[{"main_file_link":[{"open_access":"1"}],"author":[{"first_name":"Linus","last_name":"Eusterbrock","full_name":"Eusterbrock, Linus"},{"id":"98877","full_name":"Godau, Marc","last_name":"Godau","first_name":"Marc"},{"first_name":"Matthias","full_name":"Haenisch, Matthias","last_name":"Haenisch"},{"last_name":"Krebs","full_name":"Krebs, Matthias","first_name":"Matthias"},{"last_name":"Rolle","full_name":"Rolle, Christian","first_name":"Christian"}],"volume":41,"date_updated":"2025-02-06T10:51:28Z","oa":"1","citation":{"ama":"Eusterbrock L, Godau M, Haenisch M, Krebs M, Rolle C. Von ’inspirierenden Orten’ und ’Safe Places’. Die ästhetische Nutzung von Orten in der Appmusikpraxis. In: Hasselhorn J, Kautny O, Platz F, eds. <i>Musikpädagogik Im Spannungsfeld von Reflexion Und Intervention</i>. Vol 41. Musikpädagogische Forschung. Waxmann; 2021:155–172.","chicago":"Eusterbrock, Linus, Marc Godau, Matthias Haenisch, Matthias Krebs, and Christian Rolle. “Von ’inspirierenden Orten’ Und ’Safe Places’. Die Ästhetische Nutzung von Orten in Der Appmusikpraxis.” In <i>Musikpädagogik Im Spannungsfeld von Reflexion Und Intervention</i>, edited by Johannes Hasselhorn, Oliver Kautny, and Friedrich Platz, 41:155–172. Musikpädagogische Forschung. Münster, New York: Waxmann, 2021.","ieee":"L. Eusterbrock, M. Godau, M. Haenisch, M. Krebs, and C. Rolle, “Von ’inspirierenden Orten’ und ’Safe Places’. Die ästhetische Nutzung von Orten in der Appmusikpraxis,” in <i>Musikpädagogik im Spannungsfeld von Reflexion und Intervention</i>, vol. 41, J. Hasselhorn, O. Kautny, and F. Platz, Eds. Münster, New York: Waxmann, 2021, pp. 155–172.","apa":"Eusterbrock, L., Godau, M., Haenisch, M., Krebs, M., &#38; Rolle, C. (2021). Von ’inspirierenden Orten’ und ’Safe Places’. Die ästhetische Nutzung von Orten in der Appmusikpraxis. In J. Hasselhorn, O. Kautny, &#38; F. Platz (Eds.), <i>Musikpädagogik im Spannungsfeld von Reflexion und Intervention</i> (Vol. 41, pp. 155–172). Waxmann.","mla":"Eusterbrock, Linus, et al. “Von ’inspirierenden Orten’ Und ’Safe Places’. Die Ästhetische Nutzung von Orten in Der Appmusikpraxis.” <i>Musikpädagogik Im Spannungsfeld von Reflexion Und Intervention</i>, edited by Johannes Hasselhorn et al., vol. 41, Waxmann, 2021, pp. 155–172.","short":"L. Eusterbrock, M. Godau, M. Haenisch, M. Krebs, C. Rolle, in: J. Hasselhorn, O. Kautny, F. Platz (Eds.), Musikpädagogik Im Spannungsfeld von Reflexion Und Intervention, Waxmann, Münster, New York, 2021, pp. 155–172.","bibtex":"@inbook{Eusterbrock_Godau_Haenisch_Krebs_Rolle_2021, place={Münster, New York}, series={Musikpädagogische Forschung}, title={Von ’inspirierenden Orten’ und ’Safe Places’. Die ästhetische Nutzung von Orten in der Appmusikpraxis}, volume={41}, booktitle={Musikpädagogik im Spannungsfeld von Reflexion und Intervention}, publisher={Waxmann}, author={Eusterbrock, Linus and Godau, Marc and Haenisch, Matthias and Krebs, Matthias and Rolle, Christian}, editor={Hasselhorn, Johannes and Kautny, Oliver and Platz, Friedrich}, year={2021}, pages={155–172}, collection={Musikpädagogische Forschung} }"},"page":"155–172","intvolume":"        41","place":"Münster, New York","extern":"1","series_title":"Musikpädagogische Forschung","user_id":"99991","department":[{"_id":"131"},{"_id":"36"},{"_id":"129"},{"_id":"540"}],"_id":"57884","status":"public","editor":[{"last_name":"Hasselhorn","full_name":"Hasselhorn, Johannes","first_name":"Johannes"},{"last_name":"Kautny","full_name":"Kautny, Oliver","first_name":"Oliver"},{"last_name":"Platz","full_name":"Platz, Friedrich","first_name":"Friedrich"}],"type":"book_chapter","title":"Von ’inspirierenden Orten’ und ’Safe Places’. Die ästhetische Nutzung von Orten in der Appmusikpraxis","date_created":"2024-12-30T14:42:12Z","publisher":"Waxmann","year":"2021","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"keyword":["Education","Ästhetik","Schul- und Bildungswesen","Informal learning","Informelles Lernen","Musical education","Musikpädagogik","Anwendung","Ästhetische Erfahrung","Grounded Theory","Längsschnittuntersuchung","Learning process","Lernprozess","Longitudinal analysis","Longitudinal study","Mobiles Gerät","Music reading","Musizieren","Erziehung"],"abstract":[{"text":"Although