Student Motivation: Barriers and Incentives for Agency

Our starting point was the often-overlooked understanding that motivation problems aren't a diagnosis but a symptom. They indicate the actual issue - an environment insufficient for fulfilling autonomy needs, which often escapes the attention of teachers, parents, and even researchers. Our goal...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Voprosy obrazovaniâ no. 1
Main Authors: Dobryakova, Maria S., Yurchenko, Olesya V.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: National Research University Higher School of Economics (HSE) 04.04.2024
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ISSN:1814-9545, 2412-4354
Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:Our starting point was the often-overlooked understanding that motivation problems aren't a diagnosis but a symptom. They indicate the actual issue - an environment insufficient for fulfilling autonomy needs, which often escapes the attention of teachers, parents, and even researchers. Our goal was to develop a framework for exploring the main characteristics of a schoolchild's educational environment to identify the source of motivation problems. To do this, we combined aspects of the self-determination theory of E. Deci and R. Ryan with B. Bernstein's framing theory. The self-determination theory helps to consider human motivation from a psychological point of view, while B. Bernstein's framing theory opens a sociological perspective. Including Bernstein's ideas enriches the motivation analysis, highlighting sociological aspects that are not fully accounted for in the self-determination theory. The result is more comprehensive and, at the same time, more "visible" and easier to operationalize in the context of formal school or home education. 
ISSN:1814-9545
2412-4354
DOI:10.17323/vo-2024-17074