The Generalized
Internal/External Frame of Reference Model: An Extension
to Dimensional Comparison Theory
Jens Möllera, Hanno Müller-Kalthoffa, Friederike
Helma,
Nicole Nagya,
Herb W. Marshb
aKiel
University, Germany
bAustralian
Catholic University, King Saud University
Article received 6 May /
revised 24 July /
accepted 3 November / available online 20 January
Abstract
The
dimensional comparison theory (DCT) focuses on the effects
of internal, dimensional comparisons (e.g., “How good am I
in math compared to English?”) on academic self-concepts
with widespread consequences for students’ self-evaluation,
motivation, and behavioral choices. DCT is based on the
internal/external frame of reference model (I/E model) which
integrates dimensional and external, social comparisons
(e.g., “How good am I in math compared to my classmates?”).
This article presents an extension, the generalized I/E
model, which describes effects of dimensional and social
comparisons in various areas. Firstly, it proposes that such
comparisons are carried out not only within the academic
area but also within other areas. Secondly, it proposes
effects of social and dimensional comparison for other
variables besides self-concepts, i.e. for motivational
constructs, learning behaviors, or personality
characteristics. The present article closes with an
examination and discussion of the contributions of the DCT
by applying standards of good theories to it.
Keywords: dimensional comparison; social comparison;
self-concept; domain-specificity
1. Introduction to the dimensional comparison
theory and the I/E model
This paper
deals with a recently developed theory in the field of
educational psychology, the dimensional comparison theory
(DCT; Möller & Marsh, 2013). First we will present the
central ideas of the DCT and the empirical support for its
assumptions with regard to the antecedents of dimensional
comparisons and the psychological processes carried out while
dimensionally comparing aspects of different domains. Then we
will present a recent extension derived from the DCT, the
generalized internal/external frame of reference model (GI/E
model). Whereas the internal/external frame of reference model
(I/E model; Marsh, 1986) deals with the relations between math
and verbal achievements and self-concepts and proposes
positive effects from math and verbal achievements to
corresponding self-concepts and negative effects on
non-corresponding self-concepts, its generalization allows the
application of the relations and effects described therein to
other domains as well. The DCT and the GI/E model both are
presented with reference to their motivational implications.
In the discussion, DCT’s gains with regard to the criteria of
good theories developed by Van Lange (2013) will be
summarized.
1.1 The
dimensional comparison theory
Like social
comparison theory (Festinger, 1954) or the temporal comparison
theory (Albert, 1977), the dimensional comparison theory
(Möller & Marsh, 2013) details the cognitive process of
evaluating a certain target by comparing it to a certain
standard. This cognitive process comprises four stages: The
selection of a certain target for evaluation, the selection of
a certain standard, the comparison of the target with the
standard, and finally the evaluation of the target (Biernat
& Eidelman, 2007; Mussweiler, 2003). Whereas social
comparisons use information on others as the standard
(Festinger, 1954), and temporal comparisons use prior
information on oneself as the standard (Albert, 1977),
dimensional comparisons use information on other attributes of
the same person as a standard (Möller & Köller, 2001a, b).
More precisely, dimensional comparisons (like temporal
comparisons) are intra-individual comparisons, for example
comparing one’s own mathematical achievement with one’s own
verbal achievement affecting both mathematical and verbal
self-evaluations.
In the DCT,
dimensional comparisons are defined as taking place when
people compare their achievement in one domain (the target
domain) with their achievement in another domain (the standard
domain). Most of the research on DCT is quantitative in nature
and data come from field studies. However, there are some
experimental studies clearly demonstrating effects of
dimensional comparisons on self-concepts. In Möller and Köller
(2001a) as well as in Pohlmann and Möller (2009), participants
received dimensional comparison information indicating that
their performance on the domain A is ranked worse (better)
than their performance on the domain B. Participants felt
better about their performance in their better-off domain and
worse in their worse-off domain, controlled for the presence
of social comparison information (see also Strickhouser &
Zell, 2015). Research on dimensional comparison has also shown
that these comparisons happen in everyday life situations. For
example, in a diary study Möller and Husemann (2006) examined
spontaneous dimensional comparisons using qualitative data.