music apps are becoming increasingly popular, there has been little research on informal music practices with apps. This article presents findings of an ongoing study on learning processes and aesthetic experiences with informal appmusic practices. In particular, it discusses the aesthetic practices (Reckwitz, 2008b) of using specific places for making music. In our grounded theory study (Charmaz, 2014) we collected data using interviews, participant observation and videography. As exemplary cases, this article presents two analyses of the use of ‘inspiring places’ and ‘safe places’. The results suggest that perceiving the atmosphere is a fundamental prerequisite for both places. Additionally, the results shed light on aesthetic aspects of mobile music making. (DIPF/Orig.)","lang":"eng"}],"publication":"Musikpädagogik im Spannungsfeld von Reflexion und Intervention"},{"type":"journal_article","publication":"Higher Education","status":"public","abstract":[{"lang":"eng","text":"In Switzerland, every student graduating from grammar school can begin to study at a university. This leads to high dropout rates. Although students’ motivation is considered a strong predictor of performance, the development of motivation during students’ transition from high school to university has rarely been investigated. Additionally, little is known about the relation of motivational aspects with other influences on study performance. The present longitudinal study addresses this research gap and examines the development of economics and management students’ study motivation. It encompasses four waves of data collected throughout the first year, using quantitative online surveys. In total, the sample consists of 820 students. Data is analysed using latent change modelling. Results indicate that students start at a higher level of intrinsic motivation compared to extrinsic motivation. The variability of the starting value of the two constructs is also differing. The analysis also shows a gradual decline in students’ motivation. Above all, the transition from secondary to higher education seems to be a driver for this decline."}],"user_id":"51057","department":[{"_id":"208"},{"_id":"282"}],"_id":"4421","extern":"1","keyword":["Transition to higher education","Motivation","Longitudinal study","Socio-cultural factors","Latent change model","Switzerland"],"issue":"3","publication_status":"published","publication_identifier":{"issn":["0018-1560","1573-174X"]},"citation":{"ama":"Brahm T, Jenert T, Wagner D. The crucial first year: a longitudinal study of students’ motivational development at a Swiss Business School. <i>Higher Education</i>. 2016;73(3):459-478. doi:<a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-016-0095-8\">10.1007/s10734-016-0095-8</a>","ieee":"T. Brahm, T. Jenert, and D. Wagner, “The crucial first year: a longitudinal study of students’ motivational development at a Swiss Business School,” <i>Higher Education</i>, vol. 73, no. 3, pp. 459–478, 2016.","chicago":"Brahm, Taiga, Tobias Jenert, and Dietrich Wagner. “The Crucial First Year: A Longitudinal Study of Students’ Motivational Development at a Swiss Business School.” <i>Higher Education</i> 73, no. 3 (2016): 459–78. <a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-016-0095-8\">https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-016-0095-8</a>.","apa":"Brahm, T., Jenert, T., &#38; Wagner, D. (2016). The crucial first year: a longitudinal study of students’ motivational development at a Swiss Business School. <i>Higher Education</i>, <i>73</i>(3), 459–478. <a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-016-0095-8\">https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-016-0095-8</a>","short":"T. Brahm, T. Jenert, D. Wagner, Higher Education 73 (2016) 459–478.","bibtex":"@article{Brahm_Jenert_Wagner_2016, title={The crucial first year: a longitudinal study of students’ motivational development at a Swiss Business School}, volume={73}, DOI={<a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-016-0095-8\">10.1007/s10734-016-0095-8</a>}, number={3}, journal={Higher Education}, publisher={Springer Nature}, author={Brahm, Taiga and Jenert, Tobias and Wagner, Dietrich}, year={2016}, pages={459–478} }","mla":"Brahm, Taiga, et al. “The Crucial First Year: A Longitudinal Study of Students’ Motivational Development at a Swiss Business School.” <i>Higher Education</i>, vol. 73, no. 3, Springer Nature, 2016, pp. 459–78, doi:<a href=\"https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-016-0095-8\">10.1007/s10734-016-0095-8</a>."