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Motivation is impacted not only by classroom experience, but also by the mindset with which students interpret their classroom experience and the narratives they tell about their school experiences. Motivation is also affected by students’ attitudes, attributions, and beliefs about school and about learning.
Motivation can be really challenged when difficulties arise in learning something new. Some students regularly experience difficulties in learning. However, it is how students interpret those setbacks or difficulties that is key to the impact on motivation and engagement, rather than the fact that difficulties or setbacks occur. For example, students might attribute setbacks or failure to their ability or their effort, their strategies, to the difficulty or simplicity of the task, or simply to luck! If a student believes that their failure was due to a lack of effort or to using the wrong strategies, then they are likely to remain motivated and confident that they can achieve the task by making adjustments in these areas. These are modifiable characteristics that are within the student’s control. However, if a student believes that their failure was due to a lack of ability, which cannot be changed, then they experience a profound sense of hopelessness and reduced motivation. They develop a narrative of doubt regarding their ability to succeed and whether they belong in the class environment, which interferes with their capacity to learn.
Motivation is strongest when students believe they can recover from error, that they have competence or can develop it. This is a growth mindset, in which students believe their intelligence can grow or develop in order to meet challenges. When poor performance is ascribed to a lack of effort or an inappropriate strategy, and when students feel a sense of personal efficacy aligned with meaningful goals, motivation increases, as students want to increase their effort and change the strategies they are using.
Struggling students may need help to restructure the way they think about success and failure and what they attribute these outcomes to.
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References
Silverman, A., & Cohen, G. (2014). Fostering positive narratives: Social-psychological interventions to maximise motivation in the classroom and beyond. Motivational Interventions, 18, 177-211. doi: 10.1108/S0749-742320140000018005
By Dr Vicki Hargraves