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"Student motivation"
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10 keys to student empowerment : unlocking the hero in each child
\"Discover how to work alongside your students to unlock their potential. This powerful book reveals 10 keys to creating a classroom where your students can take ownership of their learning and become heroes in their own lives. You'll learn how to build relationships, support, strength, willpower, soft skills, service, agency, curiosity, innovation, and productive failure. Each key is illustrated in a narrative format, designed with tips and notes to help you make practical changes immediately. By the end of the book, you'll have the foundational pieces you need to create a student-powered classroom where students can learn about themselves, fail forward, and gain courage to face challenges head on\"-- Provided by publisher.
Understanding shifts in students’ academic motivation across a school year: the role of teachers’ motivating styles and need-based experiences
by
Cohen, Rinat
,
Katz, Idit
,
Vansteenkiste, Maarten
in
Academic Achievement
,
Education
,
Educational Change
2023
Students’ adaptive motivation to study tends to decrease over time. However, the reasons for this decline are not fully understood. Drawing on self-determination theory (SDT), we investigated whether changes in teachers’ motivating style and students’ associated need-based experiences could explain the motivational decline documented in the literature. A total of 472 Israeli seventh and eighth graders (in their first and second years of middle school) completed questionnaires at the beginning and end of the school year. Students reported their perceptions of their teachers’ (de)motivating styles (i.e., autonomy support, structure, control, and chaos), the extent to which their psychological needs were satisfied or frustrated, and their motivation to study. There was a significant decrease from the beginning to the end of the school year in 7
th
- and 8th-grade students’ perceptions of autonomy support and structure provided by their teachers, students' autonomous motivation, and their experienced need satisfaction. There was a significant increase from the beginning to the end of the school year in 7th and 8th graders’ perception of their teacher as chaotic and the students’ experience of need frustration, controlled motivation, and amotivation. A growth curve multilevel model (GCMLM) indicated that the perceived changes in teachers’ motivating and demotivating styles, together with the changes in the students' reported need-based experiences from the beginning to the end of the year, could account for these changes in students’ motivation. Teachers should develop and maintain a need-nurturing environment to prevent a drop in student motivation.
Journal Article
How do teachers engaging messages affect students? A sentiment analysis
2023
Gathering information from students’ answers to open-ended questions helps to assess the quality of teachers’ practices and its relations with students’ motivation. The present study aimed to use sentiment analysis, an artificial intelligence-based tool, to examine students’ responses to open-ended questions about their teacher’s communication. Using the obtained sentiment scores, we studied the effect of teachers engaging messages on students’ sentiment. Subsequently, we analysed the mediating role of this sentiment on the relation between teachers’ messages and students’ motivation to learn. Results showed that the higher the students’ perceived use of engaging messages, the more positive their sentiments towards their teacher’s communication. This is an important issue for future research as it shows the usefulness of sentiment analysis for studying teachers’ verbal behaviours. Findings also showed that sentiment partially mediates the effect of teachers engaging messages on students’ motivation to learn. This research paves the way for using sentiment analysis to better study the relations of teachers’ behaviours, students’ sentiments and opinions, and their outcomes.
Journal Article
Using the Decoding the Disciplines framework for learning across the disciplines
\"This volume provides examples and evidence of the various ways in which the Decoding the Disciplines framework has been applied across disciplines and used to inform teaching, curriculum, and pedagogical research initiatives at Mount Royal University\"--Page [4] of cover.
Student motivation and engagement in online language learning using virtual classrooms: Interrelationships with support, attitude and learner readiness
2024
Online language learning with virtual classrooms (OLLVC) is becoming a reality to a large number of students across contexts. Yet students’ motivation and engagement in OLLVC remains underexplored. The current study evaluated 6364 university students’ motivation and engagement in OLLVC and its interrelationships with environmental support, learner attitude and readiness in the Chinese higher education context. This study employed the adapted motivation and engagement scale and adopted purposive sampling to recruit a sample of undergraduate students, who were engaged in online English learning using VC. The data were examined using structural equation modeling via Mplus 7.4. Results showed that students were generally motivated and engaged in OLLVC and there were significant individual differences across age, English proficiency, gender, academic ranking, and major. Moreover, student evaluation of their readiness for OLLVC mediated the relationships between support and attitude for online learning and student motivation and engagement in OLLVC. These findings call for attention to the importance of taking student readiness as a mediating mechanism in students’ motivation and engagement in OLLVC. Implications for supporting virtual-classroom-mediated online language learning are also discussed.
Journal Article
Loving what they learn : research-based strategies to increase student engagement
\"How are competence, autonomy, relatedness, and relevance related to engagement? In Loving What They Learn: Research-Based Strategies to Increase Student Engagement, Alexander McNeece explains the connections and how, from those connections, a cycle of self-efficacy emerges. McNeece describes the elements that set off the cycle and offers research-based strategies to increase those feelings in students\"-- Provided by publisher.
Exploring the determinants of students' motivation in pursuing a degree in the field of education in the UAE
by
Hojeij, Zeina
,
Shraim, Zubaida
,
Al Shehhi, Shaikha
in
Adult Education and Lifelong Learning
,
Career advancement
,
career choice
2024
The United Arab Emirates (UAE) aims to improve its education sector by recruiting qualified and diverse student teachers. Therefore, the aim of this study was to examine the factors affecting student motivation to enroll in colleges of education. Using simple random sampling, a total of 199 consenting students were recruited to participate in this study (154 females and 45 males). The participants were informed about the right to withdraw from the study at any time. Data was analyzed using factor analysis to construct the composite variables for the factors that motivated students to join the College of Education. The results proved a positive correlation between career advancement and personal and social needs. However, the outcomes regarding admission and working conditions were negative. This study revealed significant differences in career advancement, personal, and social needs factors specifically among fourth-year students. Thus, factors affecting students' motivation must be considered when recruiting in the UAE.
Journal Article
The relevant classroom : 6 steps to foster real-world learning
\"Eric Hardie offers six steps to help students engage in meaningful, relevant learning and develop key skills they need to succeed in life\"-- Provided by publisher.
Using motivational interviewing to promote teacher efficacy, autonomy-supportive teaching and students' academic motivation
by
Wagnsson, Stefan
,
Jordan, Martina S.
,
Gustafsson, Henrik
in
Autonomy support
,
Control Groups
,
Educational Strategies
2023
Motivational interviewing (MI) is a collaborative communication style used to promote individuals' motivation, and there is growing support for using MI in schools. This study aims to test whether a teacher-focused intervention program based on MI and autonomy-supportive teaching increases teachers' autonomy-supportive teaching, teacher efficacy and students' academic motivation and perceptions of autonomy support. In this intervention study with a short-term longitudinal design, teachers were trained in MI and autonomy-supportive teaching style, along with a control group in which the students' teachers did not receive specific training. 14 teachers and 478 students (10-12 years) participated in the study. The MI-based intervention were found to significantly increase teachers' perceived autonomy-supportive teaching and sense of efficacy in student engagement, instructional strategies, and classroom management from Time 1 to Time 2. However, the intervention did not increase students' academic motivation or perceptions of teacher autonomy support over time. The current study indicate that school-based MI may be more important for teachers' professional development than for younger students' academic motivation. This study demonstrates that MI training can have an impact on teachers' instructional behaviors and increase teacher efficacy, providing valuable insights for both teacher education and school leaders.
Journal Article