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1.8C Problem 1 Summary

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1.8 C Problem 1
(Un)Motivated to Learn

Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation
Trait theory- motivation is based on individual characteristics eg. interested in art, so
spend hours in an art gallery
State theory- motivation is a temporary state eg. have a test tomorrow so temporarily
motivated to read all about the art pieces that the test is on
Motivation usually combo- trait + state eg. study the info about the art pieces as you’re
interested in it and because you have a test on it

Amotivation- lack of any intent to act, no engagement at all, no motivation
Intrinsic motivation- motivated by natural human tendency to seek and conquer
challenges as we pursue personal interests and exercise our capabilities
 During this, don’t need incentives or punishments as satisfied by activity itself
Eg. read books about art because you love it
Extrinsic motivation- motivated causes by external factors such as rewards and
punishments
 Little to do with task itself, only care about what we will gain from completing the
activity
o Associated with:
 Negative emotions
 Poor academic achievement
 Maladaptive learning strategies
 Provides incentives to try new things
 Pushes to get started
 Helps persist to complete difficult task

Difference between ex/intrinsic motivation is locus of causality- whether the student’s
reason for the action is internal or external
o Internal locus of control, intrinsic motivation: external locus of control, extrinsic
motivation
 Division between the two is usually too either/or

Explanations of motivation
1. Activities fall in a continuum from fully self-determined (intrinsic) to full
determined by others (extrinsic)
o Four types of extrinsic motivation (based on level of internal
drive to engage)
External regulation- completely controlled by outside consequences
Introjected regulation- engage in task to avoid guilt/negative self-
perception
Identification- participating despite lack of interest as it serves larger
goal that’s personally motivating
Integrated regulation- participating in task because it’s interesting and
has extrinsic reward value
2. Motivations are not two ends of a continuum: extrinsic/intrinsic tendencies are
two independent possibilities
o Can be motivated by both types of factors at anytime

Teacher Lessons
 Encourage/nurture intrinsic motivation & extrinsic to support learning
 Both motivation types decline with age

Views

, Needs and Self-Determination (Chronologically)
1. Preliminary research: motivation is trait like needs, 3 main needs: achievement,
power, affiliation
2. Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
o Humans have seven levels of needs in hierarchy from (low level) survival -
> self-actualisation (high level)
 (self-actualisation- fulfilling one’s potential)
o Deficiency needs- four lower levels of Maslow’s Hierarchy: survival,
safety, belonging, self-esteem
 When satisfied, motivation for fulfilling them decreases
o Being needs- three higher levels of Maslow’s Hierarch: cognitive needs,
aesthetic needs, self-actualisation
 When satisfied, motivation increases as can never fully fill these
Eg. more successful you are in exams, the more you will
strive to improve further




 People don’t always behave as theory predicts
o move among different need types
o can be motivated by many needs at once
eg. feel unsafe at uni, likelier concerned with safety than learning
 views the student as a whole, with physical, emotional, intellectual needs
being interrelated
eg. hungry student likely struggles to focus
3. Self Determination Theory
o Need to feel competent and capable to have sense of autonomy and
control over our lives and be connected to others in relationships
o Need for competence- individual’s need to demonstrate ability or
mastery over tasks at hand
- Satisfaction= accomplishment, promotes self-efficacy, helps
establish learning goals for future tasks
o Need for autonomy- desire to have our own wishes and choices, rather
than external rewards or pressures determining our actions
o Need for relatedness- desire to belong and establish close emotional
bonds and attachments with others who care about use
 Like preliminary research:
Achievement > competence
Power > autonomy and control
Affiliation > relatedness
 May not be universal
Study (Jang Et Al.)- experiences of competence, autonomy, relatedness,
associated with satisfying learning experiences in Korean high
school

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