Article
Corresponding author:
Moonjoo Seog, The Gyeongin National University of Education, San 59–12, Gyesan-Dong, Gyeyang-gu, Incheon,
407–753, Korea.
[email: seogmoon@ginue.ac.kr]
Students’ motivation to study
music: The South Korean context
Moonjoo Seog
The Gyeongin National University of Education, South Korea
Karin S. Hendricks
The University of Illinois, USA
Patricia A. González-Moreno
Autonomous University of Chihuahua, Mexico
Abstract
As part of an international mapping exercise to investigate students’ motivation to study music as
compared to other school subjects, this study examined South Korean students’ perceptions of subject
value, competence and task difficulty, based on the expectancy-value theoretical framework. A sample
of 2671 students was drawn from 11 schools (grades 5–12). The results suggest a decline across school
levels in students’ perceptions of the value of music, and an increase across school levels in perceptions
of task difficulty and parental expectations of effort in test-driven school subjects (i.e., mathematics,
Korean, science). These trends among South Korean student motivational profiles may demonstrate the
impact of high-stakes college entrance examinations. Students reported high parental expectations for
student success in rigorous academic subjects, which might have negatively influenced students’ values
towards non-tested subjects such as music, art and physical education (P.E.). However, the high ranking
of interest in music as a subject, along with relatively stable reported interest in music over time, suggests
that South Korean students have a notable interest in music learning, but it is likely that the emphasis on
examinations in South Korea may minimize the potential for exploration or expansion of this interest.
Keywords
competence beliefs, cross-cultural comparisons, expectancy-value theory, motivation, music education,
school subjects, self-beliefs, task difficulty, testing, values
The context for this article
This article reports data drawn from an international mapping exercise that involved eight
different countries (Brazil, China, Finland, Hong Kong, Israel, Korea, Mexico and the USA),
Research Studies in Music Education
33(1) 89–104
© The Author(s) 2011
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DOI: 10.1177/1321103X11400514
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