Motivating Students To Engage in Learning: The MUSIC Model of Academic Motivation
Motivating Students To Engage in Learning: The MUSIC Model of Academic Motivation
Motivating Students To Engage in Learning: The MUSIC Model of Academic Motivation
Abstract:
The purpose of this article is to present a model
of academic motivation that can be used by
instructors to design courses that will engage
students in learning. The model, based on
research and theory, consists of five components
that an instructor should consider when designing
instruction: (1) empowerment, (2) usefulness, (3)
success, (4) interest, and (5) caring. In this
article, I describe the components of the model
by discussing the key concepts of the
components, summarizing the background
research and theories that support the importance
of the components, and providing questions,
suggestions, and examples that instructors should
consider when designing instruction. My hope is
that novice, as well as experienced, instructors
will find this model and the associated
suggestions and examples useful as a reference
tool to which they can refer when designing
instruction.
Copyright © 2010, International Journal of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Abstract
Abstract:
Service-learning can be used as a teaching tool to
promote social justice, and its implementation
can encourage both students’ personal
development and social engagement. In this
article, I illustrate how service-learning can help
students become more self-aware, appreciative of
diversity, and agents of social change. This
process involves students reaching out to
marginalized populations through community
placements, reaching in through detailed
reflection and introspection about their attitudes
and experiences, and reaching around their
communities through advocacy and activism to
address social problems that are evident at field
sites. I include supporting qualitative data that
document how these experiences impacted
students’ personal growth and civic participation.
Copyright © 2010, International Journal of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Abstract
Abstract:
There has been a lack of research done on in-class
teaching and learning using visual methods. The
purpose of this article is to demonstrate an enriched
teaching and learning experience, facilitated by a
Photovoice project, in an Advanced Methodology
class where sociology graduate students were
exposed to various social research methods and
methodologies. Students were asked to take
photographs that would represent a research interest
or a lived experience based in their own social world.
The article weaves four students and the professor’s
experiences to document the impact the Photovoice
project had on each of them. Through this process, it
was found that Photovoice is a successful tool for
conducting research, teaching students to think
critically, and introducing students to a new medium
to create knowledge. Students experienced what it is
like to be a researcher and a participant in a
qualitative research project and discovered the
overwhelming potential visual methods have to
inform society about lived experiences.
Abstract
Abstract:
Teacher education and the teaching profession
are adapting to innovative methods to ensure the
professional longevity and effectiveness of those
who become educators. This is particularly
important because of the early, and sometimes
abrupt, exit of beginning teachers from the
profession. Clearly, to mitigate such early exodus
from the profession, those responsible for teacher
education must examine how they prepare
student teachers and whether or not they are
equipped to face the realities of the classroom
when they enter the profession. This paper
presents a modality that engages pre-
professionals or student teachers in meaningful
and productive field experiences that will
improve student teachers’ learning. The author
presents an instructional model that can be
applied to prepare student teachers for more
effective field experiences that will improve their
learning.
International Journal of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education 2009, Volume 21, Number 2, 252-257 http://www.isetl.org/ijtlhe/ ISSN
1812-9129 An Instructional Model for Preparing Teachers for Fieldwork
Jacqueline Hughes
California State University, Bakersfield
Teacher education and the teaching profession are adapting to innovative methods to ensure the
professional longevity and effectiveness of those who become educators. This is particularly
important because of the early, and sometimes abrupt, exit of beginning teachers from the
profession. Clearly, to mitigate such early exodus from the profession, those responsible for teacher
education must examine how they prepare student teachers and whether or not they are equipped to
face the realities of the classroom when they enter the profession. This paper presents a modality that
engages pre-professionals or student teachers in meaningful and productive field experiences that
will improve student teachers’ learning. The author presents an instructional model that can be
applied to prepare student teachers for more effective field experiences that will improve their
learning.
Teacher educators are constantly faced with the challenge of providing student teachers with learning
opportunities that will “promote effective teaching and that will maximize student learning” (Ostorga & Lopez-
Estrada, 2009, p. 18). Educators believe that integrating field experiences into coursework is an effective approach
to meeting this challenge (Chiang, 2008) because such experiences modify and enrich student teachers’ thinking and
conceptual understanding about teaching and learning (Loyens & Gijbels, 2008; Parkison, 2009; Cherubini, 2008;
Loyens, Rikers, & Schmidt, 2008). Challenging pre-services teachers thinking is likely to improve their conceptual
understanding of teaching and learning theories, increase of transferability of skills, and improve future learning
(Renkl, 2009; Wilson, Floden & Ferrini-Mundy, 2001), thus making student teachers more effective in the
classroom.
