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Johnathan, Josh, Annastasia, and Amber Motivation is… • Internal state or condition that activates behavior and gives it direction • Desire or want that energizes and directs goal-oriented behavior • Influence of needs and desires on the intensity and direction of behavior. Amber Sources of Motivational Needs • Behavioral/external – Stimuli – Pleasant/unpleasant • Social – Imitating models – Valued part of group • Biological – Activate senses – balance • Cognitive – Maintain attention – Meaning/understanding • Affective – Increase secuirty – Decrease threats – Optimism/enthusiasm • Conative – Meet individual goal – Self-efficacy – Taking control • Spiritual – Purpose of life – Connect to unknowns Amber Behavioral – Classical conditioning – Operant learning Amber Cognitive • Cognitive – Information processing • Piaget – Cognitive dissonance – Attribution – Expectancy Amber Psychoanalytic • Freud – Two categories : life and death • Erickson and Sullivan – Interpersonal relationships Amber Humanistic – Maslow – Hierarchy of human Needs Amber Types of Motivation • Motivation can be categorized as • Extrinsic (outside the person) - Rewards - Power - Superficial Happiness • Intrinsic (internal to the person). – – – – body/physical, mind/mental Transpersonal Spiritual . Johnathan Johnathan External, Behavioral Factors Internal, Attitudinal Factors 1. Decision : to choose, pay attention, to, and engage in one activity but not others. 1. Interest in the subject or process, based on existing attitudes, experience, and background knowledge on the part of the learner. 2. Persistence : over an extended time, returning to the activity after any interruptions. 2. Relevance, which involves the perception that personal needs such as an achievement, affiliation with other people, and power are being met. 3. Activity Level : maintains a high activity level. 3. Expectancy of success or failure. 4. Outcomes, i.e., the extrinsic or intrinsic rewards felt by the learner. Johnathan Classroom Factors that Affect Learning In The Classroom • Rewards can be used to maintain or enhance student intrinsic interest. • Verbal praise and performance feedback increase the value of an activity. • Tangible rewards (contingent) on level of performance or are given unexpectedly - students will remain motivated • The slight negative effect can be expected when a teacher offers a tangible reward without regard to the student's level of performance. This negative effect can be prevented by giving: * Rewards for successful solution of problems * Completion of work * Attaining specified levels of performance on particular tasks • The way the rewards "administered" may have a positive or a negative effect on intrinsic motivation. Johnathan Can classroom factors effect motivation? • The environment can be used to focus the student's attention on what needs to be learned. • Teachers who create warm and accepting yet business-like atmospheres will promote persistent effort and favorable attitudes toward learning. • This strategy will be successful in children and in adults. Interesting visual aids, such as booklets, posters, or practice equipment, motivate learners by capturing their attention and curiosity http://ss.uno.edu/ss/teachdevel/Motivat/Motivate.html Annestasia What is the Teachers role in Motivation The teacher is the one that sets the motivational tone for the classroom. There are a variety of specific actions that teachers can take to increase motivation on classroom tasks. In general, these fall into the two categories: intrinsic motivation and extrinsic motivation. As a general rule, teachers need to use as much of the intrinsic suggestions as possible while recognising that not all students will be appropriately motivated by them. The extrinsic suggestions will work, but it must be remembered that they do so only as long as the student is under the control of the teacher. When outside of that control, unless the desired goals and behaviors have been internalised, the learner will cease the desired behavior and operate according to his or her internal standards or to other external factors. http://hagar.up.ac.za/catts/learner/leonb/motivation.htm#I Annestasia Intrinsic Explain or show why learning a particular content or skill is important Create and/or maintain curiosity Provide a variety of activities and sensory stimulations Provide games and simulations Set goals for learning Relate learning to student needs Help student develop plan of action http://hagar.up.ac.za/catts/learner/leonb/motivation.htm#I Annestasia Extrinsic Provide clear expectations Give corrective feedback Provide valuable rewards Make rewards available http://hagar.up.ac.za/catts/learner/leonb/motivation.htm#I Annestasia Is motivation in the classroom different from other facets of life? • While people may not value doing something that they feel very confident about succeeding in because they will not find it interesting then, the expectancy to succeed at something can also have a positive influence on the value of doing it. People, choose to do something because being good at it gives it importance to them, so that the more they expect to succeed in an activity, the more they value doing it. Moreover expectancy-value models of motivational achievement include multiple ways of valuing and valuing an activity is in itself motivating if one is challenged by it, or has interest in it, or is involved in it, or enjoys it, or wants to do well in it or likes doing it well, or finds it useful. http://www-writing.berkeley.edu/tesl-ej/ej18/a2.html Josh What? • In other words no. Motivation whether it be at school or at home are the same. Most students show about as much motivation to homework as they do cleaning their room. If the student had interest in what they are about to do, say a sporting activity, it would be the same as if they were going to do a project that sounded fun. Josh Motivation and Achievement Linked • Weiner (1984; 1986) proposed that the extent of future expectancy to succeed depends on what individuals attribute their past successes or failures to, whether to a stable factor such as ability, or to less stable ones like effort, luck, or task difficulty. Students who attribute a good grade on a test to ability are more likely to expect to do well on the next test than if they had attributed the grade to the test being easy or to being lucky. Conversely, attributing failure to inability, a stable factor, will have a more negative effect on the next test than attributing it to an unstable one like lack of study. http://www-writing.berkeley.edu/tesl-ej/ej18/a2.html Josh What did that Mean? In other words Motivation and Achievement are based on whether they are Intrinsic or Extrinsic motivated. Students will base their achievements based off of their type of motivation. Josh What would a classroom that encouraged motivation look like? • It would have an environment that made the students feel comfortable and encouraged. • The rules and rewards would be on a wall were the students would be able to see them. • The teacher would be giving specific praise that encourage the students to advance their learning methods. • The class would be hard at work with hardly an distraction. Josh The end