Module 3
Module 3
Module 3
1 Motivation (150)
Congratulations! You have passed this lesson.
A massive proportion of learners need to be motivated to learn.
Learner motivation makes learning, as well as teaching, immeasurably easier and more pleasant and more
productive.
Theories of motivation are sometimes of value but are unlikely to add much to your practical learning at this
stage. You can delve into these theories if you wish.
You know what motivation is, and you know that sometimes you are highly enthused and driven. At other
times, you don’t quite feel the same drive, or you’re bereft of any drive at all. Of course, your learners are no
different.
When you are motivated, there’s some inspiration and eagerness to succeed in what you are doing. If you
apply this awareness to your learners, you can identify the motivated learner. This is a learner who is willing
and eager to invest significant effort and substantial time in language learning and is driven to make progress.
Instead of digging into the numerous theories, let’s consider some different types of motivation and how
knowledge of motivation will be of great practical use in your role.
Intrinsic Motivation
This is the urge to engage in a learning activity for its own sake, for the enjoyment it provides, or the feelings
of accomplishment it evokes. This type of learner is driven by personal achievement.
Extrinsic Motivation
This comes from external incentives and reward and success, e.g., a qualification, need for a high proficiency
score (e.g., to gain entry to an English-speaking university). Or, perhaps, the desire for higher pay (where
language proficiency offers that).
Whether one type of motivated learner is more motivated than another is up for grabs. There is not enough
conclusive research. Give thought to this when meeting up with your new class, particularly adults.
Ask them why they have decided to take your course (and note the reasons why). This will benefit you when
you are teaching them or when you happen to mingle with them during some other school activity.
2. Integrative motivation v Instrumental motivation
Let’s have a look at another two types of motivation.
Integrative Motivation
A learner who is integratively motivated wants to learn another language because he wants to get to know
and better understand the people who speak that other language. He is also interested in the culture
associated with that language. For example, a learner may have a significant relationship with a person or
persons in another country and wants to learn their language and learn about their culture.
Instrumental Motivation
A learner who is instrumentally motivated wants to learn another language for practical reasons, e.g., getting
into college, achieving a salary increase, securing a post overseas, etc.
1. Personalisation
Learners are more likely to be interested in tasks that relate to themselves or their interests. Ask learners to
share their opinions, tastes, experiences and suggestions. This can be very motivating because they’re
connecting the learning material to their personal life experience and context.
We have taught boys-only classes in the Far East where the English Premier Soccer League was king, as was
David Beckham at the time. Every single boy in the class was passionate about football (soccer) and anything
to do with football, e.g., magazines, strips, soccer cards with their favourite player’s picture on the front and
details about him on the back, etc.
There was no need to motivate them when a lesson was built around, for example: What are the three
questions you would ask David Beckham if you met him? OR Draw your own football strip and tell your group
why you chose the patterns and colours on the strip and badge.
2. Realia
Your learners will be much more engaged when you use realia: real-life, authentic language materials.
Authentic materials are materials which are unscripted and unedited and are not explicitly developed for
language learning purposes. These could be, for example:
Restaurant menus
Extracts from newspapers, magasines: photos, advertisements, classifieds, crosswords, horoscopes,
features, etc.
Travel tickets
Recordings of casual conversations amongst native speakers
Radio and TV news and weather broadcasts
3. Gamification
Gamification is where a teacher adds in game elements to motivate her learners. Some teachers have been
doing this for many years.
As learners now grow up with video and computer games as part of their everyday life, the concept of
gamification is becoming more prevalent in the classroom.
In general, it mirrors several elements found in the video/computer games context:
For example, the teacher might set up a lexical recycling activity (re-meeting lexis they have learned
recently), where the groups of learners need to look at pictures and complete the gaps in sentences with the
correct recently learned word. The rules of the game could be:
4. Choice
Occasionally, let your learners choose what they want to do or how they want to do it. When they have
choices, they have a feeling of autonomy.
An example of autonomy would be to allow learners to pick from a list of topics to debate. Or you can let
learners choose partners with whom they would like to team up with for a specific activity or game.