},"page":"459-478","intvolume":"        73","year":"2016","author":[{"first_name":"Taiga","full_name":"Brahm, Taiga","last_name":"Brahm"},{"full_name":"Jenert, Tobias","last_name":"Jenert","first_name":"Tobias"},{"first_name":"Dietrich","last_name":"Wagner","full_name":"Wagner, Dietrich"}],"date_created":"2018-09-18T08:58:54Z","volume":73,"publisher":"Springer Nature","date_updated":"2022-01-06T07:01:03Z","doi":"10.1007/s10734-016-0095-8","title":"The crucial first year: a longitudinal study of students’ motivational development at a Swiss Business School"},{"title":"The Value of Self-Service: Long-Term Effects of Technology-Based Self-Service Usage on Customer Retention.","volume":39,"date_created":"2018-11-15T11:36:38Z","author":[{"first_name":"Anne","full_name":"Scherer, Anne","last_name":"Scherer"},{"first_name":"Nancy","full_name":"Wünderlich, Nancy","id":"36392","last_name":"Wünderlich"},{"full_name":"Von Wangenheim, Florian","last_name":"Von Wangenheim","first_name":"Florian"}],"date_updated":"2022-01-06T07:02:36Z","publisher":"MIS RC","intvolume":"        39","page":"177-200","citation":{"short":"A. Scherer, N. Wünderlich, F. Von Wangenheim, MIS Quarterly 39 (2015) 177–200.","mla":"Scherer, Anne, et al. “The Value of Self-Service: Long-Term Effects of Technology-Based Self-Service Usage on Customer Retention.” <i>MIS Quarterly</i>, vol. 39, no. 1, MIS RC, 2015, pp. 177–200.","bibtex":"@article{Scherer_Wünderlich_Von Wangenheim_2015, title={The Value of Self-Service: Long-Term Effects of Technology-Based Self-Service Usage on Customer Retention.}, volume={39}, number={1}, journal={MIS Quarterly}, publisher={MIS RC}, author={Scherer, Anne and Wünderlich, Nancy and Von Wangenheim, Florian}, year={2015}, pages={177–200} }","apa":"Scherer, A., Wünderlich, N., &#38; Von Wangenheim, F. (2015). The Value of Self-Service: Long-Term Effects of Technology-Based Self-Service Usage on Customer Retention. <i>MIS Quarterly</i>, <i>39</i>(1), 177–200.","ama":"Scherer A, Wünderlich N, Von Wangenheim F. The Value of Self-Service: Long-Term Effects of Technology-Based Self-Service Usage on Customer Retention. <i>MIS Quarterly</i>. 2015;39(1):177-200.","chicago":"Scherer, Anne, Nancy Wünderlich, and Florian Von Wangenheim. “The Value of Self-Service: Long-Term Effects of Technology-Based Self-Service Usage on Customer Retention.” <i>MIS Quarterly</i> 39, no. 1 (2015): 177–200.","ieee":"A. Scherer, N. Wünderlich, and F. Von Wangenheim, “The Value of Self-Service: Long-Term Effects of Technology-Based Self-Service Usage on Customer Retention.,” <i>MIS Quarterly</i>, vol. 39, no. 1, pp. 177–200, 2015."},"year":"2015","issue":"1","publication_identifier":{"issn":["0276-7783."]},"publication_status":"published","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"keyword":["customer defection","customer retention","e-service","longitudinal","Self-service","value-in-context"],"article_type":"original","department":[{"_id":"181"}],"user_id":"37741","_id":"5704","status":"public","abstract":[{"lang":"eng","text":"Advancements in information technology have changed the way customers experience a service encounter and their relationship with service providers. Especially technology-based self-service channels have found their way into the 21st century service economy. While research embraces these channels for their cost-efficiency, it has not examined whether a shift from personal to self-service affects customer–firm relationships. Drawing from the service-dominant logic and its central concept of value-in-context, we discuss customers’ value creation in self-service and personal service channels and examine the long-term impact of these channels on customer retention. Using longitudinal customer data, we investigate how the ratio of self-service versus personal service use influences customer defection over time. Our findings suggest