The Concept of Motivation |
<
p style=”line-height: 150%; margin-bottom: 12.0pt; margin-left: 0cm; margin-right: 0cm; margin-top: 12.0pt; margin: 12pt 0cm; text-align: justify;”>Motivation
is one of the techniques that a teacher should implore in order to enhance the
process of learning. It is a very important aspect of learning.
Scholars
have defined motivation in many ways. Santrock (2008:71), defines motivation as
processes that energise, direct and sustain behaviour, furthermore, motivation
is the process of instigating and sustaining goal-directed behaviour.
Woolfolk (2010: 376) defines motivation as “an
internal state that arouses, directs and maintains behaviour.” Santrock
(2008:414) points out that “motivation involves the processes that direct and
sustain behaviour.” It is the drive that makes us do anything and we on
it in our day to day lives. Motivation is that drive that causes one to
concentrate on school work and another not to. It also makes some mothers to
work up early in the morning while others work up late to catch up with the
order of the day.
From
all the above definitions, we can regard Motivation as a vehicle that drives one
to achieve his or her goal. It is very difficult for learners to set goals,
employ cognitive processes and then achieve the set goals if motivation is not
present in their learning process.
It is
important to note that learners are different and as such, they are motivated differently;
one type of motivation cannot work for all learners in a classroom for instance
because they vary not only in the level i.e. (how much) but also in the
orientation of motivation i.e. (what type of motivation).
There are two
types of motivation. These are Intrinsic and Extrinsic motivation. The two can
also be looked at as different views of motivation. Intrinsic motivation is a
trait centred view which implies that motivation comes from within regardless
of the situation. On the other hand, extrinsic motivation is a situation centred
which means the situation determines the level of motivation and also shapes one’s
behaviour. However, in certain instances, there can be could or should be
considered resulting from purely intrinsic or extrinsic factors and now
acknowledge the potential benefits of a more balanced view that allows for a combination of the two.
Intrinsic motivation is the internal urge that people have
to accomplish a task. It is driven by an interest or enjoyment in the task itself.
Intrinsically motivated people strive to achieve a goal regardless of the
situation. They carry out activities for inner satisfaction and not for
separable consequences.
Examples:
1.
A wife may perform
all her matrimonial duties not because of what she gets in return from the
husband but because of the inner love she has for her husband.
2.
A learner might
get all the mathematics questions correct because she or he enjoys working with
numbers.
Intrinsic
motivation, therefore, exists within an individual and does not rely on external
pressure. It gives learners pleasure to engage in activities and help them
develop skills they think is important.
·
Challenge – people are best motivated when they are working
towards personally meaningful goals whose attainment requires activity at a
continuously optimal level of difficulty.
·
Curiosity – something in the physical environment attracts the
learner’s attention or there is an optimal level of discrepancy between present
knowledge and what these could be if the learner engages in some activity.
·
Control– people have a basic tendency to want to control what
happens to them.
·
Fantasy – Learners use mental images of things and situations
that are not actually present to stimulate their behaviour.
·
Competition – Learners feel satisfied by comparing their
performance favourably with that of others.
·
Co-operation
– Learners feel satisfied by helping others to achieve their goals.
·
Recognition
– Learners feel satisfied when others recognise and appreciate their
accomplishments.
Ø Learners who are intrinsically motivated handle
assignments or tasks more willingly.
Ø They are eager to learn classroom materials as such
are likely to achieve at high levels.
Ø They process information in effective ways through
taking part in the classroom activities thereby mastering what they learn.
Ø Learners who are highly intrinsically motivated become
so absorbed in one thing that they tend to ignore other tasks.
Extrinsic
motivation is the type of motivation that comes from the outside environment of
an individual. It refers to the behaviour that is influenced by external
events such as grades, points or money. People who are extrinsically motivated
work hard to achieve goals common. Extrinsic motivators include money,
grades, the threat of punishment, praise, a crowd cheering on an individual or team
and trophies. Learners who are extrinsically motivated are compelled to do
something or act in a certain way because of factors that are external to them.
Examples:
1.
A student at CfE may
choose to study Economics because of the prestige that surrounds the field of
study and the expected high paying jobs.
2.
A learner will
work extra hard in class where their teacher awards all students who perform
very well i.e. taking positions number one, two and three in terms of
performance.
When one is
extrinsically motivated, they put in their all because they are more interested
in the result (reward).
1.
Learners do not
master what they learn because they are interested in what they earn at the
end.
2.
Little or no
learning is likely to take place in the absence of external motivators.
3.
The primary
negative effect of using extrinsic motivation is that it tends to forestall
self-regulation and scholars have warned that it runs a serious risk of
diminishing intrinsic motivation.
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