MODEL

Portrait of a Learner PK-3 PK-3

Systems Change

Motivation

Factor Connections

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Motivation is the desire and energy that guides thinking and behavior. When students are motivated, they become more engaged in their learning, more likely to persist and problem-solve in the face of challenges, and more likely to reason deeply. Students need to be challenged just enough to stay engaged and motivated: they will often lose Motivation when a task is too easy, but also when it is so difficult that they feel it cannot be completed. With development, Motivation becomes increasingly multidimensional, breaking down into many aspects including social and academic goals, expectations of success, and mastery, a desire to learn skills for the sake of competence. Importantly, in adolescence learners' sources of Motivation become more social, with relevance, respect, and autonomy becoming increasingly more important in their social and academic worlds and behaviors.

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