This conceptual essay critiques current understandings of children's motivation for literacy learning, and argues for a reconceptualization of motivation that centers on the learner as agent in the social construction of meaning. The essay is illustrated with vignettes and examples drawn from two ethnographic studies conducted in whole-language classrooms. Both studies investigated children's perspectives of their own literacy learning processes and their constructs of themselves as readers and writers.
References
1.
AllenJ.MichaloveB.ShockleyB. (1993). Engaging children: Community and chaos in the lives of young literacy learners.Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.
2.
AppleM. (1982). Education and power.Boston, MA: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
3.
BelenkyM.ClinchyB.GoldbergerN.TaruleJ. (1986). Women's ways of knowing: The development of self, voice and mind.New York: Basic Books.
4.
BloomeD. (1986). Reading as a social process in a middle school classroom. In BloomeD. (Ed.), Literacy and schooling (pp. 123–149). Norwood, NJ: Ablex.
5.
BogdanR.BiklenS. (1982). Qualitative research for education.Boston, MA: Allyn & Bacon.
6.
CsikszentmihalyiM. (1978). Intrinsic rewards and emergent motivation. In LepperM.GreenD. (Eds.), The hidden costs of reward: New perspectives on the psychology of human motivation (pp. 205–216). Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
7.
D'AmatoJ. (1988). “Acting”: Hawaiian children's resistance to teachers. Elementary School Journal, 88, 449–544.
8.
DahlK. (1993). Children's spontaneous utterances during reading and writing instruction in whole language first grade classrooms. Journal of Reading Behavior, 25, 279–294.
9.
DahlK. (1992, December). Exploring the disposition to learn in whole language first grades. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the National Reading Conference, San Antonio, TX.
10.
DahlK.FrepponP. (in press). A comparison of inner-city children's interpretations of reading and writing instruction in the early grades in skills-based and whole language classrooms. Reading Research Quarterly..
11.
DahlK.FrepponP.McIntyreE. (1993). Composing experiences of low-SES emergent writers in skills-based and whole language urban classrooms. Unpublished manuscript.
12.
DeciD. (1971). Effects of externally mediated rewards on intrinsic motivation. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 18, 105–120.
13.
DeciE.RyanR. (1987). Intrinsic motivation and self-determination in human behavior.New York: Plenum Press.
14.
DeciE.RyanR. (1991). A motivational approach to self: Integration in personality. In DienstbierR. (Ed.), Perspectives on Motivation (pp. 237–288). Lincoln: Nebraska Symposium on Motivation 1990, University of Nebraska Press.
15.
DuckworthE. (1987). The having of wonderful ideas and other essays on teaching and learning.New York: Teachers College Press.
16.
DysonA. (1989). Multiple worlds of child writers: Friends learning to write.New York: Teachers College Press.
17.
DysonA. (1991). Viewpoints: The word and the world—reconceptualizing written language development—or, Do rainbows mean a lot to little girls?Research in the Teaching of English, 25, 97–123.
18.
EllsworthE. (1989). Why doesn't this feel empowering? Working through the repressive myths of critical pedagogy. Harvard Educational Review, 59, 297–324.
19.
EricksonF.ShultzJ. (1992). Students' experience of the curriculum. In JacksonP. W. (Ed.), Handbook of research on curriculum (pp. 465–485). New York: Macmillan.
20.
FaulknerK. (1991). Oh no!New York: S. & S. Trade.
21.
FineM. (1991). Framing dropouts: Notes on the politics of an urban public high school.Albany: State University of New York Press.
22.
FreireP. (1971). Pedagogy of the oppressed.New York: Seaview.
23.
GilliganC. (1982). In a different voice: Psychological theory and women's development.Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
24.
GirouxH. (1988). Teachers as intellectuals: Toward a critical pedagogy of learning.South Hadley, MA: Bergin & Garvey.
25.
GlaserB.StraussA. (1967). The discovery of grounded theory: Strategies for qualitative research.Chicago: Aldine.
26.
