Starting tests with easy versus difficult tasks: Effects on appraisals and emotions

Journal of Experimental Education

journal article
original research
Authors
Affiliations

Maik Bieleke

Department of Developmental & Educational Psychology, Faculty of Psychology, University of Vienna, Austria

Thomas Goetz

Department of Developmental and Educational Psychology, Faculty of Psychology, University of Vienna, Austria

Maike Krannich

Institute of Education, University of Zurich, Switzerland

Anna-Lena Roos

Institute for Research and Development of Collaborative Processes, School of Applied Psychology, University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland, Switzerland

Takuya Yanagida

Department of Developmental and Educational Psychology, Faculty of Psychology, University of Vienna, Austria

Published

2023

Doi
Abstract

Tests in educational contexts often start with easy tasks, assuming that this fosters positive experiences—a sense of control, higher valuing of the test, and more positive and less negative emotions. Although intuitive and widespread, this assumption lacks an empirical basis and a theoretical framework. We conducted a field experiment and randomly assigned 208 students to an easy-to-difficult or a difficult-to-easy condition in a mathematics test. Perceived challenge was measured along with control appraisals, value appraisals, and emotions (enjoyment, pride, anxiety, anger, boredom). While students starting with easy tasks felt less challenged than students starting with difficult tasks in Part 1, no differences emerged regarding control and value appraisals and emotions. In Part 2, students who had started with easy tasks proceeded to difficult tasks and reported a higher level of challenge, less value and control, and less positive and more negative emotions than students who proceeded from difficult-to-easy tasks. Control and value appraisals mediated the differences between the two conditions, especially regarding positive emotions. These results cast doubt on the preference for easy-to-difficult over difficult-to-easy task orders, revealing their potential for causing adverse experiences at the end of the test (e.g., reflecting contrast effects).

Keywords

achievement emotions, task difficulty, task order, control-value theory, perceived challenge, cognitive appraisals