Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- 1 The future and its discontents
- 2 Motives as emotions
- 3 Motives as thoughts
- 4 Self-worth and the fear of failure
- 5 Achievement anxiety
- 6 The competitive learning game
- 7 Motivational equity and the will to learn
- 8 Strategic thinking and the will to learn
- 9 An immodest proposal
- 10 Obstacles to change: The myths of competition
- Appendix A Mastery learning
- Appendix B Cooperative learning
- References
- Indexes
3 - Motives as thoughts
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- 1 The future and its discontents
- 2 Motives as emotions
- 3 Motives as thoughts
- 4 Self-worth and the fear of failure
- 5 Achievement anxiety
- 6 The competitive learning game
- 7 Motivational equity and the will to learn
- 8 Strategic thinking and the will to learn
- 9 An immodest proposal
- 10 Obstacles to change: The myths of competition
- Appendix A Mastery learning
- Appendix B Cooperative learning
- References
- Indexes
Summary
I would say only that if some of my judgments were wrong … they were made in what I believed at the time to be the best interest of the nation.
richard nixon (resignation speech as President of the United States, August, 1974)According to Fritz Heider (1958), each of us, including ex-presidents, searches ceaselessly for ways to create meaning in our lives, Heider proposed that this process is guided by the principles of attribution theory, which involve ascribing causes to our actions and to the actions of others. Clearly this is what Richard Nixon was doing, trying to make comprehensible his questionable actions during the Watergate scandal. These same dynamics are also illustrated by the self-searching of aeronautics pioneer, Samuel Langley, who anguished over why his flying machine crashed into the Potomac River on takeoff (incidently, just nine days before the Wright brothers' first successful flight). Was it his fault? Did the crash result from a design flaw in the steam-launch catapult, or were erratic wind currents to blame? A TV commentator who attributes the success of a college basketball team to brilliant preseason recruiting is playing the attribution game as well. A schoolchild who frets over a failing grade also is trying to ascribe causes. Was failure the result of incompetency, or the fault of the teacher for not better explaining the assignment?
As all these examples show, meaning is a construction of reality, not reality itself, and a variety of constructions are possible. Perhaps the schoolchild is in fact intellectually backward.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Making the GradeA Self-Worth Perspective on Motivation and School Reform, pp. 50 - 71Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1992