Linking Students' Emotions and Academic Achievement: When and Why Emotions Matter.

Few studies include associations of emotions, or of individual differences in emotionality, to academic competence, and there are virtually no empirical data on when or why relations exist (or do not exist). The few studies of emotion and achievement have largely focused on anxiety, but there has been scant theoretical and empirical attention devoted to the treatment of other emotions. It is suggested that considering the moderated and indirect effects of students' emotions on their academic functioning may provide an understanding of whether and under what circumstances emotions are related to achievement. This article briefly reviews findings linking situational and dispositional negative or positive emotions to academic achievement and suggests that researchers can learn much about relations between emotions and achievement by considering the potential moderating role of effortful control, as well as considering the mediating roles that cognitive processes, motivational mechanisms, and classroom relationships play in linking emotions and achievement.

[1]  M. Gollwitzer,et al.  Emotions and Aggressive Behavior , 2013 .

[2]  K. Lemery‐Chalfant,et al.  Kindergartners' Temperament, Classroom Engagement, and Student–teacher Relationship: Moderation by Effortful Control , 2012 .

[3]  J. Liew,et al.  Effortful Control, Executive Functions, and Education: Bringing Self‐Regulatory and Social‐Emotional Competencies to the Table , 2012 .

[4]  G. Band,et al.  In the Mood for Adaptation , 2010, Psychological science.

[5]  Philip A. Gable,et al.  The effect of low versus high approach-motivated positive affect on memory for peripherally versus centrally presented information. , 2010, Emotion.

[6]  K. Lemery‐Chalfant,et al.  Prediction of Kindergartners' Academic Achievement from Their Effortful Control and Emotionality: Evidence for Direct and Moderated Relations. , 2010 .

[7]  Tracy A. Dennis,et al.  Do the associations between exuberance and emotion regulation depend on effortful control? , 2010 .

[8]  Philip A. Gable,et al.  The motivational dimensional model of affect: Implications for breadth of attention, memory, and cognitive categorisation , 2010 .

[9]  Alexandra Main,et al.  The Relations of Temperamental Effortful Control and Anger/Frustration to Chinese Children's Academic Achievement and Social Adjustment: A Longitudinal Study , 2010 .

[10]  Philip A. Gable,et al.  The Blues Broaden, but the Nasty Narrows , 2010, Psychological science.

[11]  B. Hamre,et al.  Teacher-Child Relationships from Kindergarten to Sixth Grade: Early childhood predictors of teacher-perceived conflict and closeness. , 2009, Social development.

[12]  Tracy L. Spinrad,et al.  Longitudinal relations of children's effortful control, impulsivity, and negative emotionality to their externalizing, internalizing, and co-occurring behavior problems. , 2009, Developmental psychology.

[13]  Deborah J. Johnson,et al.  Cultural processes in parenting and youth outcomes: examining a model of racial-ethnic socialization and identity in diverse populations. , 2009, Cultural diversity & ethnic minority psychology.

[14]  M. Reiser,et al.  Positive and negative emotionality: trajectories across six years and relations with social competence. , 2009, Emotion.

[15]  Markus A. Maier,et al.  Achievement Goals and Achievement Emotions: Testing a Model of Their Joint Relations with Academic Performance. , 2009 .

[16]  Tabbye M Chavous,et al.  Racial Identity and Academic Achievement in the Neighborhood Context: A Multilevel Analysis , 2009, Journal of youth and adolescence.

[17]  Kevin Stark,et al.  Beyond Emotion Regulation: Emotion Utilization and Adaptive Functioning. , 2008, Child development perspectives.

[18]  R. Tremblay,et al.  Trajectories of Anxiety During Elementary-school Years and the Prediction of High School Noncompletion , 2008 .

[19]  Philip A. Gable,et al.  Approach-Motivated Positive Affect Reduces Breadth of Attention , 2008, Psychological science.

[20]  Megan M. McClelland,et al.  Touch your toes! Developing a direct measure of behavioral regulation in early childhood , 2008 .

