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Motivation and Adolescent and Adult Readers

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Everything from finding and choosing a text, to choosing to sit ... Alexander, Jetton & Kulikowich, 1995; Hidi & McLaren, 1991; Schiefele, 1992. Text Features ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Motivation and Adolescent and Adult Readers


1
Motivation and Adolescent and Adult Readers
  • Heidi Davey
  • Hoffman Estates High School
  • Northern Illinois University
  • hdavey_at_d211.org
  • 085 7528863

2
  • Everything from finding and choosing a text, to
    choosing to sit down with the text, to enacting
    strategic reading processes, to incorporating new
    information into prior knowledge requires active
    will and therefore motivation.
  • Guthrie Wigfield, 2000

3
What We Know
Data from Research and Experience
  • General academic motivation declines throughout
    adolescence.
  • Relative motivation among peers remains
    consistent.
  • Many adolescents and adults can read, but choose
    not to they choose aliterate lives.
  • Motivation is multifaceted and the decision to
    act or not act is determined by a variety of
    individual factors and how they interact.

Gerstens, 2002 Gottfried, Fleming Gottfried,
2001 Hidi Harackiewicz, 2000 Mikulecky, 1978
4
Irish Context
  • Students at or below level 2 in PISA
  • 2000 27.9
  • 2003 43.2
  • Almost 82 get Leaving Certificate
  • Adults at or below level 2
  • Over 50

5
Aliteracy
  • the aliterate far outnumber the illiterate
    population, but have little advantage over them
  • school systems focus on skill building and
    functional literacy - when reading and writing
    are seen as requirements of the job of school
    and not valuable in their own right, students
    will choose to only read when the job demands it
  • Types of aliteracy dormant (having positive
    attitudes but too busy to read), uncommitted
    (having negative attitudes but open to the
    possibility of developing positive attitudes),
    and unmotivated (having a negative attitude that
    they predict will persist)
  • each individual develops an aliterate stance as a
    result of personal interactions with texts,
    society, and self.

Beers, 1996 Mikulecky, 1978
6
Oh, No!!
  • Whatever can we do?!?

7
General Motivational Orientation
  • Intrinsic - engagement in a reading activity by
    choice and for its own sake deep involvement
    that fulfills a desire to learn or know
  • Extrinsic - engagement in a reading activity for
    the purpose of receiving some external, usually
    surface level reward or recognition, such as
    praise or positive evaluation, or avoidance of
    punishment desire to complete the reading task
    rather than understand it

Deci, 1992, as cited in Guthrie Wigfield, 2000
and Schiefele, 1999 Guthrie Wigfield, 1999
Meece Miller, 1999 Schiefele, 1999
8
Goal Orientation
  • the purposes set for a particular reading task
  • learning goals - increased competence and
    understanding
  • performance or ego goals - external rewards such
    as praise, grades, or feelings of superiority
  • work avoidant goals - task completion involving
    as little effort as possible and with little
    concern about quality

Guthrie Wigfield, 2000 Dweck Leggett, 1988
Guthrie Wigfield, 1999
9
Interest
  • Personal interest - long lasting and relatively
    stable interest in a topic that is individual
    specific
  • Situational interest - fleeting interest
    brought about by contextual features such as the
    text, the environment, or the influence of other
    people, common across individuals
  • Seductive details - may actually draw readers
    attention away from the portions of the text that
    carry meaning, thereby interfering with learning.
  • interest is not synonymous with liking
  • affects duration and frequency of text
    involvement, the mode of learning, and the
    functional state of learner resulting in
    (arousal, effortless concentration, availability
    of processing resources) all of which improve
    learning

Hidi, 1990 Hidi Harackiewicz, 2000 Schraw,
Bruning Svoboda, 1995
10
Self Efficacy
  • the readers belief that he/she has the
    capabilities to succeed at a particular reading
    task
  • Bandura-high self-efficacy within a particular
    domain or task increases engagement, persistence,
    strategy use, task performance while decreasing
    anxiety
  • more willing to engage in more challenging tasks,
    persist longer, and have less adverse reactions
    to failure
  • set broader goals and engage more deeply in texts

Gottfried, 1985 Hidi, Berndorff Ainley, 2002
11
Self-Regulation
  • individuals can learn to engage in strategies,
    such as game creation, to make uninteresting
    tasks more interesting or enjoyable
  • training in self-regulation important in
    maintaining literacy development during
    adolescence.
  • dependent upon a belief that readers and learners
    have agency
  • is enhanced by transaction belief systems, and is
    correlated to learning goals and academic success

