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Motivation and Affect in Education: Understanding the Nature and Influences

This chapter explores the nature of motivation and affect in education, including the different types of motivation, basic human needs, cognitive factors, goals, attributions, and the influence of teacher expectations. It also discusses the role of affect in motivation and cognition, including emotions, anxiety, and the impact of diversity on motivation and affect.

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Motivation and Affect in Education: Understanding the Nature and Influences

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  1. Chapter 11 Motivation and Affect

  2. The Nature of Motivation

  3. Motivation • Directs behavior toward particular goals • Leads to increased effort and energy • Increases initiation of, and persistence in, activities • Enhances cognitive processing • Determines what consequences are reinforcing and punishing

  4. General Principles • All children and adolescents are motivated in one way or another. • Motivation to do well in school is grounded in a variety of cognitive and sociocultural factors that evolve over time. • Classroom conditions play a major role in students’ motivation to learn and achieve • situated motivation

  5. Motivation • Extrinsic motivators • factors external to the individual • factors unrelated to the task • good grades, money, recognition • Intrinsic motivators • factors within the individual • factors inherent in the task • pleasure, developing a valued skill, ethically and morally the right thing to do

  6. Basic Human Needs

  7. Basic Human Needs • Arousal • basic need for stimulation • Competence and Self-Worth • ability to deal effectively with environment • Self-Determination • sense of autonomy • Relatedness • need to feel socially connected, to secure others’ love and respect

  8. Hierarchy of Needs: Maslow Self-actualization Esteem Love and belonging Safety Physiological deficiency needs growth need

  9. Cognitive Factors in Motivation

  10. Interest • Form of intrinsic motivation • Situational interest • evoked by something in immediate environment • Personal interest • personal preferences • relatively stable over time

  11. Expectancies & Values • Expectancy = expectation for success • Influenced by • prior history of success/failure • perceived difficulty of task • availability of resources and support • quality of instruction • necessary effort

  12. Expectancies & Values • Value = perceived benefit of task • Influenced by • importance • utility • interest • cost

  13. Goals • Achievement goals • mastery • performance • performance-approach • performance-avoidance • Work-avoidance/Doing-just-enough goals • Social goals • Long-term life goals • Career goals

  14. Attributions for Success/Failure • Locus • internal versus external • successes = internal causes (smart) • failures = external causes (teacher doesn’t like) • Stability • stable versus unstable • Controllability • controllable versus uncontrollable • consistent failure = stable, uncontrollable, internal factor: low ability

  15. Attributions Influence… • Learners’ emotional reactions to success and failure • Expectations for future success and failure • Effort and persistence • Learning strategies and classroom performance

  16. Developmental Trends • With age, children distinguish between effort and ability • incremental vs. entity view of intelligence • mastery orientation vs. learned helplessness

  17. Teacher Expectations • Remember that teachers make a difference. • Look for strengths in every student. • Consider multiple explanations for low achievement, classroom misbehavior. • Communicate optimism about what students can accomplish. • Objectively assess students’ progress.

  18. Teacher Expectations • Attribute successes to high ability and controllable factors. • Attribute successes to effort only if effort is considerable. • Attribute failures to controllable, easily remedied factors. • When students fail despite obvious effort, attribute failures to lack of effective strategies; help them acquire such strategies.

  19. Affect and Its Effects

  20. Affect • Emotions, general moods that a learner brings to bear on a task • Psychological elements • subjective feelings • Physiological elements • changes in heart rate, perspiration, muscular tension

  21. Affect & Motivation • People act in ways they think will help them feel happy and comfortable. • Self-conscious emotions affect self-worth. • Intrinsic motivation is related to pleasure. • Boredom results from lack of stimulation and arousal.

  22. Affect & Cognition • Hot cognition • learners associate specific topics with certain emotions • can be evoked by information that conflicts with what learners currently know or believe • cognitive dissonance, disequilibrium

  23. Anxiety in the Classroom • Feelings of uneasiness and apprehension concerning a situation with an uncertain outcome • state anxiety (temporary) • trait anxiety (chronic) • Facilitating vs. debilitating anxiety • improves vs. hinders performance

  24. Sources of Anxiety • Physically threatening situations • Situations that threaten self-worth • Physical appearance • A new situation • Judgment or evaluation by others • Frustrating subject matter • Excessive classroom demands • Classroom tests • The future

  25. Diversity in Motivation & Affect • Cultural and ethnic differences • all children have basic needs in common; how they satisfy those needs may vary • need for affiliation may vary, as may the amount of encouragement for academic achievement • stereotype threat may be present

  26. Diversity in Motivation & Affect • Gender differences • girls are more concerned with doing well • girls are more likely to have high need for affiliation • girls express emotions more openly, except anger • girls are more anxious about classroom performance

  27. Diversity in Motivation & Affect • SES • lower-income students have more stress • may have less effective strategies, self-regulation skills • Students with special needs • greatest diversity in motivation • may have difficulty meeting needs for relatedness

  28. The Big Picture

  29. The Big Picture • Motivation energizes, directs, and sustains behavior. • Several basic needs seem to drive much of human behavior. • Many forms of motivation have both cognitive and sociocultural elements. • The emotions and general moods that learners bring to bear on a task—collectively known as affect—are closely intertwined with motivation.

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