د . محمد عمران
22-10-2003, 02:20 AM
School Leadership and Student Motivation
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Much of the recent research on student motivation has rightly centered on the classroom, where the majority of learning takes place and where students are most likely to acquire a strong motivation to gain new knowledge. Making the classroom a place that naturally motivates students to learn is much easier when students and teachers function in an atmosphere where academic success and the motivation to learn are expected and rewarded. Such an atmosphere, especially when motivation to learn evolves into academic achievement, is a chief characteristic of an effective school.
HOW CAN SCHOOL LEADERS GENERATE STUDENT MOTIVATION?
An environment that nurtures educational motivation can be cultivated in the home, in the classroom, or throughout an entire school. One of the most effective avenues for engendering student motivation is a school\'s culture. According to Deal (1987), school culture can be embodied and transformed through channels such as shared values, heroes, rituals, ceremonies, stories, and cultural networks.
Davis (1989) suggests using a wide variety of activities and symbols to communicate motivational goals. \"Visible symbols,\" he says, \"illustrate and confirm what is considered to be important in the school.\" He suggests using \"school newsletters, statements of goals, behavior codes, rituals, symbols, and legends\" to \"convey messages of what the school really values.\" Staging academic awards assemblies, awarding trophies for academic success and displaying them in trophy cases, scheduling motivational speakers, and publicizing students\' success can help them see that the desire to be successful academically is recognized and appreciated.
Klug (1989) notes that school leaders can influence levels of motivation by \"shaping the school\'s instructional climate,\" which in turn shapes \"the attitudes of teachers, students, parents, and the community at large toward education.\" By effectively managing this aspect of a school\'s culture, principals can \"increase both student and teacher motivation and indirectly impact
learning gains,\" Klug says
http://www.ericfacility.net/databases/ERIC_Digests/ed346558.html
THIS DIGEST WAS CREATED BY ERIC,
THE EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES INFORMATION CENTER. FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT ERIC, CONTACT ACCESS ERIC 1-800-LET-ERIC
Much of the recent research on student motivation has rightly centered on the classroom, where the majority of learning takes place and where students are most likely to acquire a strong motivation to gain new knowledge. Making the classroom a place that naturally motivates students to learn is much easier when students and teachers function in an atmosphere where academic success and the motivation to learn are expected and rewarded. Such an atmosphere, especially when motivation to learn evolves into academic achievement, is a chief characteristic of an effective school.
HOW CAN SCHOOL LEADERS GENERATE STUDENT MOTIVATION?
An environment that nurtures educational motivation can be cultivated in the home, in the classroom, or throughout an entire school. One of the most effective avenues for engendering student motivation is a school\'s culture. According to Deal (1987), school culture can be embodied and transformed through channels such as shared values, heroes, rituals, ceremonies, stories, and cultural networks.
Davis (1989) suggests using a wide variety of activities and symbols to communicate motivational goals. \"Visible symbols,\" he says, \"illustrate and confirm what is considered to be important in the school.\" He suggests using \"school newsletters, statements of goals, behavior codes, rituals, symbols, and legends\" to \"convey messages of what the school really values.\" Staging academic awards assemblies, awarding trophies for academic success and displaying them in trophy cases, scheduling motivational speakers, and publicizing students\' success can help them see that the desire to be successful academically is recognized and appreciated.
Klug (1989) notes that school leaders can influence levels of motivation by \"shaping the school\'s instructional climate,\" which in turn shapes \"the attitudes of teachers, students, parents, and the community at large toward education.\" By effectively managing this aspect of a school\'s culture, principals can \"increase both student and teacher motivation and indirectly impact
learning gains,\" Klug says
http://www.ericfacility.net/databases/ERIC_Digests/ed346558.html