How To Motivate Students
How To Motivate Students
How To Motivate Students
Carmen Delurintu
C.N.V. Nicolae Titulescu
Influencing another person's motivation is not a simple task. For one thing the person is
already a tangle of different and perhaps conflicting motives. Some of these motives are innate.
Among these are need for security, avoidance of hunger, dread of pain, need for activity, craving
for stimulation, and sex. Other motives are learned. Learned motives include desire for certainty,
need to achieve, craving for companionship, desire to reduce anxiety, requirement for
independence or dependence, and many more. Innate motives are very powerful comprising, as
they do, basic human needs. When innate motives are aroused they are likely to take over. Then
the higher learned needs must usually stay on the back burner until the innate motives have been
quieted. The learned motives themselves vary in intensity. Some may be very strong and some
very weak. However, the strength of these motives may change, for circumstances do alter cases.
Motives, both basic and otherwise, tend to compete with each other. For another thing, when
students walk into your classroom, each one brings a hierarchy of motives that range from very
strong to very weak. These hierarchies are personal; they differ from individual to individual.
One girl's need to achieve may be much stronger than her need for peer approval, whereas her
sister may be much more influenced by peer pressure than by a desire to achieve. Further, the
priorities within an individual's hierarchy of motives change with time and circumstances. At
times everyone suppresses certain desires; at other times circumstances make certain motives
almost uncontrollably powerful. Still, on the whole, most motives retain their relative positions
within one's hierarchy of motives even though circumstances modify motives and alter their
importance.
How, then, does one motivate students? Unfortunately it is not easy. Techniques that work
well in one situation may be useless in another. Incentives that create enthusiasm in some
individuals in a class leave others completely indifferent. However, general approaches that seem
to apply to the development of positive motivation toward school learning include,
*Try to build up students' feelings of self-esteem.
*Take advantage of the students' present motives.
*Make the potential learning seem worthwhile.
*Help students establish suitable tasks and objectives.
*Keep up the pace.
*Develop a receptive mood in the learners.