Their participants were told to note and describe any
dimensional comparison that came to their mind during a period
of 14 days. University students (Study 1) and high school
students (Study 2) recorded an average of more than six
dimensional comparisons during the two weeks, clearly
supporting the assumption that dimensional comparisons occur
in everyday life. Students were asked to mark which domain
served as target and which domain served as the comparison
standard. Results showed that academic matters were most
commonly used as target domains (i.e., “We were given our
school reports and I compared my grade in religion with my
grade in mathematics”). Personal relationships with friends,
partners, and family as well as the general well-being,
physical appearance, and personality characteristics were also
used as targets (“Although I am not that thin, I am not
touchy”), yet less frequently. Additionally, target and
standard often belonged to the same domain. It was also shown
that people often carry out dimensional comparisons when they
are motivated to enhance themselves or to improve their mood.
Particularly in situations of failure, upward dimensional
comparisons with a better-off standard (Möller & Husemann,
2006) serve compensational needs: When I fail at math, it is
more pleasurable to concentrate on my verbal abilities. If
self-enhancement is the major motivation for dimensional
comparison, it is beneficial to use a better-off domain as a
comparison standard. Such an upward comparison often leads to
a higher self-esteem and a more positive mood state in the
better-off domain (despite some costs in self-concepts in the
worse-off domain). The gains in the better-off domain
following downward dimensional comparison (from this
perspective) should be stronger than the losses in the
worse-off domain following upward dimensional comparison (from
this perspective): The net effect of dimensional comparison on
self-evaluations empirically seems to be slightly positive
(Pohlmann & Möller, 2009).
In the
diary study by Möller and Husemann (2006), upward dimensional
comparisons were more frequent than downward comparisons. In
Study 1, the majority of dimensional comparisons were upward
(70.5%). Participants reported 20.9 % downward comparisons and
8.7% horizontal comparisons. In Study 2, 52.3% of all
comparisons were upward, 34.9% downward, and 12.8% horizontal.
However, the need for self-enhancement is not the only
motivation for dimensional comparisons. Following Möller,
Helm, Müller-Kalthoff, Nagy, & Marsh (2015), motivations
for domain-specific self-evaluation and for self-improvement
may also lead to dimensional comparisons. For example, someone
trying to self-evaluate how verbally talented he or she is may
choose his/her math ability as a comparison standard even if
choosing math as a (worse-off) standard may not be beneficial
to the actual self. Dickhäuser, Reuter, and Hilling (2005) and
Nagy et al. (2006) showed that the probability of choosing a
particular course in school is positively affected by high
achievement in corresponding subjects and negatively affected
by high achievement in non-corresponding subjects (i.e.,
influenced by dimensional comparisons). Imagine a student who
has to decide whether he/she wants to concentrate on language
or on science courses. One criterion for his/her decision will
be his/her achievement in these domains; he/she may ask
him/herself: “Am I better at science or in language arts?”.
Then again, self-improvement motivation may also trigger
dimensional comparisons: To become better in math, a student
might analyze his/her motivation and learning behavior in
his/her better-off verbal subjects and transfer them to math.
Here, the comparison might lead to a behavioral assimilation.
One might think that verbal and math achievements both are
based on motivation, intelligence, and adequate learning
behavior so that the more positive achievement in verbal
subjects could be transferred to math. This would lead to a
more positive learning behavior in math as well. In addition,
some hints on the antecedents of dimensional comparisons could
be found: Dimensional comparisons (like social comparisons)
were shown to be triggered by motivational needs and/or by
external forces (Möller et al., 2015).
The DCT is
inspired by the I/E model (Marsh, 1986, Figure 1), which
posits the joint operation of both social comparisons and
dimensional comparisons to construct domain-specific academic
self-concepts. Students conduct social comparisons by
comparing their achievement with the achievement of their
classmates (external frame of reference). For example, if a
student’s verbal achievement is lower than that of his/her
classmates, likely his/her verbal self-concept will also be
lower. In addition, students conduct dimensional comparisons
by comparing their achievement in a given subject with their
achievements in another subject (internal frame of reference).
For example, if a student’s verbal achievement is lower than
his/her math achievement, his/her verbal self-concept will
suffer and his/her math self-concept will benefit from
dimensional comparisons.
