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Chapter 09.
Increasing Learner
Motivation
Chapter 09.
Increasing Learner
Motivation
Chapter 09.
Increasing Learner
Motivation
Juvrianto CJ
DEFINITION OF MOTIVATION
Motivation is a force that
energizes, sustains, and direct
behavior toward a goal
KINDS
•Intrinsic : individual's
motivational stimuli are coming
from within
•Extrinsic : individual's
motivational stimuli are coming
SOURCE EXAMPLE
• Consumable
• Entertainment
• Independence
• Adult Approval
• Peer Approval
• Competition
• Responsibility
• pop corn, soft drink
• listening to music during project
• free time
• teacher praise
• classmate asking for help
• first to finish work correctly
•Class monitor
THEORIES OF MOTIVATION
1. Behaviorism : motivation as
reinforcement
THEORIES OF MOTIVATION
2. Cognitive: the development of Self-Efficacy
self-efficacy is a positive emotional experience,
example: to solve English problem in grammar in own
• Task orientation
• effort
• persistence
• beliefs
• strategy use
• performance
High S-E
• accept challenge
• high
• persist
• feel will success
• discard unproductive
• perform higher
• avoid challenge
• low
• give up
• feel incompetence
• persist unproductive
• perform lower
Low S-
E
THEORIES OF MOTIVATION
3. Humanistic: development of the whole person
Focuses on individual pesepsion, responses to internal needs, and the
drive for self actualization/becoming all that one can be
example: to solve English problem in grammar in own
Two Elements
Student -
Teacher
relationship
Classroom
Climate
PERSONAL FACTORS IN
MOTIVATION
1. Motivation and Arousal
deals with a physical and psychological
reaction to the environment
Anxiety Performance
PERSONAL FACTORS IN
MOTIVATION
2. Motivation and Needs
deals with a real or perceived lack of
something necessary or desirable
Self actualization
Self esteem
belonging
survival
safety
Intellectual Achievement
Aesthetic Appreciation
Maslow’s
Hierarchy of
Needs
PERSONAL FACTORS IN
MOTIVATION
3. Motivation and Beliefs
deals with the psychological state in which
an individual holds
a conjecture or premise to be true
• Heavy doses of success
• Positive responses
• Reward for desirable behavioral
• Choice & personal control
• encourage
Needs,
beliefs, self
worth
PERSONAL FACTORS IN
MOTIVATION
4. Motivation and Goals
deals with an observable and
measurable end result having one or
more objectives to be achieved within a
more or less fixed timeframe
• specific
• immediate/closed hand
•Moderately difficult
Effective
goals
PERSONAL FACTORS IN
MOTIVATION
5. Motivation and Self-Regulated
Learning
deals with an observable and
measurable end result having one or
more objectives to be achieved within a
more or less fixed timeframe
• meta-cognition
• strategy use
• motivational control
Self-
Regulated
Learning
The Classroom: A Model for Promoting
Student Motivation
• Class Structure
• Teacher Characteristics
• Climate Variable
• Instructional Variables
• Combining Elements of the Model for
Promoting Student Motivation
Learning-Focused Classroom
Teacher
Characteristics
- Modeling
- Enthusiasm
- Caring
- Expectation
Climate Variables
- Order and Safety
- Success
- Task
Comprehension
- Challenge
Instructional variables
- Introductory focus
- Personalization
- Involvement
- Feedback
PROMOTING STUDENT MOTIVATION
Teacher Characteristics
Teacher Modeling : Student
motivation to learn is virtually
impossible if teachers model
distaste or lack of interest in the
topics they teach.
Teacher Expectation:
1. Emotional Support
2. Teacher effort and demands
3. Questioning
4. Feedback and Evaluation
Teacher Enthusiasm : A teacher’s
goal in projecting enthusiasm is to
induce in students the feeling that
the information is valuable and worth
learning, no to amuse or entertain
them (Good & Brophy,1994)
Teacher Caring :
1. Showing Respect and
politeness
2. Valuing individuality
3. Helping with personal
problems
4. Helping with schoolwork
5. Going the extra mile
Climate Variables
Order Safety : Classrooms as Secure
Places to learn. Provide rationales for
establishing a safe and orderly learning
environment.
Success: must be on tasks that learners
perceive as substantial and worthwhile.
1. Begin lesson with open-ended
questions.
