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<!DOCTYPE ArticleSet PUBLIC "-//NLM//DTD PubMed 2.0//EN" "http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov:80/entrez/query/static/PubMed.dtd">
<ArticleSet>
<Article>
<Journal>
<PublisherName>Science and Education Publishing</PublisherName>
<JournalTitle>American Journal of Educational Research</JournalTitle>
<Issn>2327-6150</Issn>
<Volume>4</Volume>
<Issue>14</Issue>
<PubDate PubStatus="epublish">
<Year>2016</Year>
<Month>8</Month>
<Day>22</Day>
</PubDate>
</Journal>
<ArticleTitle>Change and Stability in Achievement Goals Based on Instructional Tasks of a College Classroom</ArticleTitle>
<FirstPage>999</FirstPage>
<LastPage>1007</LastPage>
<Language>EN</Language>
<AuthorList>
<Author>
<FirstName>Cheon-woo</FirstName>
<LastName>Han</LastName>
<Affiliation>Vice Provost Office for Undergraduate Affairs, University of Illinois at Chicago</Affiliation>
</Author>

</AuthorList>
<ArticleIdList>
<ArticleId IdType="pii">EDUCATION20164143</ArticleId>
<ArticleId IdType="doi">10.12691/education-4-14-3</ArticleId>
</ArticleIdList>
<History>
<PubDate PubStatus="received">
<Year>2016</Year>
<Month>4</Month>
<Day>17</Day>
</PubDate>
<PubDate PubStatus="revised">
<Year>2016</Year>
<Month>7</Month>
<Day>21</Day>
</PubDate>
<PubDate PubStatus="accepted">
<Year>2016</Year>
<Month>8</Month>
<Day>20</Day>
</PubDate>
</History>
<Abstract>Achievement goals play a principal role in enhancing learning gains and adaptive attitudes. Little is known, however, about changes and/or stability in achievement goals over time. This study focused on the research hypothesis that instructional tasks (e.g., exam, in-class quiz, writing a paper, in-class activates) of a course which are focused on competence influence differentially the adoption of college students' achievement goals in a real classroom. A total of 186 college students from an introductory educational psychology course participated in this study. All achievement goals had high stability for each instructional task using a differential continuity analytic approach, while mean-level change analyses showed a considerable decline of each individual goal pursuit. Cluster analysis technique, which is a person-centered approach, suggested changes in cluster memberships between the pre- and post-measure of achievement goals. The results and findings of the current study provide important implications for both instructional design in a classroom and research methodologies used to investigate achievement goals.</Abstract>
</Article>
</ArticleSet>
