Foundations of Education

Overview

Introduces the concept of 'motivation' and two theories of motivation.

Key Concepts

  • self-efficacy theory
  • learned helplessness
  • self-determination theory

Motivation: An Introduction

CREDIT: The text below is excerpted from: Seifert, Kelvin and Sutton, Rosemary. (2022). Chapter 6: Student Motivation. Educational Psychology: Open Education Resource LibreTexts. License: Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) License, URL: https://socialsci.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Education_and_Professional_Development/ Book%3A_Educational_Psychology_(Seifert_and_Sutton)
Motivation - the energy or drive that gives behaviour direction and focus - can be understood in a variety of ways, each of which has implications for teaching. One perspective on motivation comes from behaviorism, and equates underlying drives or motives with their outward, visible expression in behavior. Most others, however, come from cognitive theories of learning and development. Motives are affected by the kind of goals set by students - whether they are oriented to mastery, performance, failure-avoidance, or social contact. They are also affected by students' interests, both personal and situational. And they are affected by students' attributions about the causes of success and failure - whether they perceive the causes are due to ability, effort, task difficulty, or luck.

A major current perspective about motivation is based on self-efficacy theory which focuses on a person's belief that he or she is capable of carrying out or mastering a task. High self-efficacy affects students' choice of tasks, their persistence at tasks, and their resilience in the face of failure. It helps to prevent learned helplessness, a perception of complete lack of control over mastery or success. Teachers can encourage high self-efficacy beliefs by providing students with experiences of mastery and opportunities to see others' experiences of mastery, by offering well-timed messages persuading them of their capacity for success, and by interpreting students' emotional reactions to success, failure and stress.

An extension of self-efficacy theory is self-determination theory which is based on the idea that everyone has basic needs for autonomy, competence, and relatedness to others. According to the theory, students will be motivated more intrinsically if these three needs are met as much as possible. A variety of strategies can assist teachers in doing so. As a practical matter, the strategies can encourage motivation that is more intrinsic to students, but usually not completely intrinsic…

…students assign various meanings and attitudes to academic activities - personal meanings and attitudes that arouse and direct their energies in different ways. We call these and their associated energizing and directing effects by the term 'motivation', or sometimes 'motivation to learn'. As you will see, differences in motivation are an important source of diversity in classrooms, comparable in importance to differences in prior knowledge, ability, or developmental readiness.

When it comes to school learning, furthermore, students' motivations take on special importance because students' mere presence in class is (of course) no guarantee that students really want to learn. It is only a sign that students live in a society requiring young people to attend school. Since modern education is compulsory, teachers cannot take students' motivation for granted, and they have a responsibility to ensure students' motivation to learn. Somehow or other, teachers must persuade students to want to do what students have to do anyway...Fortunately, as you will see, there are ways of accomplishing this task that respect students' choices, desires, and attitudes.