that the ratio of self-service to personal service used affects customer defection in a U-shaped manner, with intermediate levels of both self-service and personal service use being associated with the lowest likelihood of defection. We also find that this effect mitigates over time. We conclude that firms should not shift customers toward self-service channels completely, especially not at the beginning of a relationship. Our study underlines the importance of understanding when and how self-service technologies create valuable customer experiences and stresses the notion of actively managing customers’ cocreation of value. "}],"publication":"MIS Quarterly","type":"journal_article"},{"type":"conference","abstract":[{"lang":"eng","text":"The transition from school to university can be overwhelming for some students. While students' motivation is considered a strong predictor of performance, the development of motivation during students' transition from high school to university has rarely been investigated. Additionally, little is known about the relation of motivational aspects with other influences on study performance. The present mixed methods study addresses this research gap and examines the development of economics students' study motivation. The longitudinal mixed-method study included three waves of data collected using quantitative surveys and a series of five interviews conducted with 14 first-year students over eight months. Regarding students' development over time, the quantitative analysis showed a gradual decline in students' motivation. However, in the interviews, certain events during the first year were identified as critical incidents demotivating students. These insights into the development of students' motivation at a business school show that concrete incidents influence students' motivational development; thus, they could be transformed by structural changes."}],"status":"public","_id":"4474","department":[{"_id":"208"},{"_id":"282"}],"user_id":"51057","keyword":["motivation","business school","higher education","latent growth curve model","longitudinal study","mixed methods","interview","students"],"extern":"1","year":"2014","citation":{"chicago":"Brahm, Taiga, and Tobias Jenert. “The Crucial First Year: The Development of Students’ Motivation at a Business School-a Mixed Methods Study,” 2014.","ieee":"T. Brahm and T. Jenert, “The crucial first year: The development of students’ motivation at a Business School-a Mixed Methods Study,” presented at the SIG4 Higher Education &#38; SIG17 Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches to Learning and Instruction Earli SIG Conference 2014, Leuven, 2014.","ama":"Brahm T, Jenert T. The crucial first year: The development of students’ motivation at a Business School-a Mixed Methods Study. In: ; 2014.","apa":"Brahm, T., &#38; Jenert, T. (2014). The crucial first year: The development of students’ motivation at a Business School-a Mixed Methods Study. Presented at the SIG4 Higher Education &#38; SIG17 Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches to Learning and Instruction Earli SIG Conference 2014, Leuven.","short":"T. Brahm, T. Jenert, in: 2014.","bibtex":"@inproceedings{Brahm_Jenert_2014, title={The crucial first year: The development of students’ motivation at a Business School-a Mixed Methods Study}, author={Brahm, Taiga and Jenert, Tobias}, year={2014} }","mla":"Brahm, Taiga, and Tobias Jenert. <i>The Crucial First Year: The Development of Students’ Motivation at a Business School-a Mixed Methods Study</i>. 2014."},"date_updated":"2022-01-06T07:01:06Z","author":[{"first_name":"Taiga","last_name":"Brahm","full_name":"Brahm, Taiga"},{"first_name":"Tobias","id":"71994","full_name":"Jenert, Tobias","orcid":" https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9262-5646","last_name":"Jenert"}],"date_created":"2018-09-19T08:06:46Z","title":"The crucial first year: The development of students' motivation at a Business School-a Mixed Methods Study","conference":{"start_date":"2014-08-20","name":"SIG4 Higher Education & SIG17 Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches to Learning and Instruction Earli SIG Conference 