Möller,
Pohlmann, Köller, and Marsh (2009) meta-analyzed 69 studies
with N = 125,308 students on the relations between academic
achievements and self-concepts (see Figure 1). The average
correlation between math and verbal achievements was strongly
positive (r = .67),
and much higher than the average correlation between math and
verbal self-concepts (r
= .10), indicating a strong domain-specificity of academic
self-concepts. Moreover, the effects of external comparisons,
i.e. the effects of math achievement on math self-concept (β =
.61) and of verbal achievement on verbal self-concept (β
=.49), were substantial and positive (see the horizontal paths
in Figure 1). However, the effects of dimensional comparisons,
i.e. the effects from verbal achievement to mathematical
self-concept (β = −.27) and of mathematics achievement on
verbal self-concept
(β = −.21), were negative (see the cross-dimensional paths in
Figure 1). Integrating the results leads to the central
assumption of the I/E model: The strong positive correlation
between subjects-specific achievements does not lead to strong
positive correlations between subject-specific self-concepts.
The reason for this is the negative effect of dimensional
comparisons between subject-specific achievements. The results
of the meta-analysis indicate the effects of social and
dimensional comparisons described in the classic I/E model to
be valid for different achievement measures (grades as well as
standardized achievement test scores), for different grades,
gender groups, and countries (Möller et al., 2009).
Despite the
various studies supporting the I/E model, the actual
psychological processes behind dimensional comparisons remain
rather unexplored. A central assumption of the DCT is that
dimensional comparison effects are moderated by the perceived
similarity of the compared school subjects. According to the
DCT, different school subjects form a similarity continuum
(Marsh, Byrne, & Shavelson, 1988; Marsh, Lüdtke et al.,
2015) that explains the different outcomes of dimensional
comparisons. The DCT predicts that for dissimilar subjects
(so-called far comparisons) like math and English, dimensional
comparisons lead to contrast effects, whereas smaller contrast
effects or even assimilation effects result between similar
subjects (so-called near comparisons). For example, Möller,
Streblow, Pohlmann, and Köller (2006) found positive path
coefficients from achievements to non-corresponding
self-concepts between relatively similar subjects like English
and German or math and physics. Möller, Streblow, and Pohlmann
(2006) asked students directly for their belief in a negative
interdependence of math and verbal abilities, that is, whether
they thought of math and verbal abilities as negatively
correlated or not. Stronger beliefs in a negative
interdependence of math and verbal ability were accompanied by
more negative path coefficients from grades in one subject to
academic self-concepts in the other subject. If students
considered abilities in two subjects to be positively
correlated, the impact of dimensional comparisons even showed
a positive assimilation effect. Therefore, similarity
perceptions regarding different school subjects seem to be
composed to a great amount of interdependence beliefs students
hold about underlying abilities.
We propose
that the similarity of school subjects influence dimensional
comparisons in a manner that is described for social
comparisons by the selective accessibility model (SAM)
designed by Mussweiler (2003). According to SAM, the
comparison of a certain target to a given standard is
influenced by perceptions of the general similarity of the
target and the standard. We assume that when two subjects like
math and English are selected as target and standard for
dimensional comparison, the comparison process is driven by
dissimilarity assumptions. When two more similar subjects like
math and physics are dimensionally compared, the comparison
process is driven by similarity assumptions instead. The
similarity assumption will make commonalities between math and
physics more accessible, which will result in lower contrast
or even assimilation effects in self-concepts. The dissimilar
perception will make differences between subjects more
accessible and lead to contrast effects as described in the
original I/E model.
Figure 1. The I/E model: Results of
a meta-analytic path-analysis on the relations between math and
verbal achievement and math and verbal self-concept (from Möller
et al., 2009). MAch = math achievement; MSelf = math
self-concept; VAch = verbal achievement; VSelf = verbal
self-concept. (see pdf)
1.2
The
Generalized Internal/External Frame of Reference Model (GI/E
model)
Whereas the
I/E model is originally restricted to math and verbal
achievements and math and verbal self-concepts, its logic is
extended in the DCT to a variety of other variables.
