Title: Social Cognitive View of Motivation
1Social Cognitive View of Motivation
2Social Cognitive Theory
- Created by Bandura
- A perspective in which people function as
anticipative, purposive, and self-evaluating
proactive regulators of their motivation and
actions, (Banks, 269)
3Banduras Social Cognitive Theory
- The factors that form the core of this theory
include - Intentionality
- Forethought
- Self-reactiveness
- Self-reflectiveness
4Social Cognitive Theory Model
- Motivation in this model includes
- Planning
- Setting goals
- Anticipating likely outcomes
- Setting personal standards
- A variety of self-regulating mechanisms
5Self-Regulating Mechanisms
- Focus on monitoring and reflecting about the
actions that increase self-worth and personal
satisfaction - These mechanisms try to avoid actions that may
decrease self-worth and/or personal satisfaction
6Two Aspects of Social Cognitive Theory
- There are two aspects in the Social Cognitive
Theory - Self-efficacy
- Vicarious learning
7Self - Efficacy
- The key link between goal-setting and
self-regulatory features - A prediction about how successful one will be on
a particular task - Based on previous performance and anticipated
goals, beliefs, and expectations
8Self Efficacy
- What can lead to a lower sense self-efficacy?
- Recurrent failures
- These failures tend to affect if a student will
undertake a task - These failures also lead a student to avoid
asking help from teacher and peers
9What can teachers do to help self-efficacy?
- INTERVENTION!
- Teachers can
- Help students set realistic and attainable goals
- Help students develop metacognitive strategies
- Provide appropriate models
- Give constructive feedback
10Vicarious Learning
- This type of learning is also known as
observational learning - This type of learning uses peer modeling
- Occurs when a student successfully completes a
task and receives positive feedback from the
teacher - The other students who have observed the praise
will be motivated to complete the same task
11Vicarious Learning and Reinforcement
- It was believed that the likelihood of a behavior
being repeated is increased with the use of
reinforcement - Reinforcement can be given both directly and
vicariously - It is now believed that reinforcement provides
information about the previous behavior
12Types of Motivation
- There are two types of motivation in the social
cognitive theory model - Extrinsic Motivation
- Intrinsic Motivation
13Extrinsic Motivation
- The idea given that all behavior is a result of
some type of external reinforcement - Supporters of extrinsic motivation have come to
the conclusion that some students need external
rewards to maintain their levels of motivation - Opponents of extrinsic motivation have come to
the conclusion that when rewards are used,
teachers are asserting control over their
students - When rewards are used continuously, any sense of
intrinsic motivation will be decreased
14Intrinsic Motivation
- The view that behaviors are chosen as a goal by
the student - Based on the idea that students can be motivated
by an interest in mastering a task and by a sense
of curiosity
15Motivation and the Flow Experience
- Connected with intrinsic motivation
- Flow Experience is what people feel when they
actively enjoy what they are doing - The flow is the persons reward
16The Flow Experience
- The flow experience can differ between people
- The flow experience is very rare
- Fewer than 10 of people report it happening
daily - For a task to be flow, both the challenge and the
skill of the task must be high
17The Flow Experience Research
- Research was done about the amount of flow
experience in teenagers in the United States and
in Italy - The findings included
- Students in Italy experienced flow more often
than those in the United States - Talented higher-achieving students experienced
flow more often than equally talented,
lower-achieving students
18Teachers and Motivating Students
- All teachers are faced with the problem of
motivating students - Teachers must remember that no one type of
motivation will motivate ALL students - Teachers must use a variety of motivational
procedures - In the classroom, teachers must know what
motivates individual students and then tailor
instruction and assessment to the students needs
and motives
19Motivation, Assessments, and Development
- Motivation is affected by maturation
- A childs idea about motivation changes as he/she
becomes older and progresses through school - Children become more realistic as they become
older - Children begin to notice the difference between
higher-achieving students and lower-achieving
students as early as the fifth grade
20Developmentally Appropriate Practices
- Involve the relationships between motivation,
assessments, and development - Developmentally appropriate practices include
instructional and assessment practices designed
to meet the appropriate developmental level of
each individual student - Based on the idea biological and experiential
maturity (readiness rather than age) should
determine the level of instructional and
assessment practices - Very important in the primary grades, where a
wide range of maturity levels exists
21What can Teachers do?
- When dealing with developmentally appropriate
practices, teachers can and should - Use a variety of both informal and formal
assessments - Use the appropriate instructional materials for
each child after the developmental level has been
discovered
22Conclusion
- Students, with or without the help of others,
should create goals that can and will play a part
in motivation - Students need to have a positive self-efficacy so
they will achieve these goals - Motivation is dependent on the person, not all
people are motivated by the same things - Students can be motivated both intrinsically and
extrinsically - Teachers must develop assessments and
instructional activities based on the levels of
their students
23References
- Banks, S. R. (2005). Classroom Assessment Issues
and Practices. Boston, MA Pearson .