GreenJ. L.MeyerL. A. (1990). The embeddedness of reading in classroom life: Reading as a situated process. In BakerC.LukeA. (Eds.), The sociology of reading (pp. 141–160). Amsterdam: Benjamins.
27.
HeathS. B. (1983). Ways with Words: Language, life and work in communities and classrooms.New York: Cambridge University Press.
28.
HortonM.FreireP. (1991). We make the road by walking: Conversations on education and social change.Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press.
29.
KozolJ. (1991). Savage inequalities.New York: Crown.
30.
LatherP. (1991). Getting smart: Feminist research and pedagogy with/in the postmodern.London: Routledge.
31.
LepperM.GreenD. (1978). The hidden costs of reward: New perspectives on the psychology of human motivation.Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
32.
LyonsN. (1990). Dilemmas of knowing: Ethical and epistemological dimensions of teachers' work and development. Harvard Educational Review, 60, 159–180.
33.
MaehrM. (1976). Continuing motivation: An analysis of a seldom considered educational outcome. Review of Educational Research, 46, 443–462.
34.
MarshallH. H. (1990). Beyond the workplace metaphor: Toward conceptualizing the classroom as a learning setting. Theory into Practice, 29, 94–101.
35.
MarshallH. H. (Ed.). (1992). Redefining student learning: Roots of educational change.Norwood, NJ: Ablex.
36.
McGrawK. (1978). The detrimental effects of reward on performance: A literature review and prediction model. In LepperM.GreeneD. (Eds.), The hidden costs of reward: New perspectives on the psychology of human motivation (pp. 31–60). Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
37.
OgbuJ. (1991). Minority status and schooling: A comparative study of immigrant and involuntary minorities.New York: Garland.
38.
OldfatherP. (1991). Students' perceptions of their own reasons/purposes for being or not being involved in learning activities: A qualitative study of student motivation (Doctoral dissertation, Claremont Graduate School, 1991). Dissertation Abstracts International, 52, 853A.
39.
OldfatherP. (1992, December). Sharing the ownership of knowing: A constructivist concept of motivation for literacy learning. Paper presented at the meeting of the National Reading Conference, San Antonio, TX.
40.
OldfatherP. (1993a). What students say about motivating experiences in a whole language classroom. Reading Teacher, 46, 672–681.
41.
OldfatherP. (1993b, April). Facilitating participation and ownership through engaging students as co-researchers. Paper presented at the meeting of the American Educational Research Association, Atlanta, GA.
42.
OldfatherP.McLaughlinJ. (1993). Gaining and losing voice: A longitudinal study of students' continuing impulse to learn across elementary and middle level contexts. Research in Middle Level Education, 17, 1–25.
43.
O'LoughlinM. (1992). Engaging teachers in emancipatory knowledge construction. Journal of Teacher Education, 43, 336–346.
44.
PiagetJ. (1973). To understand is to invent: The future of education.New York: Grossman.
45.
PollardA. (1990). Toward a sociology of learning in primary schools. British Journal of Sociology of Education, 11, 241–256.
46.
Santa Barbara Discourse Group (1992). Constructing literacy in classrooms: Literate action as social accomplishment. In MarshallH. H. (Ed.), Redefining student learning: Roots of educational change (pp. 119–150). Norwood, NJ: Ablex.
47.
SpindlerG. (1982). Doing the ethnography of schooling.New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston.
48.
von GlaserfeldE. (1984). An introduction to radical constructivism. In WatzlawickP. (Ed.), The Invented Reality (pp. 17–40). New York: Norton.
49.
VygotskyL. (1978). Mind in society.Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
50.
WeadeG. (1992). Locating learning in the times and spaces of teaching. In MarshallH. H. (Ed.), Redefining student learning: Roots of educational change (pp. 87–118). Norwood, NJ: Ablex.
51.
WestJ.OldfatherP. (1993). On group work: An imaginary dialogue among real children. Language Arts, 70, 33–44.
52.
WhiteR. (1959). Motivation reconsidered: The concept of competence. Psychological Review, 66, 297–333.
53.
WoodD.BrunerJ. S.RossB. (1976). The role of tutoring in problem solving. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 17, 89–100.