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Motivational appetites, cultural orientations and accounting students' learning

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 18:27 authored by Grace Xuecong Ji, Grace Wong, Dennis Taylor, Dessalegn MihretDessalegn Mihret
We examine the effect of cognitive and cultural factors on student learning in undergraduate accounting courses. Using survey data relating to mainstream course activities and assessment tasks, we find that the ‘motivational appetite’ concepts of liking and wanting, along with ‘cultural orientation’ of vertical-collectivism and horizontal-individualism exhibit a significant joint effect on student learning. Motivational appetite has a statistically significant main effect while cultural orientation exhibits only a joint effect. This result suggests that while cognitive processes transcend cultural influence, the latter affects students' learning through their interaction with cognitive factors. Implications for accounting course design are discussed.

History

Journal

Accounting and Finance

Volume

62

Issue

2

Start page

2283

End page

2312

Total pages

30

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Place published

Australia

Language

English

Copyright

© 2021 Accounting and Finance Association of Australia and New Zealand

Former Identifier

2006112002

Esploro creation date

2022-08-14

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