Abstract
This study examines the effects of university studentsâ types of self-determination and academic emotions on their learning community participant competence. The subjects were 234 early-childhood preservice teachers attending a university or college in the Kyonggi and Incheon area of Korea. The first metric created by Bak et al. (2005) measured early-childhood preservice teachersâ types of self-determination. The second metric developed by Kim & Kim (2016) measured their levels of learning community participant competence. The thirds metric, originally developed by Kim (2012) and So (2010), was modified by Chung (2015) to measure the academic emotions of subjects. The test results were analyzed by correlation and multi-regression techniques using SPSS 21 for Windows. The findings were as follows. First, there were significant relationships between the subjectsâ types of self-determination and the levels of learning community participant competence. Second, there were significant relationships between the subjectsâ academic positive and negative emotions and the levels of learning community participant competence. Third, the subjectsâ levels of learning community participant competence were perceived differently according to their academic emotions. Based on these results, implications pertaining to academic emotions on learning community participant competence are suggested. Keywords: self-determination motivation, academic emotions, learning community participant competence, students majoring in early-childhood education
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