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Motivation
Personality and Differential Motivation in the
Classroom – an extract
William Perez and Hunter Gehlbach
Stanford University
Competitive classroom structures are generally thought
to be less healthy and less productive learning environments
than cooperative classrooms. Because of the wide range
of personalities in schools, we imagine that students will
be motivated to learn in a classroom structure depending
on the personality traits they bring into the classroom.
More specifically, it was hypothesized that extroverts
would rate competitive classroom environments more highly
than introverts. In cooperative classroom environments,
the authors were split. One author felt that introverts
would rate cooperative classrooms more favorably than extroverts;
the other predicted that there would be no difference between
the two groups. It was also hypothesized that overall,
students would prefer the cooperative learning situation.
To test these hypotheses, thirty-nine college students
were surveyed. Results indicated a significant preference
for cooperative learning confirming findings from previous
studies. Our other hypotheses were not confirmed. Our qualitative
data suggests that other factors such as the role of choice,
teaching method, materials, and teacher likeability may
be more important factors for interacting with cooperative
and competitive classroom environments.
Because issues in education are muddled with multiple
variables, it is easy for people to think in generalizations
and set up dichotomies around certain issues. One issue
that is commonly debated through examining polarities is
the merits of a cooperative versus a competitive environment
in the classroom. Many educators and educational researchers
feel that cooperation leads to unequivocally
superior student outcomes academically and socially. This belief persists in
spite of the fact that there is no such thing as a purely cooperative or completely
competitive classroom; these constructs are aligned along a continuum.
The false dualism that pits cooperative atmospheres against
competitive classroom environments is the focus of this
research. We intend to see if there is an interaction between
the personality traits of individual students and the learning
environment that best suits them. Before clarifying our
hypothesis, we first summarize relevant literature on motivational
orientations. Next, we will clarify our definitions of
cooperation and competition in classrooms and address relevant
research in the field of personality. After describing
the methods and results of our pilot study, we conclude
by making recommendations on how to best address issues
of motivation elicited by different classroom structures
so that we can better foster life-long learning habits
in students.
Motivational Orientations:
The literature on motivation that is relevant to schooling describes students
as being oriented towards both a need for success and a need to avoid failure.
Depending upon the authors, this continuum is also represented as having a
high vs. low need for achievement, having high or low test anxiety, or having
a mastery vs. ego orientation to learning (Dweck & Leggett, 1988). One
principle that underlies these conceptions is that some people will focus more
on challenging themselves to achieve by choosing moderately difficult tasks,
persisting in the face of setbacks, etc. while others try to avoid situations
of moderately difficult tasks where their self-esteem would be at risk (Atkinson & Feather,
1974). Those who are risk averse tend to choose either very simple tasks or
very hard ones. In the former case they are confident they will succeed, and
in the latter case nobody will expect them to succeed. Dweck and Leggett (1988)
extended this general rule. They state that people have different personal
theories of intelligence. Some believe that intelligence is a stable, fixed
trait (entity view), while others think that intelligence is malleable (incremental
view). Those who entertain the entity view of intelligence usually have a performance
goal orientation as opposed to a learning goal orientation. These are the students
who are more focused on making sure that they do not appear foolish to others
in the class. Students with more of an incremental view of intelligence will
be more concerned with whether they are learning than with their social presentation
to their peers. Students holding the entity view tend to avoid failure, have
a low need for achievement, have high test anxiety, and develop an ego orientation
to learning. The opposite associations generally were found in students with
an incremental view of intelligence.
These theories have potent implications for predicting
behavior patterns related to learning. Atkinson and Feather
(1974) found that people who have a greater orientation
towards approaching success tend to have higher levels
of academic achievement. This correlation is explained
in the following manner. Students whose tendency to approach
success is greater than their tendency to avoid failure
are more likely to engage in tasks that challenge them.
Students whose tendency is to avoid failure are more likely
to protect their ego by engaging in very easy or very difficult
tasks. While they may be successful in protecting their
ego in the short term, they engage in situations and behaviors
that minimize learning since they already know the answer
on easy tasks or are helplessly guessing on extremely hard
tasks. This explanation dovetails with the goal setting
theory put forth by Dweck and Leggett (1988). They report
on an earlier study of Dweck’s where both mastery-oriented
and helpless-oriented children were given a series of problems
and experienced both successes and failures. They state
that, “the mastery oriented children not only believed
they could surmount obstacles and reach a solution, but
even relished the opportunity to do so.” (Dweck & Leggett,
1988 p. 258). Thus, those students with a learning/mastery
orientation or a greater tendency to approach success are
more likely to put themselves in situations that will enhance
their future learning.
