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Motivation to Learn Keys to Increasing Student Engagement. Motivation to Learn. Cognitive Apprenticeships review Chapter 14 Group Presentation Factors Influencing Motivation For Tuesday: start studying for your Quiz #3 (Chapters 11-14) - Tuesday, Dec. 14th 10:00-11:50
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Motivation to Learn • Cognitive Apprenticeships review • Chapter 14 Group Presentation • Factors Influencing Motivation For Tuesday: start studying for your Quiz #3 (Chapters 11-14) - Tuesday, Dec. 14th 10:00-11:50 Classroom Management-Working with Parents
Factors Influencing Motivation • Interest • Attributions • Self-efficacy • Goal Orientation
Motivation to Learn • The role of Attribution Theory and Task Engagement
Attribution Theory • Weiner, 1974 • Attribution theory assumes that people try to determine why people do what they do. • As “naïve psychologists” we come up with explanations of why things happen. • I.e., attribute causes to behavior
The Chain of Events According to Attribution theory, the type of attributions we make determine future acts The Chain of Events • A certain outcome occurs • I ask the question "Why?" • I provide an attribution. • My future behavior depends on the type of attribution I make.
Example You are taking a class and you get test results back. You take a peek and see, aarrgghh, a 65%. You think about these disappointing results for a minute and realize… • you have a lousy teacher, a terrible textbook and the test was completely unfair
Example On the next test you take a peek and see, ahhhh, a 95%. After seeing this results you think….. • When you're hot, you're hot. If you've got it, flaunt it. Some people are born great.
Three Causal Dimension(Weiner, 1974; 1986) • Locus of control • Controllability • Stability
Making Attributions – Locus of Control • External (“it was the lousy teacher”) • assigns causality to an outside agent or force • Internal (“if you’re hot, you’re hot”) • assigns causality to factors within the person
Three Causal Dimension(Weiner, 1974; 1986) • Locus of control • External v. Internal • Controllability • Causes one can control, I.e., skill/efficacy Versus • causes one cannot control, I.e., aptitude, mood, others' actions, and luck • Stability • Change over time? • Yes- (unstable) • No - (stable)
Attributions Affect Future Behavior You are taking a class and you get test results back. You take a peek and see, aarrrgh, a 65%. You think about these disappointing results for a minute and realize… • You have a lousy teacher, a terrible textbook and the test was completely unfair • External, uncontrollable, stable • Future behavior- unlikely to change • You missed several days of class and only reviewed half of the material on the study guide • Internal, controllable, unstable • Future behavior – more likely to change
Attributions Affect Future Behavior You are taking a class and you get test results back. You take a peek and see, aarrrgh, a 65%. You think about these disappointing results for a minute and realize… • You stink at this subject, no matter what you do it doesn’t make a difference. You’ll never be good at it. Why even try? • Internal, stable, and uncontrollable
Learned Helplessness(Seligman, 1965) • When cause is viewed as internal, stable and uncontrollable • A psychological condition in which a human (or animal) has learned that it is helpless. It feels that it has no control over its situation and that whatever it does is futile. As a result it will stay passive when the situation is unpleasant or harmful.
Influencing Behavior How does this have implications for the classroom? If we can direct/control the attributions people make, then we can influence their future behavior.
Four factors affecting attributions for achievement (Weiner, 1974) • Ability • Effort • Task difficulty • Luck
Alternative Example You are taking a class and you get test results back. You take a peek and see, ahhhhh, a 65%. You think about these disappointing results for a minute and realize… • You missed several days of class and only reviewed half of the material on the study guide.
Alternative Example On the next test you take a peek and see, ahhhh, a 95%. After seeing this results you think….. • Wow, what a score! The teacher must have been asleep when he graded my paper because I didn’t have a clue.
Combining 4 Factors with 3 Dimensions to examineReactions to Failure
Our View of Ability- Effects on attributions • Theories of Intelligence • Fixed/Entity view: • Intelligence is static; what you’re born with is what you’ve got • Malleable/Incremental view: • Intelligence can grow through practice, effort and improved strategies
Reactions to Success and Failure • Fixed/Entity • tend to make external attributions in the face of failure to protect self from negative attributions. You make internal attributions when successful. • Malleable/Incremental • can make internal attributions when successful and in the face of failure.
Self-Efficacy A Key to Improving Motivation
Self-efficacy Defined • People’s judgments of their capabilities to organize and execute courses of action required to attain designated types of performance (Bandura, 1986) • An individual’s judgment of his or her capabilities to perform given actions (Schunk, 1991)
Self-efficacy v. Self-concept • Self-efficacy • View of one’s abilities in a specific domain • Self-concept or self-esteem • Global view of one’s self across domains
Self- Efficacy… Influences task choice, effort persistence and achievement. Compared with students who doubt their learning capacities, those who have a sense of efficacy for [particular tasks] participate more readily, work harder, persist longer when they encounter difficulties, and achieve at a higher level… Student do not engage in activities they believe will lead to negative outcomes. -Schunk & Zimmerman, 1997
4 Factors of Influence • Past Performance • Past success in solving algebra equations increases individual’s beliefs in their capability to solve future problems • Modeling • Observing others successfully solve algebra equations increase observers belief that they can be solved
4 Factors of Influence (cont.) • Verbal Persuasion • Teacher comments “I know you will be able to solve these equations,” increases the likelihood that individuals will engage in a demanding task, and if successful, belief in their capabilities • Psychological State • Thoughts such as, “I cant do this”, uses working memory space that could be devoted to solving the problems, success is reduced and efficacy decreases.
Creating Successful Classroom Experiences(Culyer, 1996; Lipson& Wixson, 1997; Margolis & McCabe, 2004) • Work should challenge but not frustrate • Classwork at students’ instructional level • Homework at students’ independent level • Explicitly and systematically teach learning strategies that produce success.
Ways Teachers can strengthen self-efficacy in students(Margolis & McCabe, 2004) • Linking new work to recent successes • Stressing peer modeling • Reinforcing effort and persistence • Teaching learners to make facilitative attributions • Helping to identify and make personally important goals
Effective Goals(Margolis & McCabe, 2004) • Personally important • Relevant and needed • Immediate (v. distant) • Short term • Specific (v. Broad and General) • Achievable • Moderately difficult (not too hard, not too easy) • Focus on Learning/Mastery (v. Performance)
Goal Orientation The Final Key to Improving Motivation
Learning/Mastery Goals • Focus on challenge and mastery of a task • Deep processing used to accomplish understanding • Lead to • Attempting to understand • Not worrying about failure • Not comparing oneself with others
Performance Goals • Focus on demonstrating high ability and avoiding failure • “Getting an A on the test” • “I just don’t want to fail and have to take the class over” • Lead to • “Getting by” rather than true understanding of concepts • Feelings of anxiety about success and failure • Comparison and competition with others
Goal Orientation and Learner Outcomes(Wolters, 2004) • Mastery Orientation • Higher Levels of Motivational Engagement • Effective Learning Strategies • Performance Approach Orientation • Higher Grades • Performance Avoidance • Negative relation to motivation and learning strategies
Why Help Students Set Learning Goals? • Use goals to motivate and increase feelings of self-efficacy • Gives a standard by which to measure progress and success • Increase effort and persistence • Encourages the use of new strategies when the old ones do not work as well