Therefore, we introduce a generalized I/E model (see Figure 2)
which may serve as a kind of a guide to look for more I/E like
relations between independent and dependent variables. In this
model, a person carries out social and dimensional
comparisons. For example a student compares his/her own
standing or perception in a certain domain with someone else’s
standing, and as a result the student is able to form an
opinion on his/her own standing in that particular domain. The
student also carries out a dimensional comparison when
comparing his/her perception of aspects of a particular domain
A with his/her perception of aspects of a particular domain B
coming to a conclusion about his/her standing in domain A in
comparison to his/her standing domain B. Both comparisons may
have consequences for any kind of domain-specific thought and
learning behavior. If a student perceives him/herself as being
better than most of his/her classmates in a domain, the
effects of social comparisons are positive for
self-evaluations. However, the effects of dimensional
comparisons are often negative for a particular domain. If
someone perceives that he/she is better in sports than in
music he/she might neglect his/her musical activities because
he/she prefers sports.
In
extension to the original I/E model, the GI/E model allows an
integration of each domain-specific aspect that students tend
to compare externally and internally as a predictor or an
independent variable. It also integrates the consequences of
self-evaluation, motivation, and learning behavior as criteria
or dependent variables.
At the
moment our assumptions on the generalizability of the I/E
model and effects to different constructs are rather
hypothetical. However there are already some empirical studies
that provide preliminary evidence of the validity of our
extensions. We will present the description of these studies
with regard to the question whether they extended the I/E
model on the side of the predictors (i.e., examining the
effects of different independent variables on the academic
self-concept), on the side of the criteria (i.e., examining
the effects of academic achievements on different dependent
variables) or on both (i.e., examining I/E-like effects in
completely different domains).
Changing
predictors. Most recent extensions on the side of
the predictors integrate more or other school subjects than
merely the native language and math (e.g. Chiu, 2012; Marsh,
Lüdtke et al., 2015; Jansen, Schroeders, Lüdtke & Marsh,
2015; Möller, Streblow, Pohlmann, & Köller, 2006; Nagy,
Trautwein, Baumert, Köller, & Garrett, 2006), i.e., multiple
academic subjects (native and foreign language, history,
biology, physics, and math). As already outlined, the
application of the I/E model to two similar subjects does not
typically lead to contrast effects in subject-specific
self-concepts. It rather leads to no significant effect from
subject-specific achievement to self-concept in the other
subject or even to assimilative effects, i.e., positive effects
from achievement to self-concept in the other subject. A study
by Marsh, Lüdtke et al. (2015) offers an illustration of the
distinction of between-domain comparisons and within-domain
comparisons, showing significant contrast effects for so-called
far comparisons (between dissimilar subjects) and significantly
less contrast or even assimilation effects for so-called near
comparisons (for similar subjects). Jansen et al. (2015)
analyzed dimensional comparison effects for five domains and
found support for the hypotheses which derived from the DCT.
Both contrast and assimilation effects can result from
dimensional comparisons: Mathematics, physics, and chemistry
showed contrast effects to German self-concept, whereas more
assimilative effects were found from achievements in the three
subjects to mathematics, physics, and chemistry self-concepts.
Furthermore,
Tietjens, Möller, and Pohlmann (2005) successfully replicated
the I/E model using sports achievement as predictors.
Performance in track and field negatively affected the
self-concept in swimming and basketball and swimming
performance negatively influenced the self-concept in soccer
(see also Chanal, Sarrazin, Guay, & Boiché, 2009). In the
diary study mentioned above (Möller & Husemann, 2006),
participants were found to compare a vast variety of different
domains intra-individually, like personality characteristics
and physical attractiveness.
Figure
2. The
generalized I/E model. An extension of the I/E model to other
domains and consequences. (see pdf)
Changing
criteria. Some studies in the tradition of the
I/E model used math and verbal achievements as comparison target
and standard, but then used different dependent variables
analyzing effects on variables other than self-concepts, i.e.
self-regulated learning (Miller, 2000), emotions (Goetz,
Frenzel, Hall, & Pekrun, 2008), intrinsic motivation (Marsh,
Abduljabbar, Parker, Morin, Abdelfattah, Nagengast, Möller,
& Abu-Hilal, 2015), and interest (Schurtz, Pfost, Nagengast,
& Artelt, 2014).
