Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/135457
Title: Does motivation lead to academic success, or conversely? Reciprocal relations between autonomous and controlled motivation, and mathematics achievement
Authors: Santana Monagas, Elisa 
Núñez Regueiro, Fernando
Núñez Alonso, Juan Luis 
UNESCO Clasification: 710203 Motivación
5802 Organización y planificación de la educación
Keywords: Academic achievement
Cross-lagged panel model
Longitudinal study
Mathematics
Motivation, et al
Issue Date: 2025
Project: Empoderando A Los Estudiantes Durante Retos Educativos: El Rol de la Empatía Docente 
Journal: British Journal of Educational Psychology 
Abstract: Background While it's clear that autonomous motivation significantly boosts academic success, there are conflicting findings regarding the opposite relation. Besides, the reciprocal relations among controlled motivation and achievement present mixed results. Adequately distinguishing between variations among individuals and within individuals results key to acknowledge such relations. Aim This longitudinal study examines the reciprocal relations between controlled and autonomous forms of motivation and academic achievement using the RI-CLPM methodology. Sample Participants were 1042 high school students (M = 16 years, 52% male adolescents) from 16 different high schools in urban and rural areas. Methods A random intercept cross-lagged panel model (RI-CLPM) was tested to estimate whether students' autonomous and controlled motivation predicted achievement and/or vice versa. Independent models were estimated for the two types of motivation. Results Overall, the RI-CLPM results indicated a unidirectional relationship between autonomous motivation and achievement. As for controlled motivation, the results of RI-CLPM models showed no reciprocal relationship between this type of motivation and achievement. Conclusions These results underline the importance of taking within- and between-person processes into account when analysing reciprocal relations and provide crucial insights for enhancing student motivation and achievement in diverse educational contexts.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/135457
ISSN: 0007-0998
DOI: 10.1111/bjep.12736
Source: British Journal of Educational Psychology [0007-0998], 00, 1–17 (2025)
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