Basic principles of motivation exist that are applicable to learning
in any situation.
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.
Incentives motivate learning.
Incentives include privileges and receiving praise from the instructor.
The instructor determines an incentive that is likely to motivate an
individual at a particular time. In a general learning situation, self-motivation
without rewards will not succeed. Students must find satisfaction in
learning based on the understanding that the goals are useful to them
or, less commonly, based on the pure enjoyment of exploring new things.
Internal motivation is longer lasting and more
self-directive than is external motivation, which must be repeatedly
reinforced by praise or concrete rewards. Some individuals
-- particularly children of certain ages and some adults -- have little
capacity for internal motivation and must be guided and reinforced constantly.
The use of incentives is based on the principle that learning occurs
more effectively when the student experiences feelings of satisfaction.
Caution should be exercised in using external rewards when they are
not absolutely necessary. Their use may be followed by a decline in
internal motivation.
Learning is most effective when an individual
is ready to learn, that is, when one wants to know something.
Sometimes the student's readiness to learn comes with time, and the
instructor's role is to encourage its development. If a desired change
in behavior is urgent, the instructor may need to supervised directly
to ensure that the desired behavior occurs. If a student is not ready
to learn, he or she may not be reliable in following instructions and
therefore must be supervised and have the instructions repeated again
and again.
Motivation is enhanced by the way in which the
instructional material is organized.
In general, the best organized material makes the information meaningful
to the individual. One method of organization includes relating new
tasks to those already known. Other ways to relay meaning are to determine
whether the persons being taught understand the final outcome desired
and instruct them to compare and contrast ideas.
None of the techniques will produce sustained motivation
unless the goals are realistic for the learner. The basic learning principle
involved is that success is more predictably motivating than is failure.
Ordinarily, people will choose activities of intermediate uncertainty rather
than those that are difficult (little likelihood of success) or easy (high
probability of success). For goals of high value there is less tendency
to choose more difficult conditions. Having learners assist in defining
goals increases the probability that they will understand them and want
to reach them. However, students sometimes have unrealistic notions about
what they can accomplish. Possibly they do not understand the precision
with which a skill must be carried out or have the depth of knowledge to
master some material. To identify realistic goals, instructors must be skilled
in assessing a student's readiness or a student's progress toward goals.
Because learning requires change in beliefs
and behavior, it normally produces a mild level of anxiety.
This is useful in motivating the individual. However, severe anxiety
is incapacitating. A high degree of stress is inherent in some educational
situations. If anxiety is severe, the individual's perception of what
is going on around him or her is limited. Instructors must be able to
identify anxiety and understand its effect on learning. They also have
a responsibility to avoid causing severe anxiety in learners by setting
ambiguous of unrealistically high goals for them.
It is important to help each student set goals
and to provide informative feedback regarding progress toward the goals.
Setting a goal demonstrates an intention to achieve and activates learning
from one day to the next. It also directs the student's activities toward
the goal and offers an opportunity to experience success.
Both affiliation and approval are strong motivators.
People seek others with whom to compare their abilities, opinions, and
emotions. Affiliation can also result in direct anxiety reduction by
the social acceptance and the mere presence of others. However, these
motivators can also lead to conformity, competition, and other behaviors
that may seem as negative.
Many behaviors result from a combination of
motives It is recognized that no grand theory of motivation
exists. However, motivation is so necessary for learning that strategies
should be planned to organize a continuous and interactive motivational
dynamic for maximum effectiveness. The general principles of motivation
are interrelated. A single teaching action can use many of them simultaneously.
Finally, it should be said that an enormous gap exists between knowing
that learning must be motivated and identifying the specific motivational
components of any particular act. Instructors must focus on learning patterns
of motivation for an individual or group, with the realization that errors
will be common.
MOTIVATION FACTORS AND STRATEGIES, BY TIME PERIOD BEGINNING, DURING,
AND ENDING
TIME
BEGINNING: When learner enters and starts learning
MOTIVATIONAL FACTORS
ATTITUDES: Toward the environment, teacher, subject
matter, and self NEEDS: The basic need within the learner at the
time of learning
MOTIVATIONAL STRATEGIES
- Make the conditions that surround the subject positive.
- Positively confront the possibly erroneous beliefs, expectations, and
assumptions that may underlie a negative learner attitude.
- Reduce or remove components of the learning environment that lead to failure
or fear.
- Plan activities to allow learners to meet esteem needs.
TIME
DURING: When learner is involved in the body
or main content of the learning process.
MOTIVATIONAL FACTORS
STIMULATION: The stimulation processes affecting
learner during the learning experience. AFFECT: The emotional experience of the learner
while learning.
MOTIVATIONAL STRATEGIES
- Change style and content of the learning activity.
- Make learner reaction and involvement essential parts of the learning
process, that is, problem solving, role playing, stimulation.
- Use learner concerns to organize content and to develop themes and teaching
procedures.
- Use a group cooperation goal to maximize learner involvement and sharing.
TIME
ENDING: When learner is completing the learning
process.
MOTIVATIONAL FACTORS
COMPETENCE: The competence value for the learner
that is a result of the learning behaviors. REINFORCEMENT: The reinforcement value attached
to the learning experience, for the learner.
MOTIVATIONAL STRATEGIES
- Provide consistent feedback regarding mastery of learning.
- Acknowledge and affirm the learners' responsibility in completing the
learning task.
- When learning has natural consequences, allow them to be congruently evident.
- Provide artificial reinforcement when it contributes to successful learning,
and provide closure with a positive ending.
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