With regard
to motivation we refer to the corpus of motivation terms
relevant to academic achievement Murphy and Alexander (2000)
discussed. They differentiated between self-schema (including
self-efficacy and attribution), interest (situational and
individual), intrinsic and extrinsic motivation, and goal
orientation (including learning, performance, and work
avoidance goals). Our general answer to the question which
constructs fit into I/E relations as criteria is based on the
domain-specificity of the motivational constructs: Whereas
self-schema, interest, and intrinsic/extrinsic motivation in
most research studies are domain-specific constructs, goal
orientation is often conceptualized as more domain-general
(Bong, 2013). The more a motivational construct is specific to
a domain, the more we will assume effects of dimensional
comparisons. Motivational constructs that are less specific to
a domain are rarely able to be the subject of dimensional
comparisons. There is one important exception to this rule: In
the Möller et al. (2009) meta-analysis, the most important
moderator was the type of self-schema measure. When measures
of self-efficacy served as self-concept indicators that
included the target in the item, analyses revealed larger
relations between math and verbal self-evaluations and the I/E
model did not fit the data well. The most important difference
between such self-efficacy beliefs and self-concept with
regard to comparison processes may be that self-efficacy
beliefs, when including the target in the item beliefs, are
much more driven by former experiences with similar types of
tasks.
So far,
there is a lack of studies that analyze the effects of
dimensional comparisons on other criteria than students’
self-reported self-concepts. Although there is already
evidence for I/E like relations between students’ verbal and
math grades and other-ratings of students’ ability beliefs
(e.g., Dickhäuser, 2005; Möller, 2005), it would be
interesting to analyze the effects of social and dimensional
comparisons using a broader variety of domain-specific
criteria (observed and self-reported) such as time spent on
homework, teacher-ratings of students’ classroom behavior, or
students’ perceptions of instructional quality of classes (see
Arens & Möller, 2016).
In one of
the first studies directly referring to the GI/E model, Arens
and Möller (2016) asked students for their grades in math and
German and for their perceptions of the learning environment
in each their math and German classes from two perspectives:
First, the students were asked to rate their relationships to
their math teacher and their German teacher. Second, the
students were asked to judge the perceived quality of the
instruction they received in math and German classes. Analyses
revealed positive paths from grades to corresponding
student-teacher relationships and qualities of instruction.
More importantly for the DCT, negative paths occurred from
grades to non-corresponding perceptions of the quality of
instruction and positive paths occurred from grades to
non-corresponding student-teacher relationships, indicating
dimensional comparison processes.
Changing
predictors and criteria. Very few
studies replaced both independent and dependent variables.
However Dietrich, Dicke, Kracke, & Noack (2015) found
dimensional comparison effects when analyzing cross-domain
relations of teacher support and motivation: Higher levels of
perceived teacher support in one subject were negatively
related to students’ intrinsic value and effort in another
subject. Möller and Savyon (2003) analyzed dimensional
comparison effects between intelligence and honesty. They gave
their participants success or failure feedback on anagram
tasks. People in the failure condition rated themselves as
being more honest than did students who received positive
feedback in the anagram task, indicating that processes of
dimensional comparison were carried out between intelligence
and honesty.
Möller and
Marsh (2013) suggested a transfer of the I/E model to basic
personality characteristics. They viewed the “Big Two”
personality dimensions agency (competence) and communion
(warmth; Abele & Wojciszke, 2014) as ideal candidates for
an extension of the DCT since both dimensions are independent
of each other in self-perception, as are math and verbal
self-concepts. A first re-analysis of the data of Abele, Rohe,
and Hauke (2013, merged from Studies I and II) revealed some
support for a “Big Two I/E model”. Helm et al. (under review)
revealed typical I/E patterns between other-rated agency and
communion as predictors and self-rated agency and communion as
criteria, i.e. positive effects on corresponding self-ratings
and negative effects on non-corresponding self-ratings. Such
extensions to personality variables like agency and communion
widen the opportunities delivered by the generalized I/E
model.
To sum up,
the generalized I/E model may serve as a matrix for other
juxtapositions of domain-characteristics with consequences for
domain-specific beliefs and learning behaviors. The successful
transfer of our assumptions to agency and communion may serve
as an example for the research possibilities that arise from
these extensions, within and outside of learning and
motivation research.