2014","location":"Leuven","end_date":"2014-08-22"}},{"type":"conference","abstract":[{"text":"The aim of this qualitative study is first to investigate the attitude development of students in their initial year at university. College effectiveness research has shown that attitudes towards studying as well as to one's university are key factors influencing student engagement. Up to now, little is known about the processes through which such attitudes develop. Based on the theory of planned behaviour (Ajzen & Fishbein, 1980), the study addresses this research gap in three parts: a) development paths of students' attitudes towards studying and the university; b) the normative behaviour of the fellow students as well as significant persons, c) university-related experiences during the first year influencing students' attitude development. \r\nTo answer these research questions, a series of five interviews was conducted throughout the first year with a total of 13 first-year students at the University of St. Gallen/Switzerland. Data analysis was performed referring to the procedures suggested by Neale (2012) for qualitative longitudinal data. To master the challenge of displaying developments over time, graphical analysis was used to construct a case history (cf. Henderson, Holland et al., 2012) for each individual. Regarding the students' developments over time, the analysis shows the participants' attitudes towards the university became more differentiated over time. A second major result concerns frictions between students' own attitudes and what they perceive to be the dominant normative behaviour. It became obvious that this developmental process is influenced by concrete incidents students experience during the first year and thus, can be shaped by structural changes.","lang":"eng"}],"status":"public","_id":"4477","department":[{"_id":"208"},{"_id":"282"}],"user_id":"51057","keyword":["student attitudes","qualitative research","longitudinal study","student motivation"],"extern":"1","year":"2013","citation":{"ieee":"T. Jenert and T. Brahm, “How Business Students Attitudes towards their University and Studying Develop during the First Year: A Qualitative Longitudinal Study,” presented at the 15th Biennial EARLI Conference, München, 2013.","chicago":"Jenert, Tobias, and Taiga Brahm. “How Business Students Attitudes towards Their University and Studying Develop during the First Year: A Qualitative Longitudinal Study.” EARLI European Association for Research on Learning and Instruction, 2013.","ama":"Jenert T, Brahm T. How Business Students Attitudes towards their University and Studying Develop during the First Year: A Qualitative Longitudinal Study. In: EARLI European Association for Research on Learning and Instruction; 2013.","short":"T. Jenert, T. Brahm, in: EARLI European Association for Research on Learning and Instruction, 2013.","mla":"Jenert, Tobias, and Taiga Brahm. <i>How Business Students Attitudes towards Their University and Studying Develop during the First Year: A Qualitative Longitudinal Study</i>. EARLI European Association for Research on Learning and Instruction, 2013.","bibtex":"@inproceedings{Jenert_Brahm_2013, title={How Business Students Attitudes towards their University and Studying Develop during the First Year: A Qualitative Longitudinal Study}, publisher={EARLI European Association for Research on Learning and Instruction}, author={Jenert, Tobias and Brahm, Taiga}, year={2013} }","apa":"Jenert, T., &#38; Brahm, T. (2013). How Business Students Attitudes towards their University and Studying Develop during the First Year: A Qualitative Longitudinal Study. Presented at the 15th Biennial EARLI Conference, München: EARLI European Association for Research on Learning and Instruction."