Abstract

The saying-is-believing effect is an important step for changing students’ attitudes and beliefs in a wise intervention. However, most studies have not closely examined the process of the saying-is-believing effect when individuals are engaged in the activity. Using a qualitative approach, the present study uses an engagement framework to investigate (a) components of engagement in the saying-is-believing effect; and (b) how differently students may engage in a saying-is-believing exercise. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 14 undergraduates in a scholarship program for low-income transfer students from community college. Analysis using inductive and deductive approaches found that students varied on the extent to which they experienced the effectiveness of the saying-is-believing effect through affective, cognitive, and behavioral experiences. The study offers examples of how people can indeed differ in the extent to which they experience the saying-is-believing effect, and the implications for designing more effective interventions. Specifically, students’ positive affective experiences from seeing the larger goal of creating videos may be important components for the saying-is-believing effect to work. Behavioral experiences, such as learning soft skills, academic skills learned indirectly from the intervention, and academic skills learned directly from the intervention were accompanied by both positive affective and cognitive experiences. Findings show the importance of students’ differential engagement in saying-is-believing exercises both for building more effective wise interventions and interpreting heterogeneity in intervention effectiveness.

Highlights

  • A continual mission in the field of education is to keep students motivated and promote positive attitudes in school

  • We qualitatively investigated the ways in which students describe their experience creating YouTube videos related to the saying-is-believing effect to address the following research questions (RQ): RQ1: What components do students believe engage them in a saying-is-believing exercise? RQ2: Are some students more engaged in a saying-isbelieving exercise?

  • Future studies should consider varying the time lapsed after completing the saying-is-believing activity, in order to subsequently test their cognitive and behavioral changes or outcomes. To our knowledge, this is the first study to qualitatively examine the process of the sayingis-believing effect within the education wise intervention literature

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Summary

Introduction

A continual mission in the field of education is to keep students motivated and promote positive attitudes in school. In order to do so, psychologists have leveraged research on using attitudes and beliefs to influence behavior to support students’ achievement of their own educational goals (Ajzen & Fishbein, 2005; Fazio, 1986; Gormezano et al, 1987; Hecht et al, 2021). One rapidly growing relevant area of research within the intersections of social psychology and education is the work on wise interventions. Wise interventions in education aim to alter how people think or feel about themselves or the social situation in a brief, precise, and low-cost way, to increase academic persistence (Walton, 2014; Walton & Wilson, 2018). Instead of having students think that “people like me do not belong here,” they are asked to

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