1.3
Discussion
The aim of
the present article was to give an overview on a new theory in
motivation research, the dimensional comparison theory, as
well as to devise a critical extension to the core assumption
of the theory. Namely, we introduced a generalized I/E model
assuming external and in particular internal, dimensional
comparisons to be rather general comparison processes not only
limited to the formation of academic self-concepts alone, but
to apply to evaluations of different constructs as well. The
GI/E model may enable future research to go beyond the
relations between verbal and math self-concepts and apply the
rationale underlying external and dimensional comparisons in
different fields and disciplines as well. In conclusion, we
would like to evaluate the DCT in regard to its usefulness in
terms of a good theory. We will try to evaluate DCT from our
(subjective) perspective. According to Van Lange (2013) truth,
abstraction, progress, and applicability as standards (TAPAS)
may serve as ideals for theories in psychology. In the
following section, we would like to apply TAPAS to DCT:
Truth. The ideal
of truth is met when a theory allows hypothesizing testable
relations between the constructs that the theory deals with.
Although according to Popper (1959) truth remains an
unreachable ideal, empirical studies allow researchers, who
are testing hypotheses derived from theories, to evaluate what
aspects of a theory are more or less adequate descriptions of
the data. With regard to motivation and learning research,
such a theory has to describe or explain data on motivational
constructs, e.g. relations between two motivational constructs
or between motivation and achievement. In the case of the DCT,
we have shown that there is strong evidence (a) for the
occurrence of dimensional comparisons inside and outside of
schools and (b) for cross-domain effects between achievements
and academic self-concepts. The empirical support is smaller
with regard to other motivational constructs.
Abstraction. The second
ideal of abstraction asks theories to go beyond single
empirical studies, generalize findings, and verbalize
relations between constructs. In our opinion, the DCT is
abstract enough while still exposing the causal relations
between aspects of domains and corresponding self-evaluations
as well as non-corresponding self-evaluations of these
aspects, and grounding them on psychological principles. The
DCT overcomes the limitations of the I/E model, which is a
more descriptive approach.
Progress. Thirdly,
ideal theories strive for progress. They should add some new
insights to the prior knowledge or provide a new and
intriguing perspective on a phenomenon. The DCT emphasizes a
comparison process rather neglected in research outside of
educational psychological self-concept research. A first
visible sign of progress may be that research on the DCT is
published in a major social psychology journal (Strickhouser
& Zell, 2015). From our perspective and concerning the
DCT, it is essential to generalize the I/E model and to
initiate more (and more experimental) research on the
psychological phenomena associated with dimensional
comparisons. Derived from DCT, the GI/E model allows the
application of the relations and effects described in the I/E
model to other domains and person characteristics as well.
This would offer a new theoretical perspective on the
formation of self-concepts and on the emergence of
motivational tendencies in different areas of life.
Applicability. Fourthly,
a theory should be applicable to real-world concerns, an ideal
that is in particular important in an applied field of
research like motivation and learning research. The DCT does
not only claim to be applicable to the well-known and
practically important relations between academic achievement
and academic self-concept, but has the potential of explaining
several real world phenomena that may benefit from considering
dimensional comparisons as an underlying psychological
process. The DCT is applicable in each situation, which forces
people to choose between alternatives. In particular, when
students have to choose between courses, select careers and
academic majors, dimensional comparisons will be at work.
To sum up,
the GI/E model was introduced overcoming the I/E model’s
limitations with regard to math and verbal affairs. First
empirical support was presented underlining the fruitfulness
of the model to initiate further research activities. The GI/E
model is a consequence of the formulation of the DCT and
enriches the theories’ purpose. Further research is needed
that adds new domains as comparison targets and standards as
well as new motivational and learning outcomes as consequences
of external and internal comparisons.
Keypoints
The internal/external
frame of reference model (I/E model) describes the relations
between math and verbal achievements and self-concepts.
The dimensional
comparison theory (DCT) focuses on the internal frame of
reference and extends the I/E model.
Instead of being
limited to math and verbal achievements, it deals with other
domains as well. Instead of being limited to math and verbal
self-concepts, it deals with motivational constructs, learning
behaviors, and personality characteristics.
Therefore, a
generalized I/E model is proposed that allows the application
of previous findings and will initiate further research.
DCT is
discussed by applying standards of good theories to it.
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