2. Prompt students when they have
difficulty answering question
3. Use a wide variety of high – quality
Task Comprehension: Learner need
to be motivated by expecting
success and believing what they
are learning is important and
valuable by doing the task.
Challenge : A sense o f challenge is
needed if students are to
experience feelings of satisfaction,
competence, persistence and
control.
Instructional Variables
Introductory focus: Attracting
students’ attention.
The focus on introductory section is
attracting the attention and
interest of the students toward
whole section.
Feedback : Used to improve future
performance and particularly
motivating when combined with
clear student’s goal.
Personalization: Links to students’ s
life.
Attempts to make topics
meaningful by using intellectually
&/ emotionally familiar example.
Involvement: Students are actively
participating in the learning
activity.(1. using open-ended
questioning and alternatives
questioning)
Motivation and Diversity
Motivational
Problems
Possible Solution
Student Perspectives
Chapter 10. Managing
the Learning
Environment
Chapter 10. Managing
the Learning
Environment
Chapter 10. Managing
the Learning
Environment
 Topics to be discussed under Chapter 10:
19
Discipline
Established routines
School and classroom
rules
Teacher responses to
student behavior
Instruction promoting
conducive climate
20
21
22
23
24
Stage Student Characteristics
Stage 1
Kindergarten
to Grade 2
 Compliant, eager to please teachers
 Have short attention span, tire easily
 Restless, wander around room
 Require close supervision
 Break rules because they forgot
 Need rules & procedures to be explicitly taught, practiced &reinforced.
Stage 2
Grade 3 to 6
 Increasingly independent, but still like attention and affection
 Respond well to concrete incentives
 Understand needs for rules and accept consequences
 Know how far they can push
 Need rules to be reviewed and consistently and impartially reinforced
Stage 3
Grade 7 to 9
 Attempt to test independence, sometimes rebellious & capricious
 Need firm foundation of stability, explicit boundaries and predictable outcomes
 Need rules clearly stated and administered
Stage 4
Grade 10 and
above
 Behave more stable than in previous stage
 Communicate effectively adult to adult
 Respond to clear rationales for rules
25
26
27
I. Teacher characteristics
II. The Beginning of the school year
III. Essential management skills
IV. Communication with parents
I. Effective Teacher (Effective Manager)
Characteristics:
a. Caring
The foundation of positive classroom climate. A caring
teacher increase students’ motivation (Roger, 1991).
- Listens and tries to see things from student’s
perspective
- Creates safe and secure learning environment
- Helps with school work by making sense of learning task
B. Firmness
Helping students develop responsibility .
C. Democratic
Combining caring and firmness. Firmness indicates that
teachers respect themselves and caring shows respect for
other. Characteristics of a democratic teacher (Duranna) :
- Her/his class was orderly and limit were established
- Students had input to the rules.
- She/he provided leadership in both maintaining order and
guiding learning.
- She/he used her/his learning activity to promote a sense
of learning and belonging.
II. Beginning of the School Year
 A critical period during which classroom
behavior patterns are established (W. Doyle,
1986)
 Stresses the precedent setting nature of the
first day (Evertson (1987)
III. Essential Management Skills
 Organization
- Having material and demonstration prepared in
advance
- Starting on time
- Having well-established routines
- Making transitions smoothly and quickly
 Lesson movement
• Withiness
Teacher knows what is going on in all parts of the
classroom all the time and communicates this
knowing both verbally and nonverbally (Job
Kounin 1970)
• Overlapping
Relating to the withitness, describe the
teacher’s ability to attend to two incidents at
the same time without focusing exclusively on
either one (Kounin, 1970)
• Momentum
The force and flow the lesson (Kounin, 1970)
 Communication with Learners
. Verbal-non verbal congruence
. I-message
. Active listening
• Communication : Encouraging parental involvement
 Benefits of communication
- Higher academic achievement
- More positive attitudes and behavior
- Better attendance
- Greater willingness to do homework
 Barrier to parental involvement
- Economic barrier
- Language barrier
Strategies for Involving Parents
- Early communication
- Maintaining communication
• Behavioral approaches to intervention
o Decisions about behavioral system :
- Do the consequence
- Individual or group consequence
o Assertive discipline: A structure approach to
consequences
- Stating rules and describing specific positive
and negative consequences in their
management system.
