Goal Length (Short or Long Term) Interacts with Goal Scheduling Strategy (Clock Time or Event Time) for Optimal Achievement

Author:

Nagamine Masato1ORCID,Tang Li2,Miwa Shuhei3,Kainuma Ryo4,Toyama Miki5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, School of Psychology, Tokai-Gakuen University, Nagoya, Japan

2. Faculty of Applied Psychology, Tokyo Seitoku University, Kita-ku, Japan

3. Faculty of Education, Shinshu University, Nagano, Japan

4. Faculty of Education, Department of School Education, Matsumoto University, Matsumoto, Japan

5. Faculty of Human Sciences, University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Japan

Abstract

There are two strategies for scheduling personal goals: (i) clock-time, based on time passage; and (ii) event-time, based on the progress made. Neither strategy is always superior to the other; rather it is necessary to consider the environment and other conditions such as whether the goal is long or short term. We focused on goal lengthas an important factor for determining the best scheduling strategy, hypothesizing that clock-time and event-time strategies would differentially activate higher performance for long-term and short-term goals, respectively. Thus, we conducted a two-part laboratory experiment (Part 1: n = 63, Part 2: n = 86 ) in which we manipulated both goal length and scheduling strategy. Subsequently, we examined the effects of each combination of goal length and scheduling strategy on task performance (i.e., completion of a mathematical problem). Although our two studies were designed identically in most respects, they differed in the number of task problems, task time limits, and question content. Our data supported our hypothesis that clock-time scheduling was optimal for long-term goals while event-time scheduling was optimal for short-term goals.

Funder

the Center for Research on Educational Testing

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sensory Systems,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology

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