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Motivation

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3 Motivation Motivation Guidelines for Building Motivation Goal orientation Primary attributions Recognize the interaction of personal and situational factors ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Motivation


1
3
Motivation
Motivation
2
What IsMotivation?
Motivation is the direction and intensity of
effort.
Direction of effort Whether an individual seeks
out, approaches, or is attracted to a situation.
Intensity of effort How much effort an
individual puts forth in a situation.
What motivates and guides your life? What
motivates you in sport/exercise?
3
Views of Motivation
Participant orTraitCentered View
Motivated behavior is primarily a function of
individual characteristics (e.g., needs, goals,
personality).
4
Views of Motivation
SituationCenteredView
Motivated behavior is primarily determined by
situational factors.
5
Interactional View of Motivation
6
Major Motives for Sport Participants
Improving skills
Having fun
Being with friends
Experiencing thrills and excitement
Achieving success competitive outlet
Developing fitness
7
Major Motives for Exercise Participants
Joining
Continuing
Health factors
Enjoyment
Weight loss
Like instructor
Fitness
Like type of activity
Self-challenge
Social factors
Feeling better
8
What Are Achievement Motivation and
Competitiveness?
Achievement motivation
An individuals orientation to strive for task
success, persist in the face of failure, and
experience pride in accomplishments. (Gill,
1986)
9
Why AchievementMotivation Is Important
Achievement motivation influences
choice of activities
effort to pursue goals
intensity of effort
persistence (in the face of failure)
10
Competitiveness
A disposition to strive for satisfaction when
making comparisons with some standard of
excellence in the presence of evaluative others.
(Martens, 1986)
11
What Are Achievement Motivation and
Competitiveness?
Keys
Competitiveness Social evaluation or comparison
Achievement motivation Self-comparison or
achievement
12
Theories ofAchievement Motivation
13
Early Theories ofAchievement Motivation
Instinct Theory Drive Theory Need achievement
theory
14
Need Achievement Theory
15
Contemporary Theories ofAchievement Motivation
Self-Efficacy Theory
Attribution theory
Achievement goal theory
Competence motivation theory
16
SelfEfficacy Theory... Bandura
SelfEfficacy
The perception of ones ability to perform a
task successfully is really a situation-specific
form of self-confidence.
17
SelfEfficacy Sources
18
Potential Sources of Influence Motivation Among
Elite Athletes
  • Gould et al. Study interviews of 10
    current/former Olympic champions, 1980 - 1998
    games (28/32 medals won gold)
  • used triangulation (S.O.s coaches)
  • Sources of Influence

19
Attribution Theory
Attributions
How people explain their successes and failures
Attribution categories
Stability
Locus of causality
Locus of control
20
Attribution Theory
Weiners basic attribution categories
21
Attributions and Achievement Motivation
Psychological result
Attributions
Stable
Increased expectation of success
Increased pride or shame
Internal cause
In ones control
Increased motivation
22
Achievement Goal Theory
Achievementgoals
Outcome goal orientation (or competitive goal
orientation)
Task goal orientation (or mastery goal
orientation)
23
Achievement Goal Theory

24
Achievement Goal Theory
Keys
Focus extra attention on task-oriented goals.
Foster mastery or task motivational climates.
25
Competence Motivation Theory (Cognitive
Evaluation Theory)
26
What Theories of Achievement Motivation Tell Us
About High Achievers
Motivationalorientation
High motivation to achieve success
Low motivation to achieve failure
Focuses on the pride of success
27
What Theories of Achievement Motivation Tell Us
About High Achievers
Attributions
Ascribes success to ______ __ and _____________
factors within ones control
Ascribes failure to _____________ __factors
outside ones control
Goalsadopted
Usually adopts _______ goals
28
What Theories of Achievement Motivation Tell Us
About High Achievers
Perceived competence/ control
Has high perceived competence and feels that
achievement is within his or her control
Task choice
Seeks out ________________ and able
competitors/tasks
Performance
Performs _______ in evaluative conditions
29
Intrinsic Motivation and Extrinsic Rewards
Intrinsic motivation Striving inwardly to be
competent and self-determining. (e.g., geena
davis Its just fun to see how good you can
get.)
Basic question Do extrinsic rewards undermine
intrinsic motivation?
Some research shows .
30
Intrinsic Motivation and Extrinsic Rewards
Cognitive EvaluationTheory
How rewards are _________ is critical in
determining whether intrinsic motivation
increases or decreases.
31
Cognitive Evaluation Theory
Controlling aspects Rewards that are perceived
to control a person or suggest the person is
_____________ decrease intrinsic motivation.
Informational aspects Rewards that increase
information and provide __________ feedback about
competence increase intrinsic motivation.
(continued)
32
Cognitive Evaluation Theory
Success and failure Competitive success
increases intrinsic motivation, whereas
competitive failure decreases intrinsic
motivation.
Function and significance How a reward affects
intrinsic motivation depends on whether the
recipient perceives it to be more controlling or
more informational.
33
How Extrinsic Rewards Affect Intrinsic Motivation
in Sport
Scholarships Athletic scholarships can either
decrease or increase athletes levels of
intrinsic motivation, depending on which is more
emphasizedthe controlling or informational
aspects.
34
Guidelines for Building Motivation
Guideline 1
  • Recognize the interaction of personal and
    situational factors influencing achievement
    behavior.

Goal orientation
Primary attributions
Situations approached or avoided
35
Guidelines for Building Motivation
Guideline 2
People have multiple motives for involvement.
Understand why people participate in physical
activity.
People participate for more than one reason.
People may have competing motives for
involvement.
People have both shared and unique motives.
Motives change over time.
36
Guidelines for Building Motivation
Guideline 3
Change the environment to enhance motivation.
Environment may be competitive or recreational.
Provide for multiple motives and opportunities.
Adjust to individuals within groups.
37
Guideline 4
Guidelines for Building Motivation
Leaders influence motivation, directly and
indirectly.
38
Guidelines for Building Motivation
Guideline 5
Use behavior modification (contingency
management) to change undesirable participant
motives. Systematic application of the basic
principles of reinforcement to change behavior
39
Guidelines for Building Motivation
  • Emphasize mastery (task) goals and downplay
    outcome goals.
  • Monitor and correct inappropriate attributions.
  • Praise, reinforce liberally
  • Determine when competitive goals are appropriate.
  • Enhance feelings of competence and control.
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