copyright 2001 by allyn and bacon motivation: in learning and teaching professor dr. bill bauer...

36
Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon Motivation: In Learning and Teaching Professor Dr. Bill Bauer Chapter 10 EDUC 202

Upload: ashlee-reed

Post on 22-Dec-2015

218 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Motivation: In Learning and Teaching

Professor Dr. Bill Bauer

Chapter 10

EDUC 202

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Overview

What Is Motivation?Four General Approaches to MotivationGoal Orientation and MotivationInterests and MotivationSelf-Schemas

Concept Map for Chapter 10

FourApproaches to

Motivation

Self-Schemas

Interests andMotivation Goal

Orientation andMotivation

Teachers, Teaching, &Educational Psychology

What Is Motivation

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Motivation

Motivation defined: Internal stateArouses, directs, maintains behavior

Intrinsic / ExtrinsicLocus of causality

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Four General Approaches to Motivation

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Behavioral Approach

Rewards are consequences of behaviorsIncentives encourage or discourage

behaviors

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Humanistic Approaches

Third force psychologyEmphasis on personal choiceNeedsSelf-actualization / Self-determinationMaslow’s hierarchySee Figure 10.1, Woolfolk, p. 371 and

Point▼Counterpoint p. 372

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Deficiency needsSurvivalPre-requisite

SurvivalSafetyBelongingSelf-esteem

Being needsEndlessly renewedWhole person

Intellect / achievement

AestheticsSelf-actualization

Maslow’s Hierarchy

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Maslow’s Hierarchy

Self-Actualization

Need

Aesthetic Needs

Need to know & Understand

Esteem Needs

Belongingness & Love Needs

Safety Needs

Physiological Needs

Being (growth)Being (growth)NeedsNeeds

DeficiencyDeficiencyNeedsNeeds

Motivation increasesMotivation increasesas needs are metas needs are met

MotivationMotivationdecreasesdecreasesas needsas needsare metare met

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Cognitive Perspective

Focus on thinking

Emphasizes intrinsic motivation

People are active and curious

Plans, goals, schemas, and expectations

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Cognitive PerspectiveAttribution theoryPerceived cause of successes or failures

LocusStabilityResponsibility

Attributions in the classroomTeacher actions influence student

attributionsExpectancy X Value Theory

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Attribution Theory

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Weiner’s Terms

Locus

Stability

Responsibility

Internal /

external

Stable / unstable

Controllable /

uncontrollable

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Examples of Attribution Theory

Internal locus, stable, controllable:I am good at studying for multiple choice

tests, so I will do well on the next Educational Psychology Exam.

Internal, stable, uncontrollable:Essay tests are always hard for me, so I

won’t do well in American Literature.

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Sociocultural Conceptions of Motivation

Emphasizes participation in communities

of practice

Legitimate peripheral participation

Relate to authentic tasks

See table 10.2, Woolfolk, p. 376 for a

comparison of all four approaches

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Goal Orientation and Motivation

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Why Goals Improve Performance

Direct attention to the task at hand

Mobilize effort

Increase persistence

Promote development of new strategies

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Four Kinds of Goals

Learning goals / task-involved

Performance goals / ego-involved

Work-avoidance goals

Social goals

The need for relatedness

They won’t care how much you know until they know how much you care.

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Feedback & Goal Acceptance: Effective Goals Are

SpecificChallengingAttainableFocused on the taskSupported by social relationshipsReinforced with feedbackAccepted by the student

See Family and Community Partnerships, Woolfolk, p. 380

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Reflection Questions

What goal have you set for yourself recently?

Did you follow good goal setting principles?

How can you improve your personal goal setting practices?

How does goal setting affect your motivation?

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Interest and Emotions

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Interest and Emotions

Student interests linked with success in

school

Fantasy to stimulate challenge & interest

Ensure that ‘interesting details’ are

legitimately tied to learning

See Guidelines, Woolfolk, p. 382

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Arousal: Excitement & Anxiety in Learning

Arousal: excitement, alertness, attentionCuriosity: novelty & complexityAnxiety: uneasiness, tension, stressAnxiety and effects on achievementCoping with anxiety

Problem solvingEmotional managementAvoidance

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Implications for Teachers

Keep level of arousal right for learners

Sleepy students?Introduce variety

Arouse curiosity

Surprise them

Wiggle break

See Guidelines, Woolfolk, p. 386

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Self-Schemas

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Beliefs about Ability

Entity view

Incremental view

Developmental differences

Effects on types of goals

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Beliefs about Self-Efficacy

Self-efficacy, self-concept, & self-esteem

Sources of self-efficacyMastery experiences

Vicarious experiences

Social persuasion

Efficacy and motivation

Teacher efficacy

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Beliefs about SelfSelf-determination or other-determination

Classroom environment & self-determination

Cognitive evaluation theory

Learned helplessness

Self-worthMastery-oriented

Failure-avoiding

Failure-accepting

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Reflection Questions

How will you deal with a student who is

exhibiting learned helplessness?

One of your students is avoiding failure

by not doing assignments. How will you

approach this challenge?

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Lessons for Teachers

Emphasize students’ progress

Make specific suggestions for improvement

Stress connection between effort &

accomplishment

Set learning goals for your students

Model mastery orientation

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Summary

What Is Motivation?

Four General Approaches to Motivation

Goal Orientation and Motivation

Interests and Motivation

Self-Schemas

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Review QuestionsDefine motivation.

What is the difference between intrinsic and extrinsic motivation?

How does locus of causality apply to motivation?

What are the key factors in motivation according to a behavioral viewpoint? Humanistic? Cognitive? Sociocultural?

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Review Questions

Distinguish between deficiency needs and being needs in Maslow’s theory.

What are the three dimensions of attribution in Weiner’s theory?

What are expectancy X value theories?What is legitimate peripheral

participation?What kinds of goals are most motivating?

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Review Questions

Describe learning, performance, work-avoidance, and social goals.

What makes goal setting effective in the classroom?

Do interests and emotions affect learning? How?

What is the role of arousal in learning?How does anxiety interfere with learning?

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

Review Questions

How do beliefs about ability affect motivation?

What is self-efficacy and how is it different from other self-schemas?

What are the sources of self-efficacy and how does efficacy affect motivation?

How does self-determination affect motivation?

How does self-worth affect motivation?

Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon

End Chapter 10