[21]  Laudan B. Jahromi,et al.  Exuberant and inhibited toddlers: Stability of temperament and risk for problem behavior , 2008, Development and Psychopathology.

[22]  M. Reiser,et al.  Prediction of Children's Academic Competence From Their Effortful Control, Relationships, and Classroom Participation. , 2008, Journal of educational psychology.

[23]  M. Botvinick Conflict monitoring and decision making: Reconciling two perspectives on anterior cingulate function , 2007, Cognitive, affective & behavioral neuroscience.

[24]  John A. Rice,et al.  "Just stop thinking about it": effects of emotional disengagement on children's memory for educational material. , 2007, Emotion.

[25]  C. Blair,et al.  Relating effortful control, executive function, and false belief understanding to emerging math and literacy ability in kindergarten. , 2007, Child development.

[26]  Eric M. Anderman,et al.  The relationship between relative levels of motivation and intrapersonal, interpersonal, and academic functioning among older adolescents , 2006 .

[27]  L. Dougherty Children's Emotionality and Social Status: A Meta-analytic Review , 2006 .

[28]  Markus A. Maier,et al.  Achievement goals and discrete achievement emotions : A theoretical model and prospective test , 2006 .

[29]  G. Ladd,et al.  School Readiness: Are There Social Prerequisites? , 2006 .

[30]  Tracy L. Spinrad,et al.  Associations of emotion-related regulation with language skills, emotion knowledge, and academic outcomes. , 2005, New directions for child and adolescent development.

[31]  Reinhard Pekrun,et al.  Beyond test anxiety: Development and validation of the test emotions questionnaire (TEQ) , 2004 .

[32]  Lauren H. Supplee,et al.  Family and child influences on early academic and emotion regulatory behaviors , 2004 .

[33]  Jonathan D. Cohen,et al.  Anterior Cingulate Conflict Monitoring and Adjustments in Control , 2004, Science.

[34]  C. Izard Translating emotion theory and research into preventive interventions. , 2002, Psychological bulletin.

[35]  W. Arsenio,et al.  Emotionality, Emotion Regulation, and School Performance in Middle School Children. , 2002 .

[36]  C. Raver Emotions Matter: Making the Case for the Role of Young Children's Emotional Development for Early School Readiness , 2002 .

[37]  Tyler Whitney,et al.  Asperger Syndrome and the Development of Social Competence , 2002 .

[38]  Mary P. Welsh,et al.  Linkages between Children's Social and Academic Competence: A Longitudinal Analysis. , 2001 .

[39]  Tracy L. Spinrad,et al.  The relations of regulation and emotionality to children's externalizing and internalizing problem behavior. , 2001, Child development.

[40]  B. Fredrickson The role of positive emotions in positive psychology. The broaden-and-build theory of positive emotions. , 2001, The American psychologist.

[41]  B. Hamre,et al.  Early teacher-child relationships and the trajectory of children's school outcomes through eighth grade. , 2001, Child development.

[42]  N. Kalin,et al.  Emotion, plasticity, context, and regulation: perspectives from affective neuroscience. , 2000, Psychological bulletin.

[43]  M. Stein,et al.  Disability and quality of life in social phobia: epidemiologic findings. , 2000, The American journal of psychiatry.

[44]  M. Reiser,et al.  Prediction of elementary school children's externalizing problem behaviors from attentional and behavioral regulation and negative emotionality. , 2000, Child development.

[45]  G. Kochanska,et al.  Effortful control in early childhood: continuity and change, antecedents, and implications for social development. , 2000, Developmental psychology.

[46]  G. Ladd,et al.  Children's social and scholastic lives in kindergarten: related spheres of influence? , 1999, Child development.

[47]  B. Fredrickson What Good Are Positive Emotions? , 1998, Review of general psychology : journal of Division 1, of the American Psychological Association.

[48]  C. L. Rusting,et al.  Personality, mood, and cognitive processing of emotional information: three conceptual frameworks. , 1998, Psychological bulletin.

