支持学生升入高等教育:动机增强策略

Maurice Kinsella, Jonathan Wyatt, Niamh Nestor, Susan Rackard, J. Last
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在这篇文章中,我们探讨了一年级学生进入高等教育(HE)的过渡,重点是提高他们参与的激励因素。我们认为,学生支持专业人员(ssp)可以在提高学生动机方面发挥关键作用,因为这一角色需要承担广泛的学术、行政和教牧责任。在此背景下,我们提出两个问题:首先,我们应该如何理解学生动机的具体前提、表现和后果?其次,ssp可以将哪些动机增强策略整合到他们的实践中,以与学生建立富有成效的关系?根据自我决定理论(SDT)的见解,我们对学生动机进行了分类,认为:动机存在于自我调节的连续体中,动机是情境性的,动机是多维的,动机是因果性的。基于这一分类,我们为希望激发学生内在动机的高中教师提供了实践指导,确定了三种具体的动机增强策略,即:通过在自己和学生之间建立现实的期望来培养能力;通过提供资源促进学生的全面参与,从而建立联系;并通过赋予学生决策自主权来培养他们的自主权。我们认为,ssp培养参与能力的核心是对学生动机的概念和经验理解,这可以提高他们响应学生需求的能力。ssp应该以与学生合作的方式来处理这个动机增强的过程,以发现动机障碍和动机增强资源,从而更好地融入他们的高等教育体验。
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Supporting students’ transition into higher education: Motivation enhancement strategies
In this article, we explore first-year students’ transition into higher education (HE), focusing on the motivational factors that enhance their engagement. We argue that Student Support Professionals (SSPs) can play a pivotal role in heightening student motivation, given the broad range of academic, administrative, and pastoral responsibilities that this role entails. Against this background, we ask two questions: Firstly, how should we understand student motivation with specific regard to its antecedents, manifestations, and consequences? Secondly, what motivation-enhancement strategies can SSPs integrate into their practice to build a productive relationship with students? Drawing on self-determination theory (SDT) insights, we provide a taxonomy of student motivation, arguing that: Motivation exists in a continuum of self-regulation, motivation is contextual, motivation is multidimensional, and motivation is causally significant. Building on this taxonomy we offer practical guidance to SSPs who are looking to catalyse students’ intrinsic motivation, identifying three specific motivational enhancement strategies, namely: Fostering competence by establishing realistic expectations between oneself and students; fostering relatedness by providing resources for holistic student engagement; and fostering autonomy by empowering students in their decision-making. We argue that central to SSPs’ ability to foster engagement is possessing a conceptual and experiential understanding of student motivation, which can heighten their ability to respond to students’ needs. SSPs should approach this process of motivation enhancement as collaborative—working with students to discover both motivational impediments and motivation-enhancing resources to better engage with their HE experience.
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