Inspiring Students’ Motivation to Learn Robin Pappas Center for Teaching and Learning.

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Transcript of Inspiring Students’ Motivation to Learn Robin Pappas Center for Teaching and Learning.

Inspiring Students’ Motivation to Learn

Robin PappasCenter for Teaching and Learning

Pre-Assessment: Habits of Mind

Introductions and Overview

How did the difference in your motivation impact your learning?

What made the difference in inspiring (or diminishing) your motivation to learn?

Motivation

There are three things to remember about education. The first is motivation. The second one is motivation. The third one is motivation. (Terrel Bell, U.S. Secretary of Education, 1981-85)

One thing that is most certain about the past as well as the future is the importance of motivation in the practice of education. (Maehr and Meyer, 1997)

Motivation as an outcome is important to all students in the classroom all the time.(Ames, 1990)

Motivation: Definition

Personal investment an individual has in reaching a desired state or outcome

• Focuses on behaviors, not innate or fixed characteristics • Attends to processes and causes• Investment metaphor suggests all persons possess resources • May be seen in action taken and affect expressed

Maehr and Meyer, 1997.

Motivation: 2 Central Concepts and Their Context

Values

Expectancies

WGAD?!?

GOALS

Will it work out? Can I really do it?

Goals

Performance Goals versus Learning Goals

Elliot, 1999; Elliot and McGregor, 2001; Valle et al., 2003; Ford, 1992

Expectancies

• Outcome Expectancies: specific actions will bring about a desired outcome (Carver and Scheier, 1998)

• Efficacy Expectancies: one is capable of identifying, organizing, initiating, and executing a course of action that will bring about a desired outcome (Bandura, 1997)

Attributions and Expectancy

Habits of Mind pre-assessment

• Stable (but not fixed)• Controllable (via own behaviors)• Temporary, i.e., subject to learner behavior

Ames, 1990; Dweck and Leggett, 1988

Environment

Less supportive More supportive

Environment and Motivation

Environment is NOT SUPPORTIVE

Environment is SUPPORTIVE

DON’T SEE Value

SEE Value DON’T SEE Value

SEE Value

Student’s efficacy is…

LOW

HIGH

Rejecting Hopeless Rejecting Fragile

Motivated

EvadingDefiantEvading

Adapted from Ambrose et al., How Learning Works, 2010.

To Establish Value

• Connect material to students’ interests• Provide authentic, real-world tasks• Show relevance between content and students’ current

academic lives• Demonstrate relevance of higher-level skills to students’

professional lives• Identify and reward what you value (syllabus, class

discussion/lecture, feedback, modeling, assessments aligned to course objectives)

• Show your own passion and enthusiasm for the discipline

To Build Positive Expectancies

• Ensure alignment of learning objectives, assessments, and instructional strategies

• Identify appropriate level of challenge• Create assessments that provide an appropriate level of

challenge• Provide early success opportunities• Articulate expectations: desired learning for the course and

what students are expected to do to demonstrate that learning• Provide rubrics• Describe effective study strategies

To Build Value and Expectancy

• Provide flexibility and control

• Give students opportunities to reflect

• Attend explicitly to course climate

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Course Climate

• Intellectual• Social• Emotional• Physical

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Course Climate

CentralizingMarginalizing

Explicit ExplicitImplicit Implicit

De Surra and Church, 1994

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Course Climate—Content

CentralizingMarginalizing

Explicit ExplicitImplicit Implicit

Exclusive Curriculum Exceptional Outsider Transformed Curriculum

De Surra and Church, 1994; Marchesani and Adams, 1992

Establishing and Maintaining Supportive Course Climate

• Work across cultures and use examples, etc., to relate to people from diverse backgrounds and statuses

• Establish ground rules for interaction

• Use syllabus and first day of class to set tone for climate

• Set up processes to get feedback on climate

Ambrose et al., 2010; Ames, 1990