Tag Archives: intrinsic

The End Of The Beginning

Well it has certainly been a journey. 8 months. I have been in this classroom for 8 months and it still feels like I walked in yesterday. I honestly could ramble on about lessons learned, reminisce about that one time that student did that thing, or think back fondly on all those long, wonderful hours spent marking probability packages. Alas, that is not why you are here so I fear I must focus this tirade of memories on one important area. Competition.

 

My final week was capped off by taking the students I had coached in Track and field to the District Track Meet at Swangard Stadium. I had worked very hard with them over the course of the season to steadily improve, work on tricky aspects like the baton pass in relays and cadence in events like 800m, but most importantly, we worked on SELF-IMPROVEMENT. That kind of intrinsic motivation to try better than next time, to work harder, and generally improve for the sake of improving. This is a tough thing to foster inside oneself and at first, (and for some not at all) the students were resistant to it. “What place was I?”and “Who did I beat?” were the cries at the end of each race at the beginning. However, (again for some) this changed. They were soon replaced by “What was my time?” or “Was I faster than last race?” This was truly great to see and I do credit it to the nature of track and field. As was stressed often, you are racing the timer as you are going for the fastest time, not the fastest in each race. In long jump or shot put, you aren’t all jumping or throwing together. You do your best one by one so you don’t even have the person in the lane beside you to compete against. It is truly a place for training, mentally training, yourself to work towards personal bests.

 

At Swangard this came into fruition. Everywhere I saw students discussing personal bests, wishing and hoping that the next race would result in their fastest time. Were they competing against each other? Yes, in a way. It is a district competition so I believe it would be pointless to argue that it isn’t. However, that competition isn’t directed right at another competitor. You are competing against yourself and through that, you are building intrinsic motivation. Previously I have discussed the concept of competing against an external force like a timer and this is the manifestation of that idea. It is theory put into practice and it works.

 

If it works for athletics, it certainly can be applied in a cross-curricular manner into other areas of the classroom. New goal: Math Athletics. Next event: The 400cm Geometry Calculations.

 

Track and Field is truly a place for training, mentally training, yourself to work towards personal bests.

-Me

IN-trinsic Motivation

The term personal best is a curious one. Striving to beat oneself; to push past one’s accomplishments towards bigger and better things, it does require a certain mindset. It is not unknown that the concept of personal bests is related directly to the idea of intrinsically motivation and that “inner drive” that powers us forward towards success through none other than our own will. However, what cannot be ignored that this is a difficult mindset to accomplish. One could even say that the nature of IN-trinsic motivation is IN-tricate. IN as IN-side yourself, not OUT-side. Get it?

 

Well the point of this isn’t for me to make cheesy one liners so let’s connect this to my practicum shall we? Over the course of the past several weeks, I have been developing the concept of a Track and Field unit based solely on the concept of personals bests. This is intrinsic motivation at it’s…well, best. Great concept, however the notion of working against oneself is tricky. For myself, I am not an overtly intrinsically motivated person. I don’t do that well with personal bests and I need some form of extrinsic motivation; another competitor, a timer, etc. Therefore, it is reasonable to imagine the same mindset is present in at least some my students. So how do I encourage a group of students to adopt a mindset that I myself struggle with. Well I accomplish this through example.

 

From the beginning of my long practicum until now, my SA and I have introduced a new morning routine where the students are reflecting on a motivational video, finding a connection to the theme of a clip, and sharing how it relates to them personally. The shear amount of wonderful, articulate mantras that have been created by my students in connection to these videos on a daily basis is outstanding. “Success is looking at your life and being happy”, “if you don’t take risks, you’re not really living”, “failure is a stop on the road to success” are all credos, although probably not coined, by certainly echoed, by my students. In subsequent PE lessons, I found the concept of personal bests easier to get through to my students, they were sharing their times or distances as would be expected, but I also began to hear comments such as “I beat last week’s time by 10 seconds” or “I did better than I did last week”. In discussion with my class, they related the motivational comments that we created at the beginning of every day to an increase in their intrinsic motivation (this sentiment being paraphrased by me). The videos and discussion of them encouraged them to work harder and not necessarily against others. They seemed happy with beating their previous best and were excited to try again next time to improve even further.

 

So I suppose the whole idea of this is that you have to use the tools available to you to achieve your desired outcome. This, plus the notion of students exploring concepts on their own to derive their own meaning from it, are a powerful combination when facing a struggle like this one. What I found interesting at the end of all this, the students increase in intrinsic motivation spurred my intrinsic motivation to get into gear. It is the little things in this profession that you derive simple pleasure from.

 

“Success is looking at your life and being happy”

“If you don’t take risks, you’re not really living”

“Failure is a stop on the road to success”

  • My Students Paraphrasing Motivational Videos