Baum, Owen, Oreck, 1997
12
Prior Knowledge
  • Acclimated learners tend to exhibit low
    motivation, low knowledge bases and unstructured
    learning processes
  • Proficient readers tend to exhibit ease in
    comprehension, high levels of interest and
    motivation and highly strategic reading processes
  • critical component for both motivation and
    comprehension more critical in more advanced and
    more technical texts
  • tutorials designed to increase topic knowledge
    were found to dramatically increase writing
    amount, particularly if the topics were of low
    interest

Alexander, Jetton Kulikowich, 1995 Hidi
McLaren, 1991 Schiefele, 1992
13
Text Features
  • text cohesion, clarity, structure and ease of
    comprehension were found to be the sources of
    interest most highly correlated to perceived
    interest
  • limit the insertion of greater interestingness to
    improving conveyance of the main idea rather than
    focusing on seductive details

14
Affective Responses
  • increase the chance of future engagement,
    increased competency and increased motivation
  • triggered by topic interest and results in
    greater persistence, which, in turn, is highly
    correlated to recall
  • central to the initiation of cognitive processing
    skills, prerequisite to the development of
    autonomously motivated readers
  • affective- cognitive synthesis can result in
    undivided interest and maintained attention and
    motivation
  • personal responses may be seen to help
    engagement, but they are not necessarily involved
    in the creation of new meaning.
  • significant predictors of text recall, while
    importance was not

Ainley, Hidi Berndorff, 2002 Ainley, Hillman
Hidi, 2002 Hidi Harackiewicz, 2000 Sadoski
Quast, 1990
15
Helplessness
  • helpless students respond very differently to
    failure than do mastery-oriented students
  • students who have internalized a sense of
    helplessness attribute failure internally -
    negative competency perceptions, or externally -
    the task impossible or too confusing or the
    teacher or system unfair.
  • mastery-oriented students expressed high levels
    of competency perceptions and did not make
    attributional comments at all, even when
    receiving equal amounts of failure feedback -
    verbalized problem-solution cognitions or
    enjoyment of challenge perceptions.

16
Motivational Interactions
How the factors work together
17
Our Students
What this means for the classroom
  • Struggling readers, in particular, need increases
    in motivation in order to risk effort in a
    process where they have already experienced
    repeated failure (Taylor Mcatee, 2003).
  • Transaction-based instructional models and belief
    systems are believed to increase reading
    motivation by privileging the readers role in
    the process, thereby increasing reader
    investment, the priority of the reading goals,
    and the number of cognitive processes employed
    during reading such as inferring and creating
    hypotheses.
  • Transmission models and beliefs tend to decrease
    autonomy and increase reader compliance thereby
    reducing motivation to actively engage in the
    reading process and employ cognitive processes
  • Intrinsically motivating act of social discourse
    - students have linked increased interest in and
    appreciation of books to the opportunity to
    express their opinions and have discussions about
    what they are reading (Baumann Hooten, 1999)

18
Womens Literacy
  • How do they define themselves?
  • What are their goals? Dreams?
  • What are the contexts that they value?
  • What are the practical barriers?
  • Is it collaborative?

19
Developing Literate Boys
  • Is it active?
  • Is it social?
  • Is it immediately applicable?
  • Is there immediate feedback?
  • Is there an affective connection?
  • Is it competitive?

20
Working with Adults vs. Adolescents
  • goal orientation personal vs. social
  • gratification delayed vs. immediacy
  • learning styles collaborative vs. competitive
  • participant vs. avoidant

21
Final Thoughts
reality in the classroom
  • How often one becomes involved with a topic is
    only of secondary importance. Of greater
    relevance is how a person goes about occupying
    him/herself with the topic at hand, and what
    level topic-related cognitive processing actually
    reaches
  • Each literacy act in which an individual chooses
    to engage requires the motivation to act, the
    motivation to persist in activity, and the
    motivation to engage in certain cognitive and
    affective practices that will result in
    comprehension.
  • Not only must we provide these motivational
    factors in our classrooms, more importantly, we
    must empower students to create them for
    themselves

(Schiefele Krapp, 1988, p. 11).
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