The life cycle of a butterfly – mapping the stages, making drawings, making wire butterflies and
hanging them up in the room, raising butterflies from caterpillars in the classroom, observing and
noting their growth, identifying differences in the butterflies
Learning strategies such as predicting, guessing, hypothesising, sequencing (putting the days of the
week in order or the life cycle steps in order), memorising (what he ate on Tuesday), researching (what
caterpillars eat and drink), etc.
Art and design: making cardboard or cloth models of caterpillars, and making patterns and colouring
Music, drama, and movement: singing butterfly songs and rhymes, reciting poetry and taking part in
performances for an audience, and moving like a caterpillar and butterfly
6. Warmers
When you engage your learners and inspire their interest at the start of a lesson, you are using a ‘warmer’.
This is very important; more than likely they’ll have just come from classes and situations where they have
been using their native language. So, a warmer will get them swiftly engaged and participating, and into the
‘English mode’ immediately.
Always try to make the warmer related to what they have already been learning or what you are about
to teach. That is, don’t use an unrelated warmer just for fun.
We have included several warmer examples in Module 7. Here is an example of a warmer with a
purpose:
Example
In the previous lesson, they have learned the structure: Would you prefer to…?
For the start of their next lesson, make up some two-set fun choices, headed up with: Would you prefer to …
The options could be anything:
be a lion/be an elephant
eat popcorn all the time/eat potatoes all the time
be stranded alone on a deserted island/be stranded on a deserted island with someone who plays the
trumpet all day and all night
Then, the learners choose, and you can encourage them to tell the class why they chose one of the options.
3.2.1. Techniques
Here are some practical techniques that effective learners apply. This will help you to reflect on the
traits and attributes you want to nurture in learners who are lacking in some areas.
Look out for those who:
They will also use different ways of communicating to overcome gaps in linguistic knowledge. For
example, when a word is not known, the effective learner will try to describe the object or its function,
e.g., for scissors: They’re made of metal, and you use them to cut paper. Or she will find another word
approximate to the meaning of the word she is looking for, e.g., pot for saucepan or she will make up
an innovative word, e.g. foot-finger for toe.
4. They try to work out how the English language works.
They aim to come to grips with the language as a system. They pay close attention to form and look for
patterns in the language.
They are good guessers, continually monitoring the context of the conversation or text and then
revising expectations when necessary. They use clues from the situation to help them guess the
meaning of unknown words and phrases rather than giving up.
For example, once an effective learner grasps the idea of the infinitive form made up from to plus the
verb stem, e.g., to go, to eat, to sleep, he will likely grasp that it is the base form of a verb (verb stem)
which will complete the blank in the following sentence:
So, he will likely complete it with swim, play, run, paint, etc. and not with, for example, a gerund
(swimming), a noun (football), or adverb (quickly), etc.
5. They know that language is used to communicate, and they take risks.
They pay attention to meaning. They have effective techniques for practising listening, speaking,
reading, and writing. In the initial stages of their language learning, they do not worry about making
mistakes. They take risks and are not embarrassed when they get it wrong.
They speak to achieve the goal of becoming fluent. They seek out opportunities to talk with native
speakers. They realise that language learning is not merely an academic subject but is also a means of
communication.
6. They study like detectives.
They are always inquisitive, looking for evidence and clues that will help them to grasp how the
language works. They guess and ask people to correct them if they are wrong. They compare what
they say with what others say.
They keep a record of what they have learned and reflect on it. They monitor themselves. They keep a
careful eye on the forms of the language to discover patterns that will aid learning.
7. They use the language outside the classroom.
Effective learners create opportunities to try out what they have learned and do not merely complete
the homework. They are not content only with the exposure to the language that the classroom can
provide but like to find opportunities outside.
Remember this! You’ll know effective learners when you see them. Be wise. Use them to help others
achieve in the classroom. Don’t single them out in front of others. Just ensure that your pairs and
groups are strengthened by an effective learner so that some of their skills and attributes can brush off
on others.
And, use the list above as a reminder to nurture learners who are lacking in some of these areas.
3.3 Learners Learning Preferences (150)
Congratulations! You have passed this lesson.