The inference here is that to enhance student teachers’ learning and improve their ability to apply the acquired
knowledge, learning must take place in an environment that facilitates the desired learning outcomes, particularly as
they relate to application of knowledge in different situations (Woolfolk, 2004). In other words, experiences in the
learning environment must be replicated in the environment in which student teachers would eventually apply their
knowledge, as well as one that presents a wide range of learning opportunities that mirror those likely to be
encountered in the future. For example, if the learning is preparing students to become teachers, they should be
given learning opportunities in a public school setting and classroom where they can test their acquired knowledge
of teaching and learning. (The same case is true of the pre-professional medical student who wants to become a
surgeon; he or she must be given learning opportunities in the operating room to hone surgical skills before
operating on a patient.) The environment must present opportunities to allow learners to frame their knowledge and
understanding of the issues and contexts that are relevant to their discipline. These opportunities can be on-the-job
training such as in the case of the medical students who assume an internship at a hospital to hone their skills. Here
the medical intern is assigned a resident advisor who provides learning opportunities such as diagnosing a disease or
providing feedback, allowing the medical students to reflect on their action (diagnosis) and providing other
opportunities for learning that will facilitate understanding. The medical interns learn from the resident advisor as
well as from their peers as they seek to refine their understanding of a specific issue. The same approach is used in
the teacher preparation process where, at the end of the coursework, student teachers engage in student teaching
under the authority of a master teacher and the watchful eye of a university supervisor.
It is important to recognize that respected authorities in the profession suggest that the quality of the time spent
in the classrooms and the expertise of those involved (master teacher and field supervisor), as well as the feedback
provided, are significant factors in determining the value of field experience (Shantz & Ward, 2000; Tang & Chow,
2007; Whitney, Golez, Nagel & Nieto 2002). Additionally, evidence has shown that teacher preparation activities
such as dialogues with colleagues, instructors, and master teachers (Penlington, 2008); cooperative group discourse
(Gillies & Boyle, 2008); reflective thinking (Chiang, 2008); and the use of classroom video to encourage discussion
and problem-solving (Borko, Jacobs, Eitelgorg, & Pittman, 2008) have proven to be effective in enhancing student
teachers’ field experience because they allow student teachers to analyze and reflect on their experiences as they
relate to theory. Clearly, for fieldwork experiences to serve as productive learning opportunities (Wilson, et al.
2001), an intense emphasis must be placed on the learning that occurs in the field by providing student teachers with
the skills necessary to effectively comprehend the
Hughes Preparing Teachers for Fieldwork 253
meaning of their observation (Tang, 2004). Basically, student teachers must be trained to analyze their field
observations in order to enhance their understanding of teaching and learning.
Although teacher educators agree that fieldwork activities are an effective mechanism to address the theory-
practice chasm (Wilson, Floden, & Ferrini-Mundy, 2001), some admit that they find it difficult providing quality
field experiences that will facilitate learning (Beck & Kosnick, 2002; Clark, 2002: Laboskey & Richert, 2002). Yet,
other educators believe that the fieldwork component of teacher preparation is overly focused on outcomes rather
than on the process of learning that occurs during fieldwork (Ward & McCotter, 2004). As a result of the latter, the
benefits of fieldwork activities are not fully realized. Despite the important role fieldwork plays in student teacher
development and the variety of methods (e.g. analysis of case studies and videos of classroom teaching) used to
facilitate student teachers’ conceptual understanding of teaching and learning, there is no consensus on how to best
prepare teachers to engage in meaningful and productive fieldwork (i.e. how best to interpret and to make sense of
what is observed so that it changes teacher practice).
For student teachers to make meaning of their field experiences in a way that their conceptual understanding is
improved, they must have some knowledge of the environment and be able to apply that knowledge to the
experiences and events in the new environment. More importantly, the pre-service teacher must be able to reflect
and analyze his/her experiences and events and integrate this new knowledge within his/her existing knowledge. For
example, student teachers who have learned classroom management techniques through coursework and field based
activities could effectively apply that knowledge in developing and implementing a classroom management plan in
their classroom, create an engaging learning environment for their students, and make necessary adjustments to the
plan as the need arises. This is not to suggest the ability to apply the knowledge learned in context specific situations
to general situations is easy or automatic. Teachers must first understand the situations they encounter and use their
understanding to determine what action to take. To develop this ability, student teachers must not only be given
adequate exposure through field experiences to a variety of classroom situations but also must be taught how to use,
or make meaning of, their fieldwork experiences to enhance their understanding of the teaching and learning
process. It is the process of reflecting on their experiences that will enhance the learning experience of student
teachers and increase transferability.
