1 / 19

Week 3: Motivation – Inputs/outcomes/context

Question of the day: What are your goals for today’s class?

taima
Download Presentation

Week 3: Motivation – Inputs/outcomes/context

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Question of the day: What are your goals for today’s class? In spite of being “professional students” at this stage in your education, you may not have thought explicitly about what your goals are for any particular class. Please spend some time thinking about this now and jot down a couple notes as to what your goals are. In particular, list goals that you think you have implicitly for most classes (i.e., your usual goals in a classroom setting that you don’t necessarily think about) as well as goals that you think of consciously and explicitly for today’s class. Week 3: Motivation – Inputs/outcomes/context 2/19/07

  2. Where we are & where we are going • Motivation • Overarching theories • Components • Paradoxes & special issues • Person perception • Interpersonal relationships

  3. Motivation: Big theories from last time • Ryan & Deci = Autonomy, competence, relatedness • Ford = goals x emotions x personal agency beliefs (personal & situational) • Eccles = Expectancies & Values

  4. Overview • Goals for individuals/Goals for class • Review proposed interventions from last time • Inputs/outcomes/situations: • Goals • Efficacy • Attributions/attribution theory • Special cases: • Delay of gratification • Milgram • Class norms

  5. Goals for class • My goals for class (for me) • Collaboratively develop list of motivating, empirically/theoretically defensible social norms for class to experiment with for the semester • Improve my ability to pose the “right” question to promote thinking & discussion • Get at least one new idea for a pedagogical practice that I might use or pass on to others that is grounded in motivational research • My goals for class (for you) • Continue varied participation • Think about motivation in both person & environment terms • See role of motivation in multiple studies • Introduce some prominent motivation-related debates • Get you to think about how they have emerged in your personal/professional lives? • Get you thinking about how these debates play out in practical terms in educational settings

  6. Types of goals i.e., “orientations” • Mastery goals – trying to develop ability, improve over time, effort • Performance goals – trying to demonstrate ability, show others you are smart, avoid looking stupid

  7. C. Ames • Motivational climate • Personal goals • Classroom goal structures Is it possible to be high on both mastery and performance goals**?

  8. The universe of possibilities

  9. Other types of goals of note… • Social goals • Approach/avoidance • Implicit/explicit • Intrinsic/extrinsic

  10. Self-efficacy • Beliefs about ability to produce effects • Confidence/expectancies for success/personal agency beliefs/exercise of control • Basis: personal ability & environmental affordances • Albert Bandura • Past performances • Social modeling • Persuasion • Physiological cues

  11. Attribution Theory • Internal – external • Stable – unstable • Global – local • Controllable – uncontrollable

  12. Areas of interest for attribution theorists • School achievement • Effort • Ability • Conflict – how are neutral events perceived?

  13. Special Case #1: Delay of Gratification • Some things that seem to help: • Distracting thoughts • Better rewards • Intelligence • Abstractions of the rewards • “hot” stimulus vs. “cool” symbols • What would a motivation theorist say about any of these factors? What elements of motivation are at play? • Why would delay of gratification lead to such great outcomes down the road?

  14. Special case #2: Milgram • Video • What motivates the “teachers” to keep going? • What motivational lessons can we extract for the classroom (or your favorite learning environment)?

  15. What can you do as an educator? • Tasks – challenge, interest, perceived control, social, complex/multi-faceted • Evaluation & Recognition – information, minimize social comparisons, opportunities to improve, very selective use of rewards • Authority – choices for students, locus of discussions, decision-making, self-management

  16. Class norms: Discussion #1 • No hand raising policy (Yes/no) • Exemption for clarification questions • How to monitor ourselves on caliber of participation (Open-ended) • How to have a check on talking for the sake of hearing themselves • Instructor directed vs. group directed participation

  17. Class norms: Discussion #2 • Should people be held accountable for their presence in class? (by instructor, by class, not at all) • Body posture & gestures • Attention • Requisite vs. voluntary participation policy (Choose one or compromise) • Can the instructor (cold) call on people?

  18. For next time – Readings • Iyengar & Lepper • Lab + field • Thinking through all relevant variables • Advancing theory (connection to your grant proposals) • Dweck & Leggett • Entity vs. incremental view of intelligence • Connection to attribution theory • Connection to goal theory • Recipes from the website • Case • Meet with MB or HG

  19. Mastery or Performance? Go Back

More Related