Title: Blue Sky State University EPSY 350: Instructional Design
1Blue Sky State UniversityEPSY 350 Instructional
Design
Motivational Considerations in the Design of
Instruction
Applying Theories of Motivation to Improve
Learning Performance
Anthony R. Artino, Jr. Department of Educational
Psychology
2Are You Motivated?
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www.cartoonbank.com
3Where Weve Been
and Where Were Going
Systematic Design of Instruction
Theories of Learning
AnalyzeTask
Goals/Objectives
ConstructivistPerspectives
AnalyzeContext
Design Instructional Strategies
Theories of Motivation
ConsiderMotivationin the Designof Strategies
AnalyzeLearners
For VariousLearningOutcomes
- Expectancy-Value Models
- Social Cognitive Theory
- Attribution Theory
- Goal Orientation Theory
- Self-Determination Intrinsic Motivation
- Interest Affect
KellersARCS Modellinks motivationtheory to ID
4Overview
- What is Motivation?
- Why Should We Care?
- Motivational Influences on Learning
Performance - Theories of Motivation
- Review of Contemporary Theories
- Instructional Implications
- Systematic Motivational Design
- Kellers ARCS Model
5Motivation Defined
- How would you define motivation? What is it?
- Derived from Latin verb movere (to move)
- There are many definitions (product process)
- what moved a resting organism to a state of
activity (Weiner, 1990, p. 617) - a willingness, desire, or condition of arousal
or activation (Anderman Wolters, 2006, p. 369) - the process whereby goal-directed activity is
instigated and sustained (Pintrich Schunk,
2002, p. 5) - an internal state that arouses, directs, and
maintains behavior (Woofolk, 2007, p. 372)
6But There is Disagreement
- It depends on your theoretical perspective
- Drive Theory
- Internal forces act to maintain homeostasis
- Behavioral Theories
- Reinforcements sustain or increase behaviors
- Humanistic Theories
- Individuals have choices and seek control over
their lives - Cognitive Social Cognitive Theories
- Students cognition (mental structures and
processing of information) guide their motivation - Emphasis on students thoughts, beliefs, and
emotions - (Pintrich Schunk, 2002)
7How Do We Know When Someone Is Motivated?
- We infer it from behavioral indicators
- Choice of Tasks
- Latency
- How long it takes before an individual initiates
activity - Effort
- How hard a person works at the activity
- Persistence
- How long the individual is willing to work at the
activity - Achievement
- Students who engage in a task, expend effort, and
persist are likely to achieve at a higher level - (Graham Weiner, 1996 Pintrich Schunk, 2002)
Image retrieved February 3, 2007, from
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/motivation.jpg
8Why Should We Care?How is Motivation Related to
Learning?
- Motivation can influence what, when, and how we
learn (Pintrich Schunk, 2002, p. 6) - Students who are motivated
- Attend more carefully to instruction
- Mentally organize, rehearse, elaborate info to
be learned - Check their level of understanding
- Ask for help when they dont understand
- Taken together, these activities improve learning
and performance!
Mediating Cognitive Behavioral Activities
and the relationship is reciprocal
9Contemporary Theories of Motivation
TheirImplications for Instruction
Our Focus Today
- Expectancy-Value Models
- Social Cognitive Theory
- Attribution Theory
- Goal Orientation Theory
- Self-Determination Intrinsic Motivation
- Interest Affect
Retrieved February 2, 2007, from
www.cartoonbank.com
10Instructional Vignette
- Mary Im really enjoying this course. Its very
interesting, and I think it will be very useful
for me in my future career. I hope to be a
doctor someday! - Jim Really? I think its extremely boring.
Besides, Im not really getting all the
concepts, and I dont think Im going to do very
well on the test. I prefer history class to this
stuff. - Mary Well, Im not very good in history. Its
just not that important to me. Ill stick with
math and science. - (Adapted from Pintrich Schunk, 2002)
- What kinds of things are these students
discussing? - How do they relate to motivation?
11Expectancy-Value ModelsTheory Overview
InterestIm interestedin this topic
CostIf I do this Icannot do that
-
Achievement Behaviors Students choice
behaviors, cognitive engagement, persistence,
and performance
ExpectancyAm I able to do well in this task?
Task ValueWhy should I do this task?
