Thursday, January 22, 2015

Acton Research Conclusions




ABSTRACT

 INQUIRING MINDS: INCREASING STUDENT MOTIVATION FOR SUCCESS
By
Stephany York
Student apathy is at an all-time high while motivation is at an all-time low.  This generation of students is the first generation to grow up completely with technology at the tip of their fingers. Even those among the poorest have access to it.  Today’s students are more knowledgeable, and more easily bored, and more apathetic than the generations that came before them. Whether the cause is parenting, poverty, technology, or language barriers, it is imperative that educators find a motivating factor to ensure success for public education.  Student apathy has increased in public schools over the past five to ten years showing a decline in student participation and state mandated test scores. Several projects were implemented in an effort to increase student motivation at Dimmitt High School in Dimmit, Texas. A study by Próspero et al. (2012) proved that short-term rewards will yield short-term effects, and this appears to be the case with this study. However, there were successes with the overall population of students just not with the failing quarter of English I EOC Reading and Writing students retesting. Some students are showing an increase in performance due to implementation of student activities and rewards, but the numbers are not large enough to be considered a success in alleviating apathy and increasing motivation. The desire to get out of EOC accelerated learning classes to regain electives is present with a small population of students, but overall, this does not show a large enough increase in passing rates to suggest it could be a motivating factor. Nevertheless, with that said, two factors has shown success: student voice and caring teachers.


                                         Concluding Remarks

If school stakeholders want to eradicate student apathy, it begins with good instructional leadership on the part of the principal and assistant principal, good teachers who are highly qualified and care about the individual student as well as his/her education, and parents who are willing to invest in their child’s future. The last part, the parent, is the one aspect that, as educators, is beyond our control, so we must do what is necessary to get our students to buy in to their own education and know they have a future beyond those of a school building.  Goldberg et al. (2001) defines motivation as “provide[ing] someone with an incentive to so [sic] something. . . . Personal goals determine why people do what they do, and the content of these goals direct them.  Unfortunately, far too many students are refusing to work for goals that have a far too distant payoff (Glasser, 1998) or incentive.  Ultimately, if we can learn to help students self-motivate and find the desire to succeed within; these students show much higher rates in success.  Próspero et al. (2012) states, “an individual’s attempt to find challenges that are suited to his or her competencies and are carried out for the pleasure of the activity itself, absent of external rewards.”  

For a copy of the complete study, you may contact me by email.
Stephany York