Guidelines for successful intervention
oBrevity
o Follow-through
o Consistency
o Avoiding arguments
 Intervention continuum
oIgnoring inappropriate behavior
o praising desired behavior
o Using desist
o Applying
Serious Management Problems: Violence
and Aggression
 Short-term strategies
- The behavior must be stopped
- The victims need to be protected
 Long-term strategies
- Place the problem in a large contexts and
attempt to deal with possible cause
39
Thank You

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INCREASING LEARNERS MOTIVATION

  • 1. Chapter 09. Increasing Learner Motivation Chapter 09. Increasing Learner Motivation Chapter 09. Increasing Learner Motivation Juvrianto CJ
  • 2. DEFINITION OF MOTIVATION Motivation is a force that energizes, sustains, and direct behavior toward a goal KINDS •Intrinsic : individual's motivational stimuli are coming from within •Extrinsic : individual's motivational stimuli are coming
  • 3. SOURCE EXAMPLE • Consumable • Entertainment • Independence • Adult Approval • Peer Approval • Competition • Responsibility • pop corn, soft drink • listening to music during project • free time • teacher praise • classmate asking for help • first to finish work correctly •Class monitor THEORIES OF MOTIVATION 1. Behaviorism : motivation as reinforcement
  • 4. THEORIES OF MOTIVATION 2. Cognitive: the development of Self-Efficacy self-efficacy is a positive emotional experience, example: to solve English problem in grammar in own • Task orientation • effort • persistence • beliefs • strategy use • performance High S-E • accept challenge • high • persist • feel will success • discard unproductive • perform higher • avoid challenge • low • give up • feel incompetence • persist unproductive • perform lower Low S- E
  • 5. THEORIES OF MOTIVATION 3. Humanistic: development of the whole person Focuses on individual pesepsion, responses to internal needs, and the drive for self actualization/becoming all that one can be example: to solve English problem in grammar in own Two Elements Student - Teacher relationship Classroom Climate
  • 6. PERSONAL FACTORS IN MOTIVATION 1. Motivation and Arousal deals with a physical and psychological reaction to the environment Anxiety Performance
  • 7. PERSONAL FACTORS IN MOTIVATION 2. Motivation and Needs deals with a real or perceived lack of something necessary or desirable Self actualization Self esteem belonging survival safety Intellectual Achievement Aesthetic Appreciation Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
  • 8. PERSONAL FACTORS IN MOTIVATION 3. Motivation and Beliefs deals with the psychological state in which an individual holds a conjecture or premise to be true • Heavy doses of success • Positive responses • Reward for desirable behavioral • Choice & personal control • encourage Needs, beliefs, self worth
  • 9. PERSONAL FACTORS IN MOTIVATION 4. Motivation and Goals deals with an observable and measurable end result having one or more objectives to be achieved within a more or less fixed timeframe • specific • immediate/closed hand •Moderately difficult Effective goals
  • 10. PERSONAL FACTORS IN MOTIVATION 5. Motivation and Self-Regulated Learning deals with an observable and measurable end result having one or more objectives to be achieved within a more or less fixed timeframe • meta-cognition • strategy use • motivational control Self- Regulated Learning
  • 11. The Classroom: A Model for Promoting Student Motivation • Class Structure • Teacher Characteristics • Climate Variable • Instructional Variables • Combining Elements of the Model for Promoting Student Motivation
  • 12. Learning-Focused Classroom Teacher Characteristics - Modeling - Enthusiasm - Caring - Expectation Climate Variables - Order and Safety - Success - Task Comprehension - Challenge Instructional variables - Introductory focus - Personalization - Involvement - Feedback PROMOTING STUDENT MOTIVATION
  • 13. Teacher Characteristics Teacher Modeling : Student motivation to learn is virtually impossible if teachers model distaste or lack of interest in the topics they teach. Teacher Expectation: 1. Emotional Support 2. Teacher effort and demands 3. Questioning 4. Feedback and Evaluation Teacher Enthusiasm : A teacher’s goal in projecting enthusiasm is to induce in students the feeling that the information is valuable and worth learning, no to amuse or entertain them (Good & Brophy,1994) Teacher Caring : 1. Showing Respect and politeness 2. Valuing individuality 3. Helping with personal problems 4. Helping with schoolwork 5. Going the extra mile
  • 14. Climate Variables Order Safety : Classrooms as Secure Places to learn. Provide rationales for establishing a safe and orderly learning environment. Success: must be on tasks that learners perceive as substantial and worthwhile. 1. Begin lesson with open-ended questions. 2. Prompt students when they have difficulty answering question 3. Use a wide variety of high – quality Task Comprehension: Learner need to be motivated by expecting success and believing what they are learning is important and valuable by doing the task. Challenge : A sense o f challenge is needed if students are to experience feelings of satisfaction, competence, persistence and control.