Therefore, for field experiences to be effective, emphasis must be placed on preparation for field activities that
has as its core the early and consistent training in the techniques and skills of classroom observation. It is to this end
that this study proposes a model for preparing student teachers so they can effectively participate in classroom
observation and fieldwork.
Theoretical Framework
According to Dewey (1933), ‘deliberate thought and deliberate action’ do not occur automatically; therefore,
teacher educators must train student teachers to think reflectively about their learning experiences. It is this
reflective practice that will make learning more meaningful. The process of reflective thought involves “active,
persistent, and careful consideration of any belief or supposed form of knowledge in the light of the grounds that
supports it and the further conclusions to which it tends” (p. 9). Further study of reflective thinking as defined by
Dewey (1933) yields that reflective thinking:
emancipates us from merely impulsive and merely routine activity. Put in positive terms, thinking enables us to
direct our activities with foresight and to plan according to ends-in-view, or purposes of which we are aware. It
enables us to act in deliberate and intentional fashion to attain future objects or to come into command of what
is now distant and lacking. (Dewey, 1933, p. 17)
Dewey further asserts that reflective thinking is “the kind of thinking that consists in the turning a subject over in the
mind and giving it serious and consecutive consideration” (p. 3). It is important to note that reflective thinking
“involves (1) a state of doubt, hesitation, perplexity, mental difficulty, in which thinking originates, and (2) an act of
searching, hunting, inquiring, to find material that will resolve the doubt, settle and dispose of the perplexity”
(Dewey, 1933, p. 12). Training student teachers how to think reflectively, to manage their doubts and lack of
understanding through inquiry and the acquisition of information, is one approach teacher educators can use to
enhance teacher effectiveness and promoting student learning. Given the value associated with reflective thinking,
teacher educators should make explicit attempts to facilitate the development of this skill in their student teachers.
Hughes Preparing Teachers for Fieldwork 254
An Instructional Model for Fieldwork Preparation
For student teachers to obtain the maximum benefits of fieldwork, they must be trained to effectively use the
knowledge acquired in the program courses in order to understand the teaching and learning situations they will
encounter in the field. To accomplish this goal, teacher educators should identify with specificity what they expect
student teachers to do when in the field. Once the purpose and goal of fieldwork is clearly established, teacher
educators should create authentic learning opportunities for student teachers to apply their knowledge in a wide
range of situations, reflect and clarify their application of this knowledge, and integrate the new knowledge within
the context of teaching. It is through this process that students will be able to forge links between theory and practice
as well as acquire skill sets that would broaden their understanding of the practical complexities of teaching and
learning (Boreen, Johnson, Niday & Potts, 2000; Moore, 2003).
The Concept Attainment Model (CAM) by Joyce, Weils & Calhoun (2004) (see Table 1), provides the
framework for creating meaningful field experiences because it illuminates the process of conceptual understanding
by clearly illustrating how students acquire (analysis and reflection) and apply (integration) the knowledge.
Furthermore, this model illustrates the process for framing and reframing teaching concepts with the support of their
instructor and peers (Loghran, 2002; Ward & McCotter, 2004).
It is important to note that this model contains three phases (See Table 1): presentation of data and identification
of the concept to be learned; testing attainment of the concept; and analysis of thinking strategies (Joyce, et al.,
2004). During Phase One, presentation of data and identification of concept, the instructor presents the concept
(making content accessible, accessing learning, etc.) to the student teachers with examples to aid in their
understanding. The student teachers then engage in identifying the attributes of this concept. Once the student
teachers identify the attributes (defining factors) of the concepts, they name and define the concept based on the
attributes they have collected. As the training moves to Phase Two, testing attainment of the concept, students add
more attributes (defining factors) to clarify their understanding of the concept and reframe the concept with the help
of the instructor and peers. The instructor checks for comprehension of the concept by engaging students in
reflecting, problem posing, and dialogue activities. In the final phase, or what has been designated here as Phase
Three, analysis of thinking strategies, students are asked to reflect on their experiences and thought processes
regarding “how” and “why” they formed their hypotheses and to make any necessary changes.
