Title: Motivating the Unmotivated:
1Motivating the Unmotivated
Alternatives to Simply Killing Them
- Lorin W. Anderson
- The Anderson Research Group
- andregroup_at_sc.rr.com
2To Truly Improve Teaching Effectiveness,
we must look at schooling through the eyes of the
students.
3- BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -- Today's high school students
say they are bored in class because they dislike
the material and experience inadequate teacher
interaction, according to a special report from
Indiana University's High School Survey of
Student Engagement (HSSSE). The findings,
released today (Feb. 28, 2007), show that 2 out
of 3 students are bored in class every day, while
17 percent say they are bored in every class.
4- Some of the key findings were
- Fewer than 2 percent of students say they are
never bored in high school. - Seventy-five percent of students surveyed say
they are bored in class because the "material
wasn't interesting." - Nearly 40 percent felt bored because the material
"wasn't relevant to me."
5What is Motivation?
- From a practical perspective, motivation is
putting forth the effort needed to be successful
at something. - Students who dont pay attention, dont do their
work, and dont hand in homework are said to be
unmotivated.
6What Explains Student Motivation?
- A rather simple equation. M f (V, E)
- Motivation is a function of the value a student
attaches to something and the students
expectancy of success in achieving that something.
7So How Does It Work?
8So How Does It Work?
- Example 1 Cheerleading
- For Bert, becoming a cheerleader is very
important (high value) - Initially, Bert experiences great difficulty
learning the cheers and is a little awkward in
performing them (little success). - However, because cheerleading is very important
to him, Bert practices cheerleading two hours
every day (motivation). Eventually, he makes the
cheerleading team (high success). - Lesson Value can trump lack of initial success.
9So How Does It Work?
- Example 2 Dating
- Ernie values Tanya (that is, he is interested
in getting to know her better). - However, Bert, Ernies best friend, tells him
that he doesnt have a chance with Tanya (that
is, he is not likely to be successful in his
attempts to date her) - Even though Bert values Tanya, he doesnt put any
effort into getting to know Tanya better because
he believes he will not be successful. - Lesson At other times, a fear of failure can
trump value.
10So How Does It Work?
- Example 3 Mathematics
- Bert does not believe that mathematics has any
relevance in his life (that is, he does not value
it). - Despite this fact, Bert initially tries to learn
math, but after several months he realizes that
he just cant seem to get it (that is, he is
not successful). - With no perceived value and no expectation of
success, Bert is unmotivated to learn math. He
stops paying attention in class and rarely turns
in completed assignments. - Lesson When both value and success are
negative, motivation will almost always be
lacking.
11So How Does It Work?
- Example 4 Reading
- Ernie thinks that reading is just about the best
thing in the world (that is, he values it
greatly). - In addition, Ernie is a very good reader (that
is, reading comes easy to him and he is a
successful reader). - During free time at school or at home, Ernie is
more likely to read a book than do anything else. - Lesson Value Success MOTIVATION
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13Exploring Value
- The student values the thing itself (intrinsic)
- Bert studies science because he thinks science is
important - The student values the rewards associated with
the thing (extrinsic) - Bert studies science because he gets good grades
in science - The student values the thing because valuable
others believe the thing to be valuable
(socio-emotional) - Bert studies science because his father is a
scientist and he wants to be like his father
14Exploring Expectations of Success
- The best predictor of future success is past
success. In other words, past success will most
likely lead to expectations of future success.
Conversely, past failure will most likely lead to
expectations of future failure. - Success, like beauty, is in the eye of the
beholder. It is NOT objective reality. Students
must see themselves as successful. If a student
answers 10 incredibly easy questions correctly,
he or she is not likely to perceive himself or
herself as successful. A certain amount of
challenge is needed before a student is likely to
see himself or herself as successful.
15To Motivate the Unmotivated Then We Must Find
Ways of
- Increasing the value they attach to various
aspects of schooling, AND - Increasing their expectancies of success.
16Five Ways of Increasing Value
- Establish personal, caring relationships with
students (social-emotional) - Talk with each student one-on-one for five
minutes every month with an emphasis on listening
to them - Show students that you are human for example,
make mistakes purposely and have students catch
them, and dont be afraid to say that you dont
know something.
17Five Ways of Increasing Value
- Incorporate student interests whenever possible,
offering limited choices (intrinsic) - Use popular song lyrics to introduce a unit on
poetry use familiar objects to introduce
counting, adding, and multiplying. - Give students a selection of five research
projects from which to choose.
18Five Ways of Increasing Value
- Connect schooling with their out-of-school
experiences (intrinsic) - Use cereal boxes to introduce a unit on vitamins
and minerals (or other appropriate concepts). - In discussing a character in a story, ask
students if they know someone who reminds them of
that character.
19Five Ways of Increasing Value
- Arouse curiosity using mystery, controversy, and
contradictions (intrinsic) - Use Crime Scene Investigation (CSI) materials in
science. - Use mysteries to teach reading and ELA.
20Five Ways of Increasing Value
- Give reward and recognition (extrinsic)
- Strive for a goal of 4 positive comments to 1
negative comment for each student. - Initially recognize and reward improvement,
rather than some absolute level of performance.
Sometimes you cant get there from here directly.
21Five Ways of Increasing Success
- Provide challenging, yet attainable, assignments
- Use Vygotskys zone-of-proximal development as
the basis for determining appropriate
assignments. This may require that different
assignments are given to different students. - Provide encouragement and assistance to those who
have struggled with assignments in the past.
22Five Ways of Increasing Success
- Establish clear and reasonable criteria of
success on assignments - When assigning a worksheet or problem set,
establish X-in-a-row correct as the criteria for
completing it (e.g., 5 in a row, 7 in a row,
etc.). - On longer assignments, distribute rubrics and
model papers or projects so help students
understand your expectations. Also, require
students to hand in pieces of the assignment or
drafts of projects on a regular basis.
23Five Ways of Increasing Success
- Give corrective feedback
- Have students correct errors and misunderstanding
when the occur so they dont accumulate and
interfere with future learning. - Provide clues to help students correct their
errors and misunderstandings on their own, rather
than correcting them for them.
24Five Ways of Increasing Success
- Provide worked out examples
- When giving students a problem set, include a
sheet on which a couple of problems are worked
out. This allows students to go back
periodically and check how theyre doing. - Help students learn to use the textbook as a
resource or reference book. Move away from
having students read chapters as though they were
reading fiction.
25Five Ways of Increasing Success
- Have students work with partners
- Have students correct each others papers as you
give the correct answers. Then, have them work
together to correct errors on each paper. - Have students engage in paired reading, stopping
periodically to ask and answer questions about
the meaning of what they read.
26Two Final Thoughts
- Even when students engage in strategies that are
ultimately self-defeating (such as withholding
effort, procrastination, cheating, and so on),
their goal is actually to protect their sense of
self-worth. - Students must be helped to see the connection
between effort and accomplishment. Work harder,
learn more.
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