| Literature DB >> 27628718 |
David A Cook1,2,3, Anthony R Artino4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To succinctly summarise five contemporary theories about motivation to learn, articulate key intersections and distinctions among these theories, and identify important considerations for future research.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27628718 PMCID: PMC5113774 DOI: 10.1111/medu.13074
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Educ ISSN: 0308-0110 Impact factor: 6.251
Summary of contemporary motivation theories
| Expectancy‐value | Attribution | Social‐cognitive | Goal orientation | Self‐determination | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Main idea | Motivation is a function of the expectation of success and perceived value. |
After an event, learners create subconscious causal explanations (attributions) for the results. |
Human learning and performance result from reciprocal interactions among personal, behavioural and environmental factors. |
Learners tend to engage in tasks with concerns about mastering content (mastery goal), doing better than others (performance‐approach goal) or avoiding failure (performance‐avoidance goal). |
Intrinsic motivation leads people to act purely to satisfy their curiosity or desire for mastery. |
| Key concepts |
Expectation of success is the degree to which individuals believe they will be successful if they try. |
Locus refers to whether the cause is internal or external to the individual. |
Self‐efficacy is a subjective judgement of one's capability to learn or perform at a specified level. |
Mastery orientation refers to a focus on getting smarter or better; it emerges from an ‘incremental’ or growth learning mindset (ability is malleable, situations are controllable). |
Autonomy refers to the opportunity to control one's actions. |
| Comparison with other theories | Concepts of expectancy of success and value recur in many other theories. |
The tenet that emotion mediates task value distinguishes AT from classic EVT. | Self‐efficacy is similar to many constructs of expectancy of success, but is generally more task, context, and goal specific. | By contrast with AT, controllability beliefs vary by individual (i.e. are not a fixed property of the event or learner). | SDT places unique emphasis on autonomy, choice and human relationships. |
| Seminal contemporary writers and resources |
Eccles | Weiner |
Bandura |
Dweck |
Deci |
AT = attribution theory; EVT = expectancy‐value theory; GOT = goal orientation theory; SCT = social‐cognitive theory; SDT = self‐determination theory.
In addition to the theory‐specific resources listed here, the book by Schunk et al.6 offers an outstanding overview of motivation in education.
Similar concepts and terminology across several contemporary theories: clarifying confusable terminology
| Term (core theory) | Definition | Similar to … | Sometimes confused with … | Distinguishing features, by theory |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Self‐efficacy (SCT) | Perceived capability to learn or perform at a certain level based in large part on past accomplishments. |
Expectancy of success (EVT) |
Self‐concept and self‐esteem (more general characteristics of learner; less context specific) |
Self‐efficacy in SCT is very dynamic and context specific: it varies by task, setting, mood, physical health, etc. |
| Task value (EVT) | Perceived importance, usefulness, enjoyment or benefit to the individual of successful task completion. |
Valence (EVT) | – |
In SDT, value can arise from intrinsic motivation (e.g. curiosity) or extrinsic motivation (e.g. goals, utility and social values). |
| Goal | Short‐ or long‐term objective or purpose that prompts human action. | Objective, aim and purpose | Goal orientation (a general attitude to learning that is influenced by underlying beliefs about the controllability and stability of learning capacity; see mastery goal and performance goal) |
Goal |
| Mastery goal (GOT) | General mindset for learning (often subconscious) that the chief concern is to get smarter by learning new knowledge or skills. |
Learning goal |
Goal setting: a focus on the standard of performance (goal choice, targeted performance level and commitment). | Goal orientations involve an attribution, but differ from AT in that controllability beliefs vary by individual (i.e. are not a fixed property of the event or factor). |
| Performance goal (GOT) | General mindset for learning (often subconscious) that the chief concern is to look smart and avoid looking dumb. |
Ego goal | See mastery goal. | See mastery goal. |
| Intrinsic motivation (SDT) | ‘Natural inclination toward assimilation, mastery, spontaneous interest, and exploration’ |
Intrinsic interest | – |
Intrinsic motivation forms the core of SDT |
| Locus (AT) | In AT, a perception that the cause of action is internal or external to the individual. | – | Locus of control | Locus of control is a distinct concept that blurs locus with controllability; Weiner explicitly separates these constructs. |
AT = attribution theory; EVT = expectancy‐value theory; GOT = goal orientation theory; SCT = social‐cognitive theory; SDT = self‐determination theory.