  • 15. Instructional Variables Introductory focus: Attracting students’ attention. The focus on introductory section is attracting the attention and interest of the students toward whole section. Feedback : Used to improve future performance and particularly motivating when combined with clear student’s goal. Personalization: Links to students’ s life. Attempts to make topics meaningful by using intellectually &/ emotionally familiar example. Involvement: Students are actively participating in the learning activity.(1. using open-ended questioning and alternatives questioning)
  • 17. Chapter 10. Managing the Learning Environment Chapter 10. Managing the Learning Environment Chapter 10. Managing the Learning Environment
  • 18.  Topics to be discussed under Chapter 10:
  • 19. 19 Discipline Established routines School and classroom rules Teacher responses to student behavior Instruction promoting conducive climate
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  • 24. 24 Stage Student Characteristics Stage 1 Kindergarten to Grade 2  Compliant, eager to please teachers  Have short attention span, tire easily  Restless, wander around room  Require close supervision  Break rules because they forgot  Need rules & procedures to be explicitly taught, practiced &reinforced. Stage 2 Grade 3 to 6  Increasingly independent, but still like attention and affection  Respond well to concrete incentives  Understand needs for rules and accept consequences  Know how far they can push  Need rules to be reviewed and consistently and impartially reinforced Stage 3 Grade 7 to 9  Attempt to test independence, sometimes rebellious & capricious  Need firm foundation of stability, explicit boundaries and predictable outcomes  Need rules clearly stated and administered Stage 4 Grade 10 and above  Behave more stable than in previous stage  Communicate effectively adult to adult  Respond to clear rationales for rules
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  • 28. I. Teacher characteristics II. The Beginning of the school year III. Essential management skills IV. Communication with parents
  • 29. I. Effective Teacher (Effective Manager) Characteristics: a. Caring The foundation of positive classroom climate. A caring teacher increase students’ motivation (Roger, 1991). - Listens and tries to see things from student’s perspective - Creates safe and secure learning environment - Helps with school work by making sense of learning task
  • 30. B. Firmness Helping students develop responsibility . C. Democratic Combining caring and firmness. Firmness indicates that teachers respect themselves and caring shows respect for other. Characteristics of a democratic teacher (Duranna) : - Her/his class was orderly and limit were established - Students had input to the rules. - She/he provided leadership in both maintaining order and guiding learning. - She/he used her/his learning activity to promote a sense of learning and belonging.
  • 31. II. Beginning of the School Year  A critical period during which classroom behavior patterns are established (W. Doyle, 1986)  Stresses the precedent setting nature of the first day (Evertson (1987)
  • 32. III. Essential Management Skills  Organization - Having material and demonstration prepared in advance - Starting on time - Having well-established routines - Making transitions smoothly and quickly  Lesson movement • Withiness Teacher knows what is going on in all parts of the classroom all the time and communicates this knowing both verbally and nonverbally (Job Kounin 1970)
  • 33. • Overlapping Relating to the withitness, describe the teacher’s ability to attend to two incidents at the same time without focusing exclusively on either one (Kounin, 1970) • Momentum The force and flow the lesson (Kounin, 1970)  Communication with Learners . Verbal-non verbal congruence . I-message . Active listening
  • 34. • Communication : Encouraging parental involvement  Benefits of communication - Higher academic achievement - More positive attitudes and behavior - Better attendance - Greater willingness to do homework  Barrier to parental involvement - Economic barrier - Language barrier
  • 35. Strategies for Involving Parents - Early communication - Maintaining communication
  • 36. • Behavioral approaches to intervention o Decisions about behavioral system : - Do the consequence - Individual or group consequence o Assertive discipline: A structure approach to consequences - Stating rules and describing specific positive and negative consequences in their management system.
  • 37. Guidelines for successful intervention oBrevity o Follow-through o Consistency o Avoiding arguments  Intervention continuum oIgnoring inappropriate behavior o praising desired behavior o Using desist o Applying
  • 38. Serious Management Problems: Violence and Aggression  Short-term strategies - The behavior must be stopped - The victims need to be protected  Long-term strategies - Place the problem in a large contexts and attempt to deal with possible cause