},"publisher":"EARLI European Association for Research on Learning and Instruction","date_updated":"2022-01-06T07:01:06Z","author":[{"full_name":"Jenert, Tobias","id":"71994","orcid":" https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9262-5646","last_name":"Jenert","first_name":"Tobias"},{"first_name":"Taiga","last_name":"Brahm","full_name":"Brahm, Taiga"}],"date_created":"2018-09-19T08:19:05Z","title":"How Business Students Attitudes towards their University and Studying Develop during the First Year: A Qualitative Longitudinal Study","conference":{"name":"15th Biennial EARLI Conference","start_date":"2013-08-27","end_date":"2013-08-31","location":"München"}},{"citation":{"short":"T. Brahm, T. Jenert, in: EARLI European Association for Research on Learning and Instruction, 2013.","bibtex":"@inproceedings{Brahm_Jenert_2013, title={A latent growth curve analysis of Business students’ intrinsic and extrinsic motivation}, publisher={EARLI European Association for Research on Learning and Instruction}, author={Brahm, Taiga and Jenert, Tobias}, year={2013} }","mla":"Brahm, Taiga, and Tobias Jenert. <i>A Latent Growth Curve Analysis of Business Students’ Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation</i>. EARLI European Association for Research on Learning and Instruction, 2013.","apa":"Brahm, T., &#38; Jenert, T. (2013). A latent growth curve analysis of Business students’ intrinsic and extrinsic motivation. Presented at the 15th Biennial EARLI Conference, München: EARLI European Association for Research on Learning and Instruction.","ama":"Brahm T, Jenert T. A latent growth curve analysis of Business students’ intrinsic and extrinsic motivation. In: EARLI European Association for Research on Learning and Instruction; 2013.","ieee":"T. Brahm and T. Jenert, “A latent growth curve analysis of Business students’ intrinsic and extrinsic motivation,” presented at the 15th Biennial EARLI Conference, München, 2013.","chicago":"Brahm, Taiga, and Tobias Jenert. “A Latent Growth Curve Analysis of Business Students’ Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation.” EARLI European Association for Research on Learning and Instruction, 2013."},"year":"2013","conference":{"name":"15th Biennial EARLI Conference","start_date":"2013-08-27","end_date":"2013-08-31","location":"München"},"title":"A latent growth curve analysis of Business students' intrinsic and extrinsic motivation","author":[{"full_name":"Brahm, Taiga","last_name":"Brahm","first_name":"Taiga"},{"first_name":"Tobias","orcid":" https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9262-5646","last_name":"Jenert","id":"71994","full_name":"Jenert, Tobias"}],"date_created":"2018-09-19T08:27:05Z","date_updated":"2022-01-06T07:01:06Z","publisher":"EARLI European Association for Research on Learning and Instruction","status":"public","abstract":[{"lang":"eng","text":"The proposed paper aims to investigate the longitudinal development of students' motivation over the first year of their studies at a business school by using latent growth curve modeling. The study tackles the following core research questions: How do first-year university students' intrinsic and extrinsic vary over time? Which (motivational) factors are related to students' motivational development? Although motivational dispositions have been analyzed extensively in previous studies, their longitudinal development has hitherto not been examined in the higher education context.\r\n\r\nThis longitudinal study is conducted at the University of St. Gallen in Switzerland. The current sample includes 280 first-year students who have been surveyed three times and who are representative of the first-year student population.\r\n\r\nDescriptive results show that prior to their studies, students were motivated most by intrinsic factors, however, extrinsic motivation was also quite high. Employing latent growth curve modeling, it could be shown that both intrinsic and extrinsic motivation decline significantly over the course of the first year (8 months).\r\n\r\nThe study contributes to motivation theory by providing further insights into the development of academic motivation over time. Latent growth curve modeling as a method can be well used for longitudinal data analysis, thus, excluding measurement error from longitudinal data. Furthermore, the study supports educational developers by determining factors influencing students' motivational development."}],"type":"conference","extern":"1","keyword":["motivation","intrinsic motivation","extrinsic motivation","latent growth curve modeling","longitudinal data analysis","ASEQ","higher education","studying"],"department":[{"_id":"208"},{"_id":"282"}],"user_id":"51057","_id":"4480"}]
