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Motivation Unit 9 1 Why people want to do something How long they want to do it for How hard they will work to achieve it Video: Bob Sullo Motivating Students, http://www.teachingengl ish.org.uk/talk/video-d iscussion/how-do-you-mo tivate-your-students
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Motivation Unit 9

Feb 25, 2016

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Motivation Unit 9. Video: Bob Sullo Motivating Students, http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/talk/video-discussion/how-do-you-motivate-your-students. Why people want to do something How long they want to do it for How hard they will work to achieve it. TKT: How do we motivate learners?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Motivation Unit 9

Motivation Unit 9

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•Why people want to do something•How long they want to do it for•How hard they will work to achieve it

Video: Bob Sullo Motivating Students, http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/talk/video-discussion/how-do-you-motivate-your-students

Page 2: Motivation Unit 9

TKT: How do we motivate learners?

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Listen to student feedback using a class suggestion box or short questionnaire.

Train students to use reference resources to help them study successfully on their own.

Think about how you tell students about their progress. How can you encourage or praise them?

A. encourage learner autonomy

B. find out what students think

C. make your feedback positive

D. build variety into your teaching

Page 3: Motivation Unit 9

TKT: How do we motivate learners?

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Put students into new groups for different activities?

Give comments on students’ work which are helpful and enable them to feel progress.

Don’t always do the same things in the classroom. Try new routines.

• A. encourage learner autonomy

• B. find out what students think

• C. make your feedback positive

• D. build variety into your teaching

Page 4: Motivation Unit 9

How do we build motivation?

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We build rapport!We evaluate together.We build confidence!We provide opportunities!

Page 5: Motivation Unit 9

Intrinsic Motivation

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The desire to learn comes from within.Younger children and older students typically have more intrinsic motivation.

learner autonomyindependenceself-confidence

Think and discuss: What is the difference between intrinsic and extrinsic motivation? What motivates your students? Task 4: Motivation Techniques

Page 6: Motivation Unit 9

Factors which Affect Intrinsic Motivation

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 Challenge:  (personally meaningful goals )

 Control: learners like to control their learning.

 Fantasy: (imagination)

 Competition: (performance comparison)

 Cooperation: (group performance achievement)

 Recognition: (for accomplishments)

Page 7: Motivation Unit 9

Extrinsic motivation

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When someone other than the learner provides the motivation.

Teachers and parents also use shouting, noise, extra homework, punishments, no TV, no free time, (avoidance behaviors)

Parents give money, privileges, affection, time together…

Teachers give candy, praise, stars, stickers, points and happy dollars (incentives)

See Alfie Kohn video, Alfie Kohn bad news

Positive Reinforcers (rewards)

Negative Reinforcers

Page 8: Motivation Unit 9

Behaviorists

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Pavlov: experiments with dogs and salivation as response to stimuli, classical conditioning

Thorndike: cats and puzzle boxesSkinner: operant conditioning, behavior analysis

BEHAVIOR MODIFICATIONAs teachers we use behavior

modification techniques with young learners to form study and social habits. In higher grades we use grades as leverage. See grades have personalities video

Page 9: Motivation Unit 9

Social Learning Theory

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Students learn from modelling what they seeFrom the teacher.From other students, In group situations.From the media.Albert Bandura’s Bobo doll experiment

See Albert Bandura video

What does this have to do with my class or teaching situation? See video children see children do

Page 10: Motivation Unit 9

Humanism: Abraham Maslow

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Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs.

Self-actualization

Need for self esteem

Need for belonging

Need for Safety

Physiological needs (survivial)

Being needGrowth needs

Deficiency needs

See Maslow video

Page 11: Motivation Unit 9

Attribution Theoryexcuses, justifications and motivation

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How people explain outcomes and behaviors.

External or situations

Climatic conditionsNoise level (environment)Comfort

Internal or dispositional

How they feelIntelligenceSelf-efficacy: perception of ability to reach a certain goalUniqueness

Page 12: Motivation Unit 9

Constructivists and L2 learning

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Piaget, physical maturation by stagesVygotsky, social interaction, zpdBruner, discovery learningKrashen: comprehensible input

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Page 14: Motivation Unit 9

Zone of Proximal development

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Through humansThrough booksThrough artThrough supplementary materials

With your group, work out the best option to work together to create a PPT on the topic you have chosen with your: Learning Team Charter

Page 15: Motivation Unit 9

Krashen: Comprehensible Input

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According to Krashen and Terrell, the foundation of the natural approach for

Language Learning has four principles: (1) comprehension precedes production; (2) production must be allowed to emerge

in variable stages; (3) the course syllabus must be based on

communicative goals; (4) the activities and classroom

environment must work together to produce a lowered “affective filter.”

Page 16: Motivation Unit 9

Motivational “Commandments”

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Be motivated as a teacher.Provide a relaxed atmosphere.Present a variety of tasks.Establish a good relationship with students. Increase learner’s self-confidence.Personalize the learning process for

individual students.Be aware of short and long term goals.

Page 17: Motivation Unit 9

Motivated Students

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Persist at a taskCome back to the task voluntarilyDesire high levels of performanceVary from individual to individual and task to task

Page 18: Motivation Unit 9

Unmotivated Students

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Bored!!They do not see the connection between the

task/subject and real life.Uninterested in the topic or taskThink the material or task is too hardThink they lack the ability to perform, have

little confidence in their abilitiesAfraid of evaluation and failure

Cambridge Task 1: Motivation

Page 19: Motivation Unit 9

Factors which Affect Intrinsic Motivation

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 Challenge:  (personally meaningful goals )

 Control: learners like to control their learning.

 Fantasy: (imagination)

 Competition: (performance comparison)

 Cooperation: (group performance achievement)

 Recognition: (for accomplishments)

Page 20: Motivation Unit 9

Motivate your students!

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Challenge  Have personally meaningful goals Make attainment of goals probable but

uncertain. Give enroute performance feedback. Relate goals to learners' self esteem.

View module 7 Learning Strategies

Page 21: Motivation Unit 9

Motivate!

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 Control Learners like to control their learning.Relate activities to real life situations.

Allow for Fantasy Touch learners’ inside where they dwell.Make a game out of learning. Use imagination.

Page 22: Motivation Unit 9

Motivate!

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Competition (performance comparison)Competition is more important for some people

than for others. Losers may suffer more than the winners profit. May reduce the urge to be helpful to other

learners.

Have students compete against themselves to gadge their progress.

Page 23: Motivation Unit 9

Motivate!

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Cooperation and collaboration (group performance achievement)

occurs naturally as well as artificially. is more important for some people than for

others. is a useful real-life skill. requires and develops interpersonal skills.

Page 24: Motivation Unit 9

Motivate!

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Recognition Satisfaction from recognition of

accomplishments.Recognition differs from competition in that it

does not involve a comparison with the performance of someone else.

Page 25: Motivation Unit 9

Don’t motivate, engage!

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Page 26: Motivation Unit 9

Homework for Portfolio

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From Unit 9:Observe a different

teacher’s class (any subject), an online EFL or ESL class and with your own. Represent them in a three-circle Venn diagram and a reflection paragraph in your blog. Do the follow up and discovery activities as usual.