@article{52807,
  abstract     = {{Many preservice mathematics teachers lose their motivation during their first year at university. This phenomenon has been repeatedly described in recent years but is not yet fully under­stood. Since motivation may relate to different objects such as mathematics or teaching, we aim to qualitatively reconstruct different facets of the central motivational constructs of Situated-Expectancy-Value theory (intrinsic value, attainment value, utility value, cost, and expectancy of success) for preservice mathematics teachers. The analysis of longitudinal group interviews of 14 pre­service higher-secondary mathematic teachers from a German university revealed different objects of motivation (e.g., teaching mathematics, scientific mathematics, procedural mathematics, or proof-based mathematics) in preservice teachers' values and expectancy of success. Furthermore, relations between those values and expectancy of success were identified that played a significant role in preservice teachers’ motivational development over their first semester (e.g., relations of attain­ment value for scientific mathematics and psychological cost). Theoretical and practical implications towards a teaching-specific conceptualization of expectancy of success and values and value interventions are being discussed.}},
  title        = {{{Preservice teachers’ mathematics-related values and expectancy in the transition from school to university}}},
  doi          = {{10.48489/QUADRANTE.31191}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}