[49]  S. West,et al.  Temperament as a predictor of symptomatology in children: addressing contamination of measures. , 1998, Child development.

[50]  I. Sigel,et al.  HANDBOOK OF CHILD PSYCHOLOGY , 2006 .

[51]  P. Ekman An argument for basic emotions , 1992 .

[52]  M. Zoccolillo Co-occurrence of conduct disorder and its adult outcomes with depressive and anxiety disorders: a review. , 1992, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.

[53]  Paul Ekman,et al.  Facial Expressions of Emotion: New Findings, New Questions , 1992 .

[54]  Bettina Seipp Anxiety and academic performance: A meta-analysis of findings , 1991 .

[55]  P. Ekman,et al.  Voluntary facial action generates emotion-specific autonomic nervous system activity. , 1990, Psychophysiology.

[56]  N. Frijda,et al.  Relations among emotion, appraisal, and emotional action readiness , 1989 .

[57]  H. Adelman,et al.  Learning Problems, Anger, Perceived Control, and Misbehavior , 1989, Journal of learning disabilities.

[58]  Phoebe C. Ellsworth,et al.  Shades of Joy: Patterns of Appraisal Differentiating Pleasant Emotions , 1988 .

[59]  J. Stainer,et al.  The Emotions , 1922, Nature.

[60]  G. Brody,et al.  Linking parental socialization to interpersonal protective processes, academic self-presentation, and expectations among rural African American youth. , 2009, Cultural diversity & ethnic minority psychology.

[61]  Anne C. Frenzel,et al.  The Control-Value Theory of Achievement Emotions: An Integrative Approach to Emotions in Education , 2007 .

[62]  M. Cox,et al.  School Readiness and the Transition to Kindergarten in the Era of Accountability. , 2007 .

[63]  Elizabeth A. Linnenbrink The Role of Affect in Student Learning. A Multi-Dimensional Approach to Considering the Interaction of Affect, Motivation, and Engagement. , 2007 .

[64]  Roy F. Baumeister,et al.  Angry emotions and aggressive behaviors , 2007 .

[65]  Anne C. Frenzel,et al.  Girls and mathematics —A “hopeless” issue? A control-value approach to gender differences in emotions towards mathematics , 2007 .

[66]  M. Cole,et al.  Mind in society: The development of higher psychological processes. L. S. Vygotsky. , 1978 .

[67]  Elizabeth Harris,et al.  The relation of children's everyday nonsocial peer play behavior to their emotionality, regulation, and social functioning. , 2004, Developmental psychology.

[68]  James A. Russell,et al.  Structure of Self-Reported Current Affect : Integration and Beyond , 2004 .

[69]  K. Scherer,et al.  Handbook of affective sciences. , 2003 .

[70]  C. Blair,et al.  School readiness. Integrating cognition and emotion in a neurobiological conceptualization of children's functioning at school entry. , 2002, The American psychologist.

[71]  J. Belsky,et al.  Testing a core emotion-regulation prediction: does early attentional persistence moderate the effect of infant negative emotionality on later development? , 2001, Child development.

[72]  Lynn E. Alden,et al.  International handbook of social anxiety : concepts, research and interventions relating to the self and shyness , 2001 .

[73]  L. F. Barrett,et al.  Handbook of emotions, 2nd ed. , 2000 .

[74]  Elizabeth A. Linnenbrink,et al.  The role of goals and affect in working memory functioning , 1999 .

[75]  S. Denham Emotional development in young children , 1998 .

[76]  R. Larsen,et al.  Promises and problems with the circumplex model of emotion. , 1992 .

[77]  Richard A. Fabes,et al.  Emotion, regulation, and the development of social competence. , 1992 .

[78]  Kenneth H. Rubin,et al.  Social withdrawal in childhood: Developmental pathways to peer rejection. , 1990 .

[79]  J. Nicholls,et al.  The development of achievement motivation , 1984 .