Prospective elementary teachers’ (
N = 148) motivation to participate in whole-class discussions during mathematics content courses for teachers, as expressed
in their own words on an open-ended questionnaire, were studied. Results indicated that prospective teachers were motivated
by positive utility values for participating (to achieve a short-term goal of learning mathematics or a long-term goal of
becoming a teacher), to demonstrate competence (to achieve performance-approach goals), or to help others (to achieve social
goals). Negative utility values for participating were expressed by those who preferred to learn through actively listening.
Five motivational profiles, as composed of interactions among motivational values, beliefs, goals and self-reported participation
practices, were prevalent in this sample. Self-reported variations among participants’ utility values and participation practices
suggested that prospective teachers engaged differentially in opportunities to learn to communicate mathematically. Results
provide pedagogical learner knowledge for mathematics teacher educators.
Keywords Mathematics - Motivation - Preservice teachers - Prospective teachers - Performance goals - Social goals - Self-efficacy - Task value - Whole-class discussion - Discourse