The Irony of Accountability: How a Performance-Inducing Policy Reduces Motivation to Perform

Although sociological and organizational studies have focused on the influence of quantification on behavior, the author focuses on quantification’s increasingly important consequences on well-being and motivation. Using the case of U.S. education, which has long relied on accountability policies, t...

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Main Author: Trinidad, Jose Eos R
Format: text
Published: Archīum Ateneo 2023
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/is-faculty-pubs/50
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/is-faculty-pubs/article/1049/viewcontent/trinidad_2023_the_irony_of_accountability_how_a_performance_inducing_policy_reduces_motivation_to_perform.pdf
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.is-faculty-pubs-10492024-03-11T07:35:49Z The Irony of Accountability: How a Performance-Inducing Policy Reduces Motivation to Perform Trinidad, Jose Eos R Although sociological and organizational studies have focused on the influence of quantification on behavior, the author focuses on quantification’s increasingly important consequences on well-being and motivation. Using the case of U.S. education, which has long relied on accountability policies, the author finds that attendance at schools with high-stakes accountability predicted lower student self-efficacy, that is, decreased task motivation and resilience as well as increased fear of failure—salient for low-income, urban, and public schools. These associations, however, did not spill over to social and life satisfaction dimensions of well-being. Taken together, these findings suggest the irony of accountability, where data used to induce performance may unintentionally reduce people’s motivation to perform, particularly consequential in disadvantaged contexts. This article is an attempt to contribute to a broader theorization of quantification, affecting not only external behaviors and organizational structures but also internal personal dispositions. Finally, the article provides implications for the study of well-being, organizations, and education policy. 2023-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://archium.ateneo.edu/is-faculty-pubs/50 https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/is-faculty-pubs/article/1049/viewcontent/trinidad_2023_the_irony_of_accountability_how_a_performance_inducing_policy_reduces_motivation_to_perform.pdf Interdisciplinary Studies Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo accountability education organizations quantification well-being Education Educational Administration and Supervision
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic accountability
education
organizations
quantification
well-being
Education
Educational Administration and Supervision
spellingShingle accountability
education
organizations
quantification
well-being
Education
Educational Administration and Supervision
Trinidad, Jose Eos R
The Irony of Accountability: How a Performance-Inducing Policy Reduces Motivation to Perform
description Although sociological and organizational studies have focused on the influence of quantification on behavior, the author focuses on quantification’s increasingly important consequences on well-being and motivation. Using the case of U.S. education, which has long relied on accountability policies, the author finds that attendance at schools with high-stakes accountability predicted lower student self-efficacy, that is, decreased task motivation and resilience as well as increased fear of failure—salient for low-income, urban, and public schools. These associations, however, did not spill over to social and life satisfaction dimensions of well-being. Taken together, these findings suggest the irony of accountability, where data used to induce performance may unintentionally reduce people’s motivation to perform, particularly consequential in disadvantaged contexts. This article is an attempt to contribute to a broader theorization of quantification, affecting not only external behaviors and organizational structures but also internal personal dispositions. Finally, the article provides implications for the study of well-being, organizations, and education policy.
format text
author Trinidad, Jose Eos R
author_facet Trinidad, Jose Eos R
author_sort Trinidad, Jose Eos R
title The Irony of Accountability: How a Performance-Inducing Policy Reduces Motivation to Perform
title_short The Irony of Accountability: How a Performance-Inducing Policy Reduces Motivation to Perform
title_full The Irony of Accountability: How a Performance-Inducing Policy Reduces Motivation to Perform
title_fullStr The Irony of Accountability: How a Performance-Inducing Policy Reduces Motivation to Perform
title_full_unstemmed The Irony of Accountability: How a Performance-Inducing Policy Reduces Motivation to Perform
title_sort irony of accountability: how a performance-inducing policy reduces motivation to perform
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2023
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/is-faculty-pubs/50
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/is-faculty-pubs/article/1049/viewcontent/trinidad_2023_the_irony_of_accountability_how_a_performance_inducing_policy_reduces_motivation_to_perform.pdf
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