Use these types of resources to capitalise on the visual learning preference when using warmers and doing
activities:
Use these types of resources to capitalise on the auditory learning preference when using warmers and
doing activities:
Use these types of resources to capitalise on the kinesthetic learning preference when using warmers and
doing activities:
Games with action, e.g., quickly finding someone who…, and running to the board to add/change some word
Total Physical Response activities, e.g., songs with movement (Simon Says; Wheel on the Bus; Head, Shoulders,
Knees, and Toes)
Use lots of realia: e.g., fruits, vegetables, clothes, tea set
Craftwork, e.g., arising from a storybook read or a project based on a storybook
Studying in short blocks
Experiments, e.g., as part of a project on butterflies, looking after, watching and noting the growth of caterpillars
into butterflies
Role-playing
Taking field trips and visiting museums
3. A Whole-Person Approach
Every individual uses all preferences to some degree or another. A multi-faceted teaching approach that appeals
to all preferences addresses the whole person in ways that more one-sided approaches do not.
The VAK approach helps to develop the whole person within each learner, which best serves the person’s
language learning requirements as well.
Give it a try – preferably with older learners.
2. Honey-Mumford Model
This is similar to Kolb’s model.
There are four learning preferences.
According to this approach:
Activists like practical work such as labs, fieldwork, observation exercises and using visual source material for
information, etc.
Reflectors like to learn by watching other people, taking time to consider observations of their own experience,
etc.
Theorists like lectures, reading papers on topics, considering analogies, etc.
Pragmatists like simulations, case studies, homework, etc.
Thus, the four types might approach learning a software programme in different ways:
Activists might start using it and feel their way into it.
Reflectors might have a go at using it and then take time to think about what they have just done.
Theorists might begin by reading the manual.
Pragmatists might start using the programme but make frequent references to the help files.
The four types of learning are viewed as cyclical stages through which a learner can progress
(Watch>>>Think>>>Feel>>>Do), as well as categorising specific kinds of learning experiences.
3.4 Different Learning Strategies (150)
Congratulations! You have passed this lesson.
Example
Somewhere in the past, you may have picked up the idea of mind mapping. You even go the extra mile by
highlighting and colouring bits of your mind maps.
You believe that mind mapping is a potent tool which, of course, it is. So, when you take up your teaching
post, lots of the board work you do is based on mind mapping as this is second nature to you.
However, this technique is hardly likely to fully satisfy those learners who have a strong leaning towards
auditory or kinesthetic learning.
So, remember to vary your methods and techniques.
Remember: The ways your learners learn best can be different due to a range of factors, such as learning
preferences, age, prior learning experience, and so on.
Be aware of these differences and try and not to limit learners to think that they can only learn in one way.
Achieve this by ensuring that your lessons have elements that not only cater to the different learning
preferences of your learners but are also conducive to the various learning strategies of your learners.
You can influence and help to develop such strategies. Of course, it is not always feasible to meet the learning
characteristics of each learner all the time. However, you can try to vary how you teach across a series of
lessons or classes so that you can match the learning characteristics of a range of your learners most of the
time.
In short, being aware of your learners’ learning characteristics, preferences and learning strategies will go a
long way to ensuring that you can motivate them to learn.
3.5.1 Autonomy
We touched on autonomy previously. It’s a critical element in successful teaching, so let’s draw it all
together.
Effective learners generally take responsibility for their learning, both inside and outside the classroom.
Therefore, effective learners take steps to become autonomous.
Autonomous learners:
Studies have shown that as learner autonomy increases, so does learner motivation. And, thus, so do learning
results.
While the competent teacher will always try to get his learners to become autonomous learners, learners can
also learn to become more autonomous on their own.
These days, in some schools, there are just as many learner resources available as there are classroom
materials. For example, learners can access grammar reference books, dictionaries, lexis exercise books, and
CD-ROMs that supplement the main textbook series. There are also endless online learning resources.
And, remember that there are also many ways for learners to get exposure to English outside the classroom,
even if they are living in a non-English speaking context.
Here are a variety of ways in which you can increase learner autonomy.
1. Learner Journals
Use journals for different purposes. Here are some examples:
Encourage your learners to keep a learning journal of new words and their meanings (with a sentence
showing the usage of the word), then learn these and later test them out in the classroom in pairs.
A dialogue journal is an ongoing written dialogue between the learner and you, akin to writing notes or short
letters to each other. It is used specifically for assessing writing ability, but it is also useful for gaining insight
into the learner’s views, goals, motivation, and attitude to learning.
An open-ended journal allows a place for learner reflection and commentary. The learner chooses what they
feel they should address in their learning, e.g., what they should read, questions to ask, how they might apply
the learning to their personal experience, etc.