The Concept Attainment Model by Joyce, et al. (2004) was adapted to meet the author’s conception of an
instructional model for fieldwork. In this adaptation, the title and process in each of three phases has been modified
to reflect the author’s perspective and perception of an instructional model for fieldwork preparation. For example,
Phase One of the original model (Joyce, et al., 2004) was changed to Step One, Identify and define the
teaching/learning concept; Phase Two was changed to Step Two, Assessing understanding of concept; and Phase
Three was renamed Step Three, Making the connection.
Training for fieldwork. In the program, training for fieldwork begins in a course designated for enhancing
observation skills and occurs through a variety of instructional opportunities designed to prepare student teachers to
effectively engage the learning environment prior to entering the field to conduct observations. The preparation for
field observation should focus on the knowledge and skill sets teachers need in the classroom to effectively make
sense of their observation experience. The course curriculum may consist of an introduction to basic observation
skills, for example, establishing an observation focus, collecting data relevant to the focus, analyzing the data, and
demonstrating conceptual understanding. The course instructor can develop a variety of learning opportunities that
allow student teachers to acquire these skills before entering the field. One way to do this is to introduce new
teaching/learning concepts through case studies and video illustrations and have the student teachers identify the
teaching/learning concepts, identify attributes of the concept, define the concept, gather evidence to support the
definition, and refine the definition by discussing their observation with the instructor and classmates. Finally,
student teachers may demonstrate their understanding of the concept by developing examples of the concept that
demonstrate an integration of the newly formed knowledge.
For clarity, for example, student teachers are enrolled in a methods course where they are learning about
motivating students and making content accessible. After a lecture on these topics, the instructor directs the student
teacher to go into the field to observe how teachers motivate students or how they make content accessible to
students. Before entering the field, student teachers must establish the observation focus (i.e. what to look for in the
classroom). For example, the student teacher may decide to focus on how the teacher makes content accessible to
English Language Learners (ELLs) by looking for modifications of teaching strategies. (See Table 2). Once the
observation focus is established, the student teacher visits a classroom to collect data that is relevant to the focus.
Hughes Preparing Teachers for Fieldwork 255
Table 1
Concept Attainment Model
Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 3
Presentation of Data and Testing Attainment of the Concepts Analysis of Thinking
Identification of Concepts Strategies
Teacher presents labeled examples Students identify additional unlabeled examples Students describe thoughts
as appropriate
Students compare attributes on Teacher confirms hypotheses, names concepts, Students discuss role of
positive and negative examples and restates definitions according to essential hypotheses and attributes
attributes
Students generate and test na na
hypotheses
Students state a definition Students generate examples Students discuss type and
according to the essential number of hypotheses
attributes
Table 2
Example of the Instructional Model for Fieldwork
Step 1 Step 2 Step 3
Identify Instructional Provide Evidence of Testing Understanding of Concept
Practice Learning & Teaching
Situations
Making content accessible In the classroom student teacher Reflection of observation conducted in the
to English Language records evidence relevant to making field and its connection to theory taught in
Learners (ELL) content assessable to ELL their preparatory coursework
1 • Identify an What is seen is the classroom? After reflection student teachers will:
example of course concept 1 • Classroom teacher 1 • Look for examples of how the
in school classroom teaches a Social Studies lesson on teacher makes content accessible to all
2 • Provide how a bill becomes a law students
evidence of the concept 2 • Seek additional data to reinforce
Teacher modifies lesson for ELL as the framing of the concept of making content
follows: accessible to learners
1 • Uses personal or prior 3 • Validate what is seen in the field
knowledge to introduce lesson by through discussion
asking students “what is a bill? What 4 • Interprets the evidence gathered
is a law?” and reframe the concept based on discussion
2 • Explains concepts in (and ongoing reflection) with instructor and
lesson with illustrations peers
3 • Make visual aid of the 5 • Connect related factors to
lesson concepts
0 • Uses Scaffolding 6 • Integrates knowledge of what
1 • Chunks content was taught and what was observed
2 • Checks for 7 • Develop a new understanding
understanding by asking questions
and/or creating a chart on how a bill
becomes a law.
3 • Provides opportunities
for students to work in groups
4 • Uses words in the
students’ language to help them
connect points.
5 • Draws on students
culture and personal knowledge
6 • Checks for
understanding
7 • Restates and reframes
lesson for those who do not
understand lesson.