Figure 1Expectancy‐value theory. This is a simplified version of Wigfield and Eccles's theory; it does not contain all of the details of their theory and blurs some subtle but potentially important distinctions. The key constructs of task value and expectancy of success are influenced by motivational beliefs, which are in turn determined by social influences that are perceived and interpreted by learner cognitive processes
Figure 2Attribution theory. This is a simplified version of Weiner's theory; it does not contain all of the details of his theory and blurs some subtle but potentially important distinctions. The process begins with an event; if the outcome is expected or positive, it will often directly elicit emotions (happiness or frustration) without any further action. However, outcomes that are unexpected, negative or perceived as important will often awaken the inquisitive ‘naïve scientist’ who seeks to identify a causal explanation. The individual will interpret the outcome in light of personal and environmental conditions to ‘hypothesise’ a perceived cause, which can be organised along three dimensions: locus, stability and controllability. Stability influences perceived expectancy of success. Locus, controllability and stability collectively influence emotional responses (which reflect the subjective value) and these in turn drive future behaviours
Figure 3Social‐cognitive model of motivated learning. This is adapted from Schunk's model of motivated learning; it incorporates additional concepts from Bandura and other authors. Learners begin a learning task with pre‐existing self‐efficacy determined by past experiences, aptitudes and social supports. Learners can perform the task themselves or watch others (e.g. instructor or peer models) perform the task. During the task, self‐efficacy, together with other personal and situational factors, influences cognitive engagement, motivation to learn, emotional response and task selection. During and after the task, learners perceive and interpret cues that influence self‐efficacy for future tasks. Zimmerman defined a three‐phase self‐regulation cycle that mirrors this model, comprised of forethought (pre‐task), performance and volitional control (during task) and self‐reflection (after task)
Figure 4Goal orientation theory and implicit theories of intelligence. This is a simplified illustration of Dweck's theory; it does not contain all of the details of her theory and blurs some subtle but potentially important distinctions. Learners tend toward one of two implicit self‐theories or mindsets regarding their ability. Those with an entity mindset view ability as fixed, and because low performance or difficult learning would threaten their self‐concept they unconsciously pursue ‘performance’ goals that help them to look smart and avoid failure. By contrast, those with an incremental mindset view ability as something to be enhanced with practice, and thus pursue goals that cause them to stretch and grow (‘mastery’ goals). Evidence and further theoretical refinements also support the distinction of performance‐approach goals (‘look smart’; typically associated with high performance) and performance‐avoidance goals (‘avoid failure’; invariably associated with poor performance)
Figure 5Self‐determination theory. This is adapted from Ryan and Deci's theory. Self‐determination theory hypothesises three main motivation types: amotivation (lack of motivation), extrinsic motivation and intrinsic motivation, and six ‘regulatory styles’ (dark‐background boxes). Intrinsic motivation (intrinsic regulation) is entirely internal, emerging from pure personal interest, curiosity or enjoyment of the task. At the other extreme, amotivation (non‐regulation) results in inaction or action without real intent. In the middle is extrinsic motivation, with four regulatory styles that vary from external regulation (actions motivated purely by anticipated favourable or unfavourable consequences) to integrated regulation (in which external values and goals have become fully integrated into one's self‐image). The transition from external to integrated regulation requires that values and goals become internalised (personally important) and integrated (fully assimilated into one's sense of self). Internalisation and integration are promoted (or inhibited) by fulfillment (or non‐fulfillment) of three basic psychosocial needs: relatedness, competence and autonomy