Showing posts with label new millenium learners. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new millenium learners. Show all posts
Monday, 25 February 2019
Friday, 13 April 2018
Wednesday, 18 May 2016
Intrinsic & Extrinsic Motivation to Learn
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| photo credits: Educational Psychology Interactive |
Regarding motivation as a set of biological and psychological mechanisms which allow triggering an action, its orientation and finally the intensity and persistence (Lieury &
Fenouillet, 1997:9), it becomes impossible not to consider motivation as a crucial factor in the teaching and learning process, because the more motivated the student is, the more persistent and productive his activity will be.
Lieury
e Fenouillet mention two types of motivation: intrinsic (in which the activity is appealling in itself) and extrinsic (which depends on a wide range of outside rewards, such as, grades or prizes). From here we can conclude that the current use of the term motivation refers to the intrinsic type. Teachers always prefer this one because it creates better results. That is why it's so important to identify and promote factors as challenge, control, responsibility, curiosity, fantasy, cooperation and acknowledgement. (Raya, Lamb &
Vieira, 2007:62) These authors also highlight that intrinsic motivation is in inverse proportion of constraint, for example, surveillance or teacher control. It has been proved that students' discouragement is born out of a learning process.
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| Puzzle of Motivation (Lieury & Fenouillet) |
For all these reasons, it is very important to promote tasks that may increase intrinsic motivation (less exposed to constraint), such as, portfolios, group presentations, personal data files, where the teacher's role is much more of giving information, rather than controlling or evaluating, as students are intrinsically motivated and perform all tasks with pleasure. To sum up, motivation can be seen as the puzzle on the left, in which all the mentioned components find a match.
Wednesday, 29 January 2014
Digital Literacy Across the Curriculum
Digital
literacy is an important entitlement for all young people in an increasingly
digital culture. It furnishes children and young people with the skills,
knowledge and understanding that will help them to take a full and active part
in social, cultural, economic, civic and intellectual life now and in the
future. To be digitally literate is to have access to a broad range of practices
and cultural resources that you are able to apply to digital tools. It is the
ability to make and share meaning in different modes and formats; to create,
collaborate and communicate effectively and to understand how and when digital
technologies can best be used to support these processes.
Digital literacy involves critically engaging with technology
and developing a social awareness of how a number of factors including commercial
agendas and cultural understandings can shape the ways in which technology is
used to convey information and meaning.
Digital literacy across the curriculum is an important handbook by the British Future Lab is aimed at educational practitioners and
school leaders in both primary and secondary schools who are interested in
creative and critical uses of technology in the classroom. It is definitely
woth reading and bearing in mind!
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| Digital Literacy Across the Curriculum A Future Lab Handbook |
Saturday, 2 November 2013
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