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ABS377 - Towards a cultural-historical theory of motivational development: Taking a 360 view of the motivation landscape

Theme:
1.2 Children’s development and childhood
What:
Paper in a Working Group Roundtable (WGRT)
When:
3:50 PM, Tuesday 29 Aug 2017 (1 hour)
Where:
Convention Center - 2000 A - Table C
How:
Within cultural-historical approaches to learning and development, motivation is under-theorised. In contrast, motivation theories are at the forefront of mainstream educational psychology. In Thinking and Speech, Vygotsky touched on motivation arguing that thought had its origins in the motivating sphere of consciousness, but his ideas remained undeveloped. In this paper, I take a 360 view of motivation theories to contribute to a cultural-historical theorisation of motivational development.

Two lines of theorisation related to motivation in current cultural-historical approaches are Hedegaard’s work drawing on Leontiev’s activity theory and motive, and Gonzalez-Rey’s reinterpretation of Vygotsky’s early and late works on subjectivity. For Gonzalez-Rey, the concept of motive as treated in activity theory is too static an entity to function in propelling behavior. He focuses on the unity of personality and environment, and the generative nature of emotions and proposes a definition of motivation as a unit that integrates emotions, intellect, and action. Hedegaard also reiterates the importance of forces both in the person and the environment that gives rise to how the person relates to the world and how this relation develops.

In the paper, I unpack each of these theorisations of motivation and explore how they inform, contradict and enrich each other. I also examine potential contributions from social-cognitive motivation theories (incorporating concepts of achievement/social goals, individual/situational interest, intrinsic/extrinsic motivation, self-schema) particularly those tackling change or development.

The discussion will focus on the value of theorising motivation and its development, what changes and why, and how we might better support children’s motivational development.
Participant
Murdoch University
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