The second important implication of these theories on
motivational orientations involves how these dispositions
can shape learning habits for extended periods of time.
There is a burgeoning literature that describes one of
the central goals for schools as the creation of life-long
learners. Educational philosophers such as Francis Schrag
underscore the importance of this mission. In Back to Basics
he lists only three educational aspirations for the future
that everyone should agree upon. His second and third are
that students in the future, “Should be disposed
to continue their own learning,” and that, “To
the extent possible, they should have developed the capacity
to continue that learning” (1995, p. 10). The normal
pattern for students high in tendency to approach success
is, after succeeding on a task, to select a task slightly
more challenging than the previous one. The increasing
challenges maintain their interest and their learning continues
(Renninger, Hidi, & Krapp, 1992). If these students
fail on a task, they usually reduce the difficulty of their
next task slightly and soon recapture their positive cycle.
On the other hand, those students with the tendency to
avoid failure who are selecting inappropriately easy or
difficult tasks set themselves up in a lose-lose situation.
Repeated successes on easy tasks diminish interest in learning
and schooling. Repeated failures of difficult tasks contribute
to the creation of a helplessness orientation. In either
case, the students with a performance orientation decrease
the likelihood of becoming life-long learners.
In sum, whether students develop the habit of being motivated
to approach appropriately challenging tasks has tremendous
ramifications for their future academic achievement and
their development of life-long learning habits. One major
influence on whether students develop this motivational
pattern is their affect towards their classroom environment.
This affect is dictated in part by whether the classroom
is more competitive than cooperative or visa-versa. The
literature on motivation that is relevant to schooling
describes students as being oriented towards both a need
for success and a need to avoid failure. Depending upon
the authors, this continuum is also represented as having
a high vs. low need for achievement, having high or low
test anxiety, or having a mastery vs. ego orientation to
learning (Dweck & Leggett, 1988). One principle that
underlies these conceptions is that some people will focus
more on challenging themselves to achieve by choosing moderately
difficult tasks, persisting in the face of setbacks, etc.
while others try to avoid situations of moderately difficult
tasks where their self-esteem would be at risk (Atkinson & Feather,
1974). Those who are risk averse tend to choose either
very simple tasks or very hard ones. In the former case
they are confident they will succeed, and in the latter
case nobody will expect them to succeed. Dweck and Leggett
(1988) extended this general rule. They state that people
have different personal theories of intelligence. Some
believe that intelligence is a stable, fixed trait (entity
view), while others think that intelligence is malleable
(incremental view). Those who entertain the entity view
of intelligence usually have a performance goal orientation
as opposed to a learning goal orientation. These are the
students who are more focused on making sure that they
do not appear foolish to others in the class. Students
with more of an incremental view of intelligence will be
more concerned with whether they are learning than with
their social presentation to their peers. Students holding
the entity view tend to avoid failure, have a low need
for achievement, have high test anxiety, and develop an
ego orientation to learning. The opposite associations
generally were found in students with an incremental view
of intelligence.
These theories have potent implications for predicting
behavior patterns related to learning. Atkinson and Feather
(1974) found that people who have a greater orientation
towards approaching success tend to have higher levels
of academic achievement. This correlation is explained
in the following manner. Students whose tendency to approach
success is greater than their tendency to avoid failure
are more likely to engage in tasks that challenge them.
Students whose tendency is to avoid failure are more likely
to protect their ego by engaging in very easy or very difficult
tasks. While they may be successful in protecting their
ego in the short term, they engage in situations and behaviors
that minimize learning since they already know the answer
on easy tasks or are helplessly guessing on extremely hard
tasks.
This explanation dovetails with the goal setting theory
put forth by Dweck and Leggett (1988). They report on an
earlier study of Dweck’s where both mastery-oriented
and helpless-oriented children were given a series of problems
and experienced both successes and failures. They state
that, “the mastery oriented children not only believed
they could surmount obstacles and reach a solution, but
even relished the opportunity to do so.” (Dweck & Leggett,
1988 p. 258). Thus, those students with a learning/mastery
orientation or a greater tendency to approach success are
more likely to put themselves in situations that will enhance
their future learning.