X
Utility ValueThis topic isuseful for me
ImportanceThis topic isimportant to me
(Eccles Wigfield, 2002)
12Expectancy-Value ModelsInstructional Implications
- Expectancy
- Help students maintain accurate but high
expectations for success - Use examples of students past success
- Use peer models
- Build students confidence
- Provide opportunities for success (mastery
experiences) - Give accurate feedback
- Emphasize that competence is changeable and
controllable
- Task Value
- Make value explicit
- Embed tasks in real-world (maybe even
controversial) issues - Discuss importance and utility value as it
relates to these issues - Model personal interest and value
- Activate interest
- Provide opportunities for choice and control w/in
instruction
(Bransford et al., 2000 Pintrich Schunk, 2002)
13Social Cognitive TheoryOverview
- Key Theoretical Components
- Self-Efficacy
- beliefs in ones capability to organize and
execute the courses of action required to produce
given attainments (Bandura, 1997, p. 3) - Developed through
- Mastery experiences
- Vicarious experiences
- Verbal persuasion
- Physiological states
- Social Modeling
- Self-Regulated Learning
Person(cognition, affect, motivational beliefs,
biological events)
reciprocal causation
Environment (physical socio-cultural)
Behavior
Behavior is a product of both self-generated and
external sources of influence (Bandura, 1986,
p. 454)
14Social Cognitive TheoryInstructional Implications
- Build self-efficacy
- Provide opportunities for enactive mastery
experiences - Employ successful models (see next slide)
- Give positive, yet realistic feedback
- Overly optimistic feedback tends to be
ineffective - Embed realistic, challenging, proximal goals into
instruction
15Social Cognitive TheoryInstructional
Implications cont
- Use social modeling
- Competent, credible, enthusiastic, and similar
models - Model personal interest and value (instructor
enthusiasm) - Develop self-regulated learning skills
- Explicit instructional prompts for
- Rehearsal, organization, and elaboration
- Provide chances for self-appraisal and reflection
- Model metacognition
- Make visible the instructors thinking processes
- (Driscoll, 2005)
16Instructional Vignette
- Roy is an average student, but algebra isnt his
best subject. Sam is one of the best students and
usually gets As and occasionally Bs on his
algebra assignments. - The teacher returns a recent assignment to both
students. Roy didnt do too well, and as he looks
it over it he thinks, What did I do wrong here?
I just dont get this stuff. It seems so abstract
and its hard to see how it relates to anything
meaningful. I just cant do this, its too hard
for me. I think Im just not cut out for math. - Sam also had problems on the homework. As he
reviews it, he thinks, I dont understand this,
so Ill have to ask the teacher about this
problem. Maybe Im just not studying hard enough.
Ill have to go back to my notes and review this
again. He increases the amount of time he spends
studying for algebra. - (Adapted from Pintrich Schunk, 2002)
- What kinds of things are these students
discussing? - How do they relate to motivation?
17Attribution TheoryOverview
Locus
Internal
External
Controllable
Uncontrollable
Controllable
Uncontrollable
Stable
- Instructor bias/favoritism
- Ease/difficulty of school or course
requirements
Stability
- Health onday of exam
- Mood
Unstable
- Skills/knowledge
- Temporary orsituational efforton exam
- Help from friends/instructor
(Adapted from Weiner, 1986, as cited in Pintrich
Schunk, 2002)
- Achievement attributions classified by
- Locus (internal/external to the person)
- Stability (relatively stable/unstable over time)
- Controllability (controllable/uncontrollable by
the person)
18Attribution TheoryInstructional Implications
- Provide accurate feedback
- Deemphasize ability
- The Im just not smart attitude
- An emphasis on effort after student failures
usually leads to more adaptive attributes - Effort is unstable, internal, and controllable
(Schunk Zimmerman, 2006) - If effort was high, emphasize lack of skills/
knowledge - Unstable factors
- Can be learned with effort
19Goal OrientationTheory Overview
- Explicitly developed to explain achievement
behavior - Why do students engage in achievement behaviors
and how they approach academic tasks?
