Abstract
The purposes of this study were twofold: to examine the relationship of two types of motivational belief to undergraduates’ self-reported musical practice behavior, and to evaluate the adaptation of measures of academic motivation to the musical domain. Measures of a tripartite goal orientation and implicit theory of musical ability were completed by 344 instrumental music majors at American universities. Factor analysis showed the adapted items reproduced the subscales of the original measures, and that these subscales were reliable (α > .74). Entity theories of musical ability were positively correlated with ego-approach (r = .16, p < .01) and ego-avoid goals (r = .23, p < .001), and negatively related to task goals (r = -.14, p <.01). A researcher-designed practice strategy survey found task orientation positively related to frequency of six of seven practice factors; ego-approach and ego-avoid goals negatively related to one strategy type.
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