The second important implication of these theories on
motivational orientations involves how these dispositions
can shape learning habits for extended periods of time.
There is a burgeoning literature that describes one of
the central goals for schools as the creation of life-long
learners. Educational philosophers such as Francis Schrag
underscore the importance of this mission. In Back to Basics
he lists only three educational aspirations for the future
that everyone should agree upon. His second and third are
that students in the future, “Should be disposed
to continue their own learning,” and that, “To
the extent possible, they should have developed the capacity
to continue that learning” (1995, p. 10). The normal
pattern for students high in tendency to approach success
is, after succeeding on a task, to select a task slightly
more challenging than the previous one. The increasing
challenges maintain their interest and their learning continues
(Renninger, Hidi, & Krapp, 1992). If these students
fail on a task, they usually reduce the difficulty of their
next task slightly and soon recapture their positive cycle.
On the other hand, those students with the tendency to
avoid failure who are selecting inappropriately easy or
difficult tasks set themselves up in a lose-lose situation.
Repeated successes on easy tasks diminish interest in learning
and schooling. Repeated failures of difficult tasks contribute
to the creation of a helplessness orientation. In either
case, the students with a performance orientation decrease
the likelihood of becoming life-long learners.
In sum, whether students develop the habit of being motivated
to approach appropriately challenging tasks has tremendous
ramifications for their future academic achievement and
their development of life-long learning habits. One major
influence on whether students develop this motivational
pattern is their affect towards their classroom environment.
This affect is dictated in part by whether the classroom
is more competitive than cooperative or visa-versa.
Varieties of Competition and Cooperation
Next we need to understand that there are many varieties
of competition and cooperation in the classroom. As mentioned
in the introduction, these ideas are often thought of as
opposing one another in a false dichotomy i.e. classrooms
are often thought to have either a competitive or cooperative
atmosphere. They are rarely thought of as a mixture of
the two.
Most of the research in this area of classroom structure
delineates three options for how teachers organize the
orientation of their classrooms: cooperative, competitive,
or individualistic. Cooperative classes are defined as
those where improved personal performance is dependent
upon improved performance of others. In competitive classes,
improved personal performance is dependent upon and causes
worse performance for classmates i.e. it is a zero-sum
game. In individualistic structures personal performance
is independent of the performance of others (Johnson & Johnson,
1975).
In practice pure forms of these structures do not exist.
Though some law schools and business schools still ‘grade
on the curve’, and there are many ‘weeder’ courses
in medical schools, there are few instances where classes
are purely competitive i.e. 20% get As, 20% get Bs…and
20% fail. Conversely, few teachers assign group projects
in which high performance of members in other groups helps
your personal achievement. Although purely independent
work does exist, it is rare that there is no peer interaction
in a class. As a result our study uses these constructs
only as guide-posts. As will be seen in the methods section,
we describe actual classroom scenarios rather than attempting
to pinpoint a precise definition of a particular classroom
structure. For the purposes of our study, cooperative classroom
settings are defined as those where students interact with
each other frequently in an attempt to help one another
learn while the teacher helps facilitate these interactions.
Grading in these classrooms is criterion-based as opposed
to normative. A competitive classroom features fewer interactions
between students, more individualized work, little encouragement
to help classmates, and evaluation that in some way depends
upon the performance of the other members of the class.
Personality and Learning Structures
Research by Graziano et al. (1985) and Wolfe and Kasmer
(1988) using hypothetical athletic competition scenarios
suggests that extroverts and introverts react differently
to cooperative and competitive situations. Most notably,
the results indicate that extroverts regard a competitive
situation more favorably than do introverts, whereas introverts
regard a cooperative situation more favorably than do extroverts.
These findings indicate that educators need to be aware
of these temperament factors in order to address individual
educational needs of students. If the educational setting
is
incompatible with the students’ personal orientations towards learning,
they may be unable to engage in educational activities and will be left at
a disadvantage. More importantly, students may disengage from the learning
process which can further hamper their educational success.