2. Self-And Peer-Assessment
In self-assessment, the learners are asked to reflect and rate themselves on their performances.
In peer assessment, a learner assesses another learner’s work. Remember this: The youngest of learners,
though, are not able to give very detailed peer feedback because they are not yet ready to think in-depth.
4. Outside-Classroom Activities
Allowing your learners to practise activities outside the classroom will enhance autonomy. For example, they
may discuss the route to the park or public library with their peers. They may say hello to passers-by or talk to
the librarian in the public library and ask for a book. Or they may discuss road signs amongst themselves, and
so on.
5. Strategy Training
We have already explored several strategies for better learning. The more learners use these strategies, the
more autonomous they will become.
6. Goal Setting
If you aim to get the best out of your learners, it’s important to remember that setting learning goals is not all
down to you.
You should encourage your learners to set their own goals in some areas. What do they want to be able to do?
8. Homework
Teachers have different opinions on the use of homework.
Our long experience tells us that it is a potent activity for increasing autonomy – and learning.
It needs to be issued regularly, and there should be open-ended pieces, allowing the learners to respond as
they wish to the content and length.
To get the best out of it, it needs to be well-planned and inspiring. And, wherever possible, it should involve
the learners’ parents or caregivers – even where the parents or caregivers do not speak English.
Here is an activity we have used on many occasions with young learners whose parents did not speak English.
1. We encouraged the parents/caregivers to supply their child with a memory stick. We ‘bought’ the
parents/caregivers into participating – merely listening to the child’s pronunciation of the
words/expressions on the stick and encouraging the child.
2. For pronunciation practice, we recorded lots of relevant and practical words and short phrases onto
each stick. The content progressed from easy to hard.
3. The only ‘rule’ was that the learners needed to practise the words/expressions in order. There were no
‘rules’ as to how many they needed to practise and no timescale was set.
4. The results were remarkable. The class learned much more in a quicker timescale than classes where
this activity was not used. This kept us well ahead of the syllabus.
4. Be An Honest Mentor
Another reason some learners reach a plateau is that everyone around them is telling them that everything is
OK. We often listen to people who tell us what we want to hear, not what we need to hear.
Be an honest mentor who doesn’t hold back and gives the learners the honest criticism they need to improve,
and guidance on how to achieve improvement. Yes, their ego will get bruised, but perhaps that’s the price one
must pay for personal and professional growth.
Time for a little break. Then, come back and have a go at Quiz 3.
It’s not too taxing. Good luck! After that, we’ll move on to Module 4, where we will focus on some
challenging English Language Elements. It may be some time since you studied these language
elements, so this will bring you up-to-date.
End of Module 3 (150)
Congratulations! You have passed this lesson's quiz achieving 87%
There is only one correct answer for each question. Select the correct answer.
Although you will not fail the whole course if you score below 40% in the End Of Module Quiz it will count
towards your final assessment. You will be able to retake this quiz. When you are finished be sure to look
over the questions again and take note of any errors and use this to learn, you may be asked similar questions
in your final assessment.
Which of the following approaches would fail to influence and drive learner motivation?1
True
False
Incorrect - Right Answer: False
3. In relation to the VAK approach, which type of learner is most likely to enjoy
participating most in role-plays?1
Reflector learner
Pragmatist learner
Kinesthetic learner
Auditory learner
Grade: 1
4. Asking a speaker to repeat what she said is an effective learning strategy.1
True
False
Grade: 1
5. The learning preferences approach we recommend excludes a category for:1
visual learners
kinesthetic learners
activist learners
auditory learners
Grade: 1
6. In relation to the learning plateau effect, which of the following statements is invalid?1
True
False
Grade: 1
10. Intrinsic motivation is:1
True
False
Grade: 1
12. A motivated learner gets frustrated by situations involving a temporary lack of
understanding or confusion.1
True
False
Grade: 1
13. In relation to intrinsic and extrinsic motivation, it is clear which type of motivation
makes a learner more motivated.1
True
False
Incorrect - Right Answer: False
14. Which of the following statements about motivation is untrue?1
Being aware of your students’ learning strategies will help you to motivate them to learn.
It is always feasible to meet the learning characteristics of each student every time.
Grade: 1