Pekrun, Reinhard and Sakaki, Michiko and Murayama, Kou and Frenzel, Anne C and Goetz, Thomas and Marsh, Herbert W and Lichtenfeld, Stephanie and Wünsch, Miriam (2025) Parents’ Academic Expectations and Aspirations Predict Students’ Achievement Emotions. Journal of Educational Psychology. (In Press)
Pekrun, Reinhard and Sakaki, Michiko and Murayama, Kou and Frenzel, Anne C and Goetz, Thomas and Marsh, Herbert W and Lichtenfeld, Stephanie and Wünsch, Miriam (2025) Parents’ Academic Expectations and Aspirations Predict Students’ Achievement Emotions. Journal of Educational Psychology. (In Press)
Pekrun, Reinhard and Sakaki, Michiko and Murayama, Kou and Frenzel, Anne C and Goetz, Thomas and Marsh, Herbert W and Lichtenfeld, Stephanie and Wünsch, Miriam (2025) Parents’ Academic Expectations and Aspirations Predict Students’ Achievement Emotions. Journal of Educational Psychology. (In Press)
Abstract
Parental expectations (i.e., predictions) and aspirations (i.e., wishes and desires) for their children’s academic attainment have been considered important in children’s academic success. The present study tested the hypothesis that parents’ expectations and aspirations influence students’ positive and negative achievement emotions. We applied contemporaneous- and lagged- predictive effects models to five annual waves of data from secondary school students in Germany on achievement emotions in mathematics. Results indicated that when parents have higher expectations, students experience more positive emotions and less negative emotions (except for boredom) during the same year. In contrast, higher parents’ expectations predicted higher levels of negative emotions, particularly anxiety, in the subsequent year. We also found that parents’ aspirations are only weakly linked to achievement emotions, once parents’ expectations are controlled for. However, when parents’ aspirations exceeded their own expectations, this over-aspiration was predictive of greater anxiety and lower levels of pride in the same year. These findings highlight the complex relations between parental expectations and achievement emotions that differently manifest over time. Our results are also consistent with recent notions that parents’ unrealistically high aspirations may be maladaptive for students.
Item Type: | Article |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | expectation, aspiration, expectancy-value theory, control-value theory, family, parents, achievement emotions |
Divisions: | Faculty of Science and Health Faculty of Science and Health > Psychology, Department of |
SWORD Depositor: | Unnamed user with email elements@essex.ac.uk |
Depositing User: | Unnamed user with email elements@essex.ac.uk |
Date Deposited: | 31 Mar 2025 11:08 |
Last Modified: | 31 Mar 2025 11:10 |
URI: | http://repository.essex.ac.uk/id/eprint/40605 |
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Filename: Sakaki et al. J Ed Psych 2025 Parental Aspirations and Expectations Predict Students' Emotions.pdf
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