Further findings on the relationship between personality
and learning
orientation show that extroverts judge competitive situations to be
significantly more arousing, potentially rewarding, interesting, and likeable
than introverts. In addition, introverts regard the competitive situation as
more potentially punishing than do extraverts (Graziano et al., 1985, Wolfe & Kasmer,
1988). Wolfe and Kasmer (1988) make even more specific distinctions as to what
other specific personality traits explain preference for either a cooperative
or competitive situation. Within the Extrovert factor, they identified sociability
and impulsivity subfactors that further pinpoint the interaction mechanisms
of personality and learning environment. They found that Sociability subfactor
strongly determines subject’s ratings of the cooperative activity and
that the Impulsivity subfactor can strongly predict subject’s ratings
of the competitive activity. These findings support the idea that individuals
with a social orientation prefer the personal interactions in a cooperative
learning environment. Impulsive persons do not find the harmonious interactions
of cooperative learning appealing and thus do not perceive a cooperative situation
in the same favorable light as do sociable people.
Another study by Borg and Shapiro (1996) found evidence
that personality type does affect a student’s ability
to succeed in college level introductory economics courses.
They suggest that matching student’s learning style
with a professor’s teaching style improves student’s
performance in economics. According to the authors, students
develop different learning styles based on their personality.
They cite research by Wetzel et al. (1982) and Charkins
et al. (1985)that identify three learning styles based
on personality types:
Dependent Learners typified by an SJ temperament on the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator,
Independent Learners characterized by an NT temperament and Collaborative learners
characterized by NF and SP temperaments. They determined that students with
a SJ personality type, according to the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, prefer “chalk-and-talk
lecture format,” individual learning whereas NF students prefer activities
in which they can be personally involved, i.e. cooperative learning. In sum,
previous research illustrates that different personalities are likely to thrive
in different learning environments.
Summary
All indications from the research are that we want students
to develop mastery orientations towards learning. Classroom
structures that are competitive are generally thought to
be less healthy and less productive learning environments
as compared to cooperative classrooms. Because of the wide
range of personality traits that students bring into the
schools, we posit that certain classroom structures are
neither unilaterally good nor evil but rather that students
will be more or less motivated by a classroom structure
depending upon several factors including their personality.
More specifically, we predict that extroverts will rate
competitive classroom environments more highly than introverts.
In cooperative classroom environments, the authors are
split. One author feels that introverts will rate cooperative
classrooms more favorably than extroverts; the other author
predicts there will be no difference between the two groups.
Our study will also attempt to confirm previous research
findings that indicate that overall, students prefer cooperative
learning situations.
References:
Atkinson, J. W., & Feather, N. T. (1974). A theory
of achievement motivation. Huntington, N.Y.,: R.
E. Krieger Pub. Co.
Borg, M. O., Shapiro, S. L. (1996). Personality Type and Student Performance
in Principles of Economics. Journal of Economic Education, 27 (Winter),
3-25.
Charkins, R. J., O'Toole D. M., & Wetzel, J. L. (1985). Linking teacher
and student learning styles with student achievement and attitudes. Journal
of Economic Education, 16 (Spring), 111-120.
Dweck, C. S., & Leggett, E. L. (1988). A social-cognitive approach
to motivation and personality. Psychological Review, 95(2), 256-273.
Graziano, W. G., Feldesman, A. B., & Rahe, D. F. (1985). Extraversion,
social cognition, and the salience of aversiveness in social encounters.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 49, 971-980.
Johnson, D. W., & Johnson, R. T. (1975). Learning together and alone
: cooperation, competition, and individualization. Englewood Cliffs:
Prentice-Hall.
Keirsey, D., Bates, M. (1984). Please understand me: Character & temperament
types. Del Mar, CA: Gnosology Books, Ltd.
Renninger, K. A., Hidi, S., & Krapp, A. (Eds.). (1992). The role of
interest in learning and development. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum
Associates.
Wetzel, J. N., Potter, W. J., & O’Toole, D. M. (1982). The influence
of learning styles and teaching styles on student attitudes and achievement
in the introductory economics course: A case study. Journal of Economic
Education, 13 (Winter); 33-39.
Wolfe, R. N., Kasmer, J. A. (1988). Type Versus Trait: Extraversion,
Impulsivity, Sociability, and Preferences for Cooperative and Competitive Activities.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 34, (5): 864-871.
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