Publication | Closed Access
Processes and skills underlying continuing intrinsic motivation to learn: Toward a definition of motivational skills training interventions
116
Citations
44
References
1984
Year
Educational PsychologyEducationLearning-by-doingGenerative Process ModelInstructional ModelsSocial SciencesPsychologyTeacher EducationStudent MotivationSelf-efficacy TheoryLearning PsychologyTeaching PracticesAchievement GoalPersonal ControlIntrinsic MotivationLearning SciencesMotivationLearning BehaviourMotivational TheoryMotivational SkillsSelf-regulationMotivational LearningSelf-regulated Learning
Continuing intrinsic motivation to learn is the result of actively generating and implementing a variety of metacognitive, cognitive, and affective processes and skills. An understanding of these processes, skills, and their interrelationships forms a basis for the design of an effective motivational skills training program. This article advances a generative process model of continuing motivation in which the central role of perceived self‐efficacy and personal control are explicated. Support for this model from current theories of learning and motivation is presented, along with implications for specific skills training interventions. It is argued that the functional purpose of motivational skills training is to promote perceptions of self‐efficacy and personal control that underlie the ability to take positive self‐control and change negative attitudes and orientations toward learning. For students with motivational deficiencies, this training is a necessary precursor to their active engagement in the learning process and execution of appropriate learning strategies and skills.
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