Document Type

Article

Date

1984

Keywords

sex-linked traits

Language

English

Disciplines

Social and Behavioral Sciences

Description/Abstract

Recent studies have demonstrated that positive verbal feedback enhances males' intrinsic motivation for a task, while decreasing that of females. This result has been attributed to differential socialization forces which make the controlling aspects of rewards more salient for females as opposed to males, for whom the informational aspects are prepotent. A weakness in this con­ clusion stems from the use of a masculine sex-linked task in prior experiments, producing a result which may be due to gender congruence/in­ congruence rather than to socialization differences. Two laboratory ex­periments were performed to examine the e feels of verbal praise on intrin­sic motivation, controlling for sex-typing of the experimental activity. Ex­periment 1 found that verbal praise increased females' and males' intrinsic motivation on both a feminine and masculine task, and intrinsic motiva­tion was higher for sex-appropriate than sex-inappropriate tasks. The sexes did not show a differential pattern o response to praise. In Experiment 2, verbal praise also enhanced sex-role traditional females' intrinsic motivation on the same activity used in prior research. These results suggest that socialization content has changed sufficiently to make concerns about com­ petence and self-determination equally salient for females and males.

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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