Student motivation, especially intrinsic motivation
(the motivation that comes from within ones self), is a critical part
of the education process. Motivation is a necessity so that learning becomes a continuing, improving, interesting and hopefully enjoyable process
A teacher, must develop and encourage classroom motivation, i.e. think of and find ways to motivate students to reach their potential, their goals and their dreams. Children
locked into classroom discussions are no different than adults locked
into boring, irrelevant meetings. If you do not understand how something
relates to your goals, you will not care about that thing. If an adult
cannot see the relevance of the material covered in a meeting, and has
no desire to score political points, he will tune out or drop out. If a
child does not understand how knowing the elements of the periodic table
will help to address the concerns of his life, and he is not
particularly interested in pleasing the teacher, he will do the same.
Because
we do not want our children to be motivated solely by a desire to
please the teacher, what we need to address is how to make the content of the curriculum fit into the concerns of the child.
Sometimes, this is easy. The child who wants to design a roof for the
family doghouse will gladly sit through a lesson on the Pythagorean
theorem if he understands that the lesson will teach him how to
calculate the dimensions of the roof he needs. If a piece of content
addresses a particular concern of a student, or even a general area of
interest, that student will not tune it out.
Most
children, as they work through their years of school do, in fact, find
areas of study they genuinely enjoy. However, these areas are different
for different people. The general problem of matching individual
interests to fixed curricula is one that is impossible to solve. People
obviously have different backgrounds, beliefs, and goals. What is
relevant for one will not be relevant to another. Of course, we can
force something to be relevant to students–we can put it on the test.
However, this only makes it have the appearance of significance, it does
not make it interesting.
Some
children decide not to play the game that our rigid education system
offers. Instead, they continue to search for ways in which what is
taught makes sense in their day-to-day lives, becoming frustrated as
they realize that much of what is covered is irrelevant to them. If
children are unwilling to believe that their own questions do not
matter, then they can easily conclude that it is the material covered in
class that does not matter.
What
is left, then, if the content has no intrinsic value to a student? Any
teacher knows the answer to this question. Tests. Grades. When students
do not care about what they are learning, tests and grades force them to
learn what they do not care about knowing. Of course, students can win
this game in the long run by instantly forgetting the material they
crammed into their heads the night before the test. Unfortunately, this
happens nearly every time. What is the point of a system that teaches
students to temporarily memorize facts? The only facts that stay are the
ones we were forced to memorize repeatedly, and those we were not
forced to memorize at all but that we learned because we truly needed to
know them, because we were motivated to know them. Motivation can be induced artificially, but its effects then are temporary.
Create Student Motivation in the Classroom
1. Encourage students to set goals.
2. Give students more control - a chance to create their own personal choices. Establishing their own rights, is a very resourceful motivational technique.
3. As much as possible relate assignments and class projects to real life situations.
4. Practice the assertive discipline (positive discipline) techniques.
5. Most teachers come across students who are difficult to motivate
and who do not care about what happens in school. For this teacher
needs to create incentives. There are ways to motivate
students. Doing unique activities, creating situations where they can
work in small groups, creating a reward system are just a few ideas. Colourful certificates, stickers, awards and school passes are some examples of rewards for students of primary grade.
6. Having students help with some of the many jobs that need to be done in the classroom, will not only help a teacher but classroom jobs are also a great student motivational tool.
7. Games are fabulous classroom team building
activities that are great for creating motivation in the classroom. It
is amazing how it does wonders for students’ self-esteem and
camaraderie.
8.
Another classroom activity for team building is a classroom meeting
between teacher and students where held a Special talk and teacher and
students together choose Student of the Week. Students will loveit! This is another excellent student motivational tool.
Two important thoughts to keep in mind by a Teacher:
1. Always display care, concern and encouragement for your students.
2. Never give up on any unmotivated students or they will give up on themselves.
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