Abstract

This study investigated the relationship between a large-scale and high-stakes English test and test takers’ learning behavior. Specifically, it explored whether and how the National Matriculation English Test (NMET) influenced test takers’ extracurricular English learning activities under the Chinese Mainland educational context. Based on Bandura’s triadic reciprocal determinism theory, this study proposed a distal mediation model and employed covariance-based Structural Equation Modeling to test the model. The data were collected via a cross-sectional survey with 470 test takers. The results showed that test takers’ perceptions of the examination exerted direct and indirect effects on their extracurricular English learning activities, and that test takers’ perceived self-efficacy for self-regulated learning and academic achievement were two important factors mediating the relationship between their perceptions of the test and extracurricular learning. Furthermore, test takers’ perceptions of the exam-approaching have diverse moderating effects on different mediation effects. This study suggests that introducing the triadic reciprocal determinism theory helps understand how an examination influences learning. It also highlights the role of test takers’ perceptions of an examination and their perceived self-efficacy in predicting a test’s impact on learning.

Highlights

  • This study was conducted under the Chinese Mainland educational background, with a particular focus on Gaokao—the college entrance examination for the entire country

  • Conceptual model and research questions Based on the triadic reciprocal determinism (TRD) theory and related literature, this study proposes that Test takers’ perceptions of the NMET (TPN) influences test takers’ perceived selfefficacy for self-regulated learning (PSE-SRL) and Perceived self-efficacy for academic achievement (PSE-AA), which in turn affect their takers’ extracurricular English learning activities (TEELA)

  • Data examination To ensure the quality of confirmatory factor analysis (CFA), outliers and distributional assumptions were examined first (Jackson, Gillaspy Jr., & Purc-Stephenson, 2009)

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Summary

Introduction

This study was conducted under the Chinese Mainland educational background, with a particular focus on Gaokao—the college entrance examination for the entire country. The number of test takers has been increasing in recent years, which reached 10,710,000 in 2020, an increase of 400,000 over (2021) 11:5 last year (Ministry of Education of the People’s Republic of China, 2020). The NMET is designed to help universities select qualified students and to guide teaching and learning in senior high schools (Ministry of Education of the People’s Republic of China, 2017). In this context, the impact of the NMET on teaching and learning deserves scrutiny. This study aims to investigate the relationship between the NMET and test takers’ learning, their extracurricular English learning

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