Avoid
Approach
- Focus on mastering task,learning, understanding
- Use of standards of self-improvement, progress,
deep understanding
- Focus on avoiding misunderstanding
- Use of standards of not being wrong, not doing
itincorrectly
Mastery Orientation
- Focus on avoiding inferiority, not looking
stupid or dumb in comparison to others - Use of normative standardsof not being lowest
performer
- Focus on being superior,besting others, being
the smartest - Use of normative standardssuch as getting the
highest grade, being top performer
Performance Orientation
(Adapted from Pintrich Schunk, 2002)
20Goal OrientationInstructional Implications
- Create positive goal structures
- Emphasize mastery (learning and understanding),
not performance - Students apt to adopt mastery-orientation
(Anderman Wolters, 2006) - Ensure assessment is private, not public
- Minimizes social comparisons
Image retrieved February 3, 2007, from
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21Self-Determination Intrinsic MotivationTheory
Overview
- Integrates needs with social-cognitive
constructs (Pintrich, 2003) - Self-determination is
- using ones capability to choose how to satisfy
ones needs (Schunk Zimmerman, 2006, p. 359) - Intrinsic motivation increases when learners are
self-determined
22Self-Determination Intrinsic MotivationTheory
Overview
Learning Performance
Intrinsic Motivation
Extrinsic Motivation
Unmotivated
motivationcontinuum
motivationcontinuum
Self-Determined Learner
Three Basic Innate Psychological Needs
CompetenceThe need to feel competentin
interactions with others,tasks and activities,
andlarger contexts
AutonomyThe need to feel a sense of control,
agency, orautonomy in interactionswith
environment
RelatednessThe need to belong to agroup
(affiliation)
23Self-Determination Intrinsic
MotivationInstructional Implications
- Avoid external rewards for intrinsically
motivated students - Can undermined intrinsic motivation
- Enhance intrinsic motivation
- Challenge students
- Intermediate difficulty activities
- Prompt curiosity
- Present slightly discrepant ideas
- Provide learner control and choice
- Engage students in fantasy, games, simulations
Image retrieved February 3, 2007, from
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ds1.jpg
24Instructional Vignette
- John Im really fed up. None of my students
have any interest in the training. They just
dont care. Some of them even seem angry that
they have to be here. I overheard one student
yesterday talking about his frustration with the
whole training program. - Teri Well, I dont know. I do have some students
who at least are interested in the training.
When I hear them talk in class, some of them
seem to like it. - Tony Yeah, my guys seem relatively interested
too, but the problem I have is that some of them
just get so wound up about the exams that they
bomb the test. You can just see them getting
nervous before the test, and during it you can
seem them wriggling around. Im just not sure
what to do. - (Adapted from Pintrich Schunk, 2002)
- What kinds of things are these instructors
discussing? - How do they relate to motivation?
25Interest AffectOverview
- Interest
- Three Types
- Characteristic of Person
- Personal
- Characteristic of Context
- Situational
- Psychological State
- Personal x Situational
- Positively Influences
- Choice, persistence, effort
- Attention
- Use of deep processing
- Performance
- Affect
- Moods Emotions
- Academic Emotions
- Positive
- Enjoyment, hope, pride
- Negative
- Test anxiety, frustration, boredom
- Positively/Negatively Influence
- All the same processes
(Pekrun, Goetz, Titz, Perry, 2002)
(Krapp, Hidi, Renninger, 1992)
26Interest AffectInstructional Implications
- Interest
- Use original source material with authentic
content - Model enthusiasm and interest
- Use variety, novelty, surprise
- Provide some choice based on personal interest
- Build/integrate students personal interests into
lessons
Image retrieved February 3, 2007, from
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mage.jpg
27Interest AffectInstructional Implications
- Affect
- Provide plenty of time for assessments
- Order test items from easy to difficult
- Minimize social comparisons
- Emphasize mastery (learning and understanding),
not performance - Make course value/relevance explicit
Image retrieved February 3, 2007, from
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28Recurring Themes Instructional Implications
Note Research in multimedia and hypermedia
learning environments has revealed that too much
learner control can hinder learning and
performance, particularly for low ability
learners and/or novices who lack domain knowledge
(Clark Feldon, 2005 Lawless Brown, 1997).
29Systematic Motivational DesignKellers ARCS Model
- A systematic, step-by-step approach to designing
motivational tactics into instruction - Integrates well with traditional ID/ISD processes
- ARCS steps include
- Analyze the Audience
- Define Motivational Objectives
- Design a Motivational Strategy
- Implement and Revise
Traditional ID/ISD Processes(ADDIE Model)
Image retrieved February 3, 2007, from
http//edweb.sdsu.edu/Courses/EDTEC700/ETP/images/
addie.jpg
30Systematic Motivational DesignKellers ARCS Model
- Based on four dimensions of motivation (Keller,
1999)
A
- Attention
- Capturing the interest of learners
- Stimulating the curiosity of learners
- Sound familiar?
R
- Relevance
- Meeting the personal needs/goals of learners to
effect a positive attitude - Sound familiar?
