on a given taskÓ (Wigfield et al., 2004,
p. 171). Wigfield, et al. (2004) go further to say that attainment value
incorporates identity issues and that tasks are important when people include
them within their own definition of self. Similarly, Steele (1997) asserts that
to sustain academic success, a studentÕs schooling must be part of their
self-definition. Maintaining school as part of your self-definition, however,
can be difficult for a student who faces stereotype threat in their school
environment. Attempting to be productive in an academic
environment that promotes negative stereotypes can lead to disidentification,
which is a Òreconceptualization of the self and of one's values to remove the
domain as a self-identity, as a basis of self-evaluationÓ (Steele, 1997, p.
614). Disidentification is a protective factor that one uses to maintain their
self-concept. Cook, et al. (2012) found that self-concept has an important
impact on student achievement and values when facing stereotype threat.
Therefore, a student that is struggling to identify with a threatening activity
can begin to disidentify with that threatening activity or domain. The
separation that a student experiences allows them to maintain their positive
view of self all while lessening the importance of the activity, which means
that they would be assigning a low attainment value to that activity.
Wigfield et al. (2004)
described that people within a culture Òinternalize the culturally proscribed
identity componentsÓ (p. 189) and will place a high importance on items that
are consistent with their identity groups. Those items could include career,
sports, music, school, etc. This however, could serve to be a complex
phenomenon when an underrepresented student identifies with more than one culture or if the student
identifies with a culture that has a separate value system than that of his/her
school culture. Similar to what was discussed in previous sections, these
factors are important when putting a racial lens on how a student determines
the attainment value of a task.
Intrinsic
ÒIntrinsic value is the enjoyment one gains from doing the taskÓ
(Wigfield et al., 2004, p. 171) and is like interest. The meaning of a goal is
culturally influenced (Ryan & Deci, 2000) so in the case of education, an
underrepresented student could lack interest in specific subject matter if
their culture or immediate community does not endorse it.
When considering intrinsic value with a racial lens, stereotype
threat can play a role. Being in an environment that excessively promotes
negative stereotypes creates an environmental threat (Steele, 1997), and that
can negatively impact a studentÕs sense of belonging over time (Walton &
Cohen, 2007). If a student feels that they do not have autonomy, relatedness,
or competence in a task, then they often lack enjoyment in the task (Ryan &
Deci, 2000). As unsatisfying and threatening experiences compound, students can
associate discrimination, feelings of isolation, and lack of enjoyment to a
given threatening task or domain. Moreover, these negative feelings could
easily become the representation of the activity and create a lack of interest
and perhaps create disdain toward an activity. When the activity is schooling
or school related, then one must consider the long-term effects that have
created the disinterest and not just assume that all students in one
subcultural group are naturally turned off by schooling. Furthermore, one must
consider that the subculture did not, by choice, become a breeding ground for
disliking that activity, but that the dominant culture has influenced the
shaping of the subculture.
After applying a racial
lens to the four value components, it is important to revisit Figure 1. ROC
includes and highlights the psychological state of the student after choosing
to pursue educational goals (strain of costs). The authors of ROC then
emphasize how the perceived costs impact school and environmental factors,
while environmental and school factors are impacting ROC, synchronously. When
racializing the values of EVT itÕs important to use the same cyclical pattern.
This would create a new component within the EVT model, named social psychological impact of choice and
performance, emphasizing the immediate trauma that an underrepresented
student deals with. This new component, within the model, receives an arrow
only from achievement related choices,
and sends one arrow to cultural milieu.
This highlights the circle like pattern of a racial experience and shows that a
racialized experience cannot be shoved into one component (or box) of the EVT
model, but that it is represented throughout the entire theory.
Racially Nuanced Values for Practice & Research
For future studies, I would model the qualitative study that was
done by Chambers et al., (2014) when ROC was developed. By interviewing a group
of underrepresented students, I can use these data to help validate this
reframing of EVT and to build items to place on instruments and surveys when
measuring value. Additionally, I would adapt value questions from previously
validated value scales so that they better fit the experience of the
underrepresented student for future research measurements.
Racializing
the values of EVT is useful for expanding and nuancing a well-used theory of
motivation, but it especially has practical implications. If researchers and
educators can use this reframing to better understand underrepresented student
needs, this could, in turn, help educators identify targets for intervention
efforts in schools. This would be especially effective in urban school
environments where underrepresented students represent most of the population.
Conclusion
When I racialized the values of EVT, I used the
theory of ROC to nuance the model in a way that can change how EVT is used for
underrepresented students. The questions that were always considered when
determining the value assessing process for students were: How does that
student identify? How many identity groups does that student ascribe to? What
is the culture of these identity groups? Do these various cultures have
conflicting value systems? Do these value systems conflict with the values of
the White normed education system? What messages are the school and the
external environment sending to the student because of their subscribed
cultural groups? Finally, what is the mental/emotional impact on the student
when having to process all of these questions and answers prior to placing
value on a task? Moreover, these questions were all inspired by the framework
and assertions of ROC.
EVT is dynamic and can be applied to student behavior across
numerous circumstances. However, the same constructs used to create ROC have
been used to reframe the value types of EVT so that it is theoretically
equipped to address motivation of Black, Brown, and underrepresented students.
During the reframing process of the value types, the common theme was that no
student experience was as simple as changing a few words in a theory to reflect
their racialized experience. Like the chapter by Wigfield, et al. (2004), I
endorsed an emic approach, assuming expectancies and values may have a
different meaning to students from underrepresented backgrounds, which opens up
the use of EVT, and allows EVT to be more ethnically accurate in addressing the
academic motivational needs of students.
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Chris Seals is a doctoral
student in Educational Psychology Research Assistant & Teacher Assistant at
Michigan State University. His research interests include motivational aspects
in learning and achieving, specifically for students of color. Recently, he has
focused on social psychological interventions, based on self-affirmation
theory, particularly studying how the mechanisms of student belongingness and
student view of ability (fixed versus growth) impact studentsÕ achievement.