Motivation: Cultural Influences - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Motivation: Cultural Influences

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Motivation: Cultural Influences EDU 330: Educational Psychology Daniel Moos, PhD Motivation: Cultural Differences (I) Anglo-American children More interested when ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Motivation: Cultural Influences


1
Motivation Cultural Influences
  • EDU 330 Educational Psychology
  • Daniel Moos, PhD

2
Motivation Cultural Differences (I)
  • Anglo-American children
  • More interested when allowed to make a personal
    choice in learning (Iyenggar Lepp, 1999)
  • Asian children
  • More motivated when trusted others (authority
    figures/peers) make choice for them (Iyenggar
    Lepp, 1999)
  • Chinese children
  • More motivated when do schoolwork in order to
    please parents and teachers (in contrast to
    Western students engage in self-handicapping
    other maladaptive outcomes (Cheng Lam, 2013)

3
Motivation Cultural Differences (II)
  • Pursuit of avoidant goals
  • Negative predictor of well-being in US
    (individualistic culture)
  • Non (or even Positive) predictor for South
    Koreans and Russians (collectivist culture
    Elliot et al. 2001)
  • Western theorists of motivation argue that higher
    the self concept, higher the academic achievement
    (Schunk Pajares, 2009)
  • East Asian students tend to have lower ability
    beliefs, but higher academic performance than
    Western students (Stevenson et al. 1990)
  • Western students who have higher opinion of
    abilities typically do worse on international
    comparative achievement tests compared to Asian
    students (Kaiser at al. 2002)

4
Personal Investment (PI) Theory Introduction
  • Personal Investment Theory
  • Focuses on how persons choose to invest energy,
    talent, and time in particular tasks
  • Does NOT assume people from a given culture will
    choose to invest effort in same set of activities
  • Does NOT assume that they will invest for same
    reasons

5
Personal Investment (PI) Theory Assumptions (I)
  • Assumes whether a person will invest energy
    depends on interaction between
  • Sense of self (who am I?)
  • Perceived goals (what do I want to achieve?)
  • Facilitating condition (what is the environment
    like?)

6
Personal Investment (PI) Theory Assumptions (II)
  • Sense of self (who am I?)
  • Academic self-concept
  • Sense of purpose
  • Self-reliance

7
Personal Investment (PI) Theory Assumptions (III)
  • Perceived goals (what do I want to achieve?)
  • Task/mastery goals (increase ones understanding)
  • Ego/performance goals (wanting to do better than
    others)
  • Social solidarity goals (wanting to enhance a
    sense of belongingness)
  • Extrinsic reward goals (wanting to get
    praise/rewards)

8
Personal Investment (PI) Theory Assumptions (IV)
  • Facilitating condition (what is the environment
    like?)
  • Social-contextual environment
  • Parental support
  • Teacher support
  • Negative peer influence

9
Personal Investment (PI) Theory Ending question
  • Think of a instance where your decision to commit
    energy, time, and effort reflects the core
    assumptions of the PI theory
  • Sense of self (who am I?)
  • Perceived goals (what do I want to achieve?)
  • Facilitating condition (what is the environment
    like?)
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