C
- Confidence
- Helping learners believe/feel that they will
succeed and they control their success - Sound familiar?
S
- Satisfaction
- Reinforcing accomplishments with rewards
(internal and external)
31Systematic Motivational DesignIn-Class Activity
Using Kellers ARCS Model
- Case 1 A course in educational psychology is
required of all persons seeking teacher
certification in the state. Most of the students
are juniors and seniors in the Universitys
teacher preparation program. A few come from
programs outside of education, and a few have
already taken and failed the teacher
certification test. The course will be delivered
as a traditional, face-to-face class and will
also use WebCT for online discussions and
debates. - Case 2 A literacy course is offered to farmers
in an underdeveloped nation. The course is run
in the evening and is populated by both men and
women from the ages of 15 to 61. None of the
students can read. - (Adapted from Driscoll, 2005)
Using the table on the next slide, conduct an
abbreviated motivational analysis. Determine the
motivational issues and design some tactics to
address them.
32Systematic Motivational DesignMotivational
Analysis Matrix
(Adapted from Keller, 1999, p. 41)
33Systematic Motivational DesignMotivational
Analysis Matrix
Example of How Cells Are Filled Using ARCS Model
(unrelated scenario)
(Adapted from Keller, 1999, p. 41)
34Summary
- What is Motivation?
- Why Should We Care?
- Motivational Influences on Learning
Performance - Theories of Motivation
- Review of Contemporary Theories
- Instructional Implications
- Systematic Motivational Design
- Kellers ARCS Model
35References
- Anderman, E. M., Wolters, C. A. (2006). Goals,
values, and affect Influences on student
motivation. In P. A. Alexander P. H. Winne
(Eds.), Handbook of educational psychology (2nd
Ed., pp. 369-389). Mahwah, NJ Lawrence Erlbaum
Associates. - Bandura, A. (1986). Social foundations of thought
and action A social cognitive theory. Englewood
Cliffs, NJ Prentice Hall. - Bandura, A. (1997). Self-efficacy The exercise
of control. New York W. H. Freeman and Company. - Bransford, J. D, Brown, A. L., Cocking, R. R.
(2000). How people learn Brain, mind,
experience, and school. Washington, DC National
Academy Press. - Clark, R. E., Feldon, D. F. (2005). Five common
but questionable principles of multimedia
learning. In Mayer, R. (Ed.), Cambridge handbook
of multimedia learning. Cambridge Cambridge
University Press. - Driscoll, M. P. (2005). Psychology of learning
for instruction (3rd ed.). Boston Pearson
Education, Inc. - Eccles, J. S., Wigfield, A. (2002) Motivational
beliefs, values, and goals. Annual Review of
Psychology, 53, 109-132. - Graham, S., Weiner, B. (1996). Theories and
principles of motivation. In D. C. Berliner R.
C. Calfee (Eds.). Handbook of educational
psychology (pp. 63-84). New York Simon
Schuster Macmillan.
36References
- Keller, J. M. (1999). Using the ARCS motivational
process in computer-based instruction and
distance education. New Directions in Teaching
and Learning, 78, 39-47. - Krapp, A., Hidi, S., Renninger, K. A. (1992).
Interest, learning, and development. In K. A.
Renninger, S. Hidi, A. Krapp (Eds.), The role
of interest in learning and development (pp.
3-25). Hillsdale, NH Erlbaum. - Lawless, K. A., Brown, S. W. (1997). Multimedia
learning environments Issues of learner control
and navigation. Instructional Science, 25,
117-131. - Pintrich, P. R. (2003). A motivational science
perspective on the role of student motivation in
learning and teaching contexts. Journal of
Educational Psychology, 95, 667-686. - Pekrun, R., Goetz, T., Titz, W., Perry, R. P.
(2002). Academic emotions in students
self-regulated learning and achievement A
program of qualitative and quantitative research.
Educational Psychologist, 37, 99-105. - Pintrich, P. R., Schunk, D. H. (2002).
Motivation in education (2nd ed.). Upper Saddle
River, NJ Pearson Education. - Schunk, D. H., Zimmerman, B. J. (2006).
Competence and control beliefs Distinguishing
the means and ends. In P. A. Alexander P. H.
Winne (Eds.), Handbook of educational psychology
(2nd Ed., pp. 349-367). Mahwah, NJ Lawrence
Erlbaum Associates. - Weiner, H. (1990). History of motivational
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