Friday, September 22, 2017

3 tips on how to nurture intrinsic motivation within our kids


“Motivation is a fire from within. If someone else tries to light that fire under you, chances are it will burn very briefly.”
-Stephen R. Covey

While I was in college one of my professors once shared a story about his little girl. She was in the summer reading program at their local library which ran a reading rewards program. The more books you read the more pizza you could win. Her dad (my professor) pointed out how before his daughter entered the program she was an avid reader. He noticed how after she began reading for pizza some things started to change over time. The amount of books she read actually decreased, she found books that took less time to finish, and at times she would read the same book multiple times.

My professor’s daughter went from being intrinsically motivated (reading for the sake of reading because she wanted to) to being extrinsically motivated (reading for pizza, or any external reward).

What is intrinsic motivation?

Intrinsic motivation can be defined as that which drives someone to engage in or accomplish without fear of punishment or expectation of reward. It’s doing it because you want to—not because you depend on external factors. In Unconditional Parenting, Kohn argues that people are more likely to lose their desire to do a particular thing if they start to be extrinsically rewarded for it.

Kohn’s main emphasis is not if our kids are motivated but how they are motivated? Our goal then as parents is to help foster in our children how to be motivated from within (intrinsic) and not from without (i.e. through rewards and punishments).

Why is it important to have intrinsic motivation?

Kohn explains that when all is said and done we want our kids to have a sincere interest that continues even after the rewards run out. Kids will be more passionate and willing to pursue their interest long-term if there isn’t a shiny prize at the end of the tunnel.

Another salient aspect of intrinsic motivation is brought to our attention in the book Scientific Advances in Positive Psychology, by Warren and Donaldson. They teach that intrinsic motivation increases children’s social-emotional learning (SEL). Not only do kids with SEL have the capability to regulate their own emotions, but they are also able to empathize with others and build strong relationships.

What can we do? Well, since there are many ways to nurture intrinsic motivation in kids, we are going to focus on only a handful of ideas that parents can use with kids at home.

Here are some ways we can help kids become intrinsically motivated:

1.      Creating a Service-Oriented Home

In your home, try to create an environment of service to others for the sake of being kind. For example, it is easy to fall into the trap of rewarding kids for saying please and thank you. A child who knows something good comes after saying “thank you” starts to learn “if I say thank you I can get ….” We have then missed out on an opportunity to teach kindness for the sake of being kind. Read stories which promote service in genuine ways rather than serving in order to gain something.

Edwards and Karas convey the principle of service for the sake of service in their children’s book, A Hat for Mrs. Goldman: A Story About Knitting and Love. For older children, Mark Twain’s book, Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc can inspire kids to serve others in their family, community and country with no strings attached. Touching stories like this present great conversations afterwards.

After reading an inspiring story you can ask your kids, “why did so and so do that?” and “how can we be more like so and so?”

Another thing we can do is to instill intrinsic motivation is to give our kids opportunities to make things their choice rather than requiring them to serve others. An example of this was shown in a study published in the Journal of Experimental Child Psychology. In the study five-year-olds were given a choice condition (the decision was left to them to either help another peer or not) or they were given a no-choice condition (someone in authority told them to help their peer). As a result, the study showed that the kids who were provided with freedom of choice were more intrinsically motivated and willing to help others.

2.      Be Intentional with your Messages about Failure

Dr. Carol Dweck teaches us how to use our kid’s failures as teaching opportunities in her book, Mindset. She asks what we should tell our kids after they fail. Most of the time we are tempted to protect them from failure, but Dweck argues how this could be detrimental to our kids in the long run. She goes on and shares a story about a nine-year-old girl named Elizabeth who entered a gymnastics competition. Although Elizabeth’s hopes were high, she did not win or earn any ribbons. The story ends with Elizabeth’s wise father directly and gently validating her disappointment, pointing out how the other girl’s had been in gymnastics a lot longer than she had. He also said she didn’t win because she hadn’t earned it. He told her that if she really wanted to excel in gymnastics then she’d have to work even harder.

This is not how we usually talk to our kids after they’ve failed; it’s not what comes natural after we see our own kids hurt. We must be intentional in word and action when our kids fail and resist the tendency to distract them from important lessons on motivation by saying things like “you should have won! You were way better than the other kids!”

Instead of putting verbal Band-Aid’s on our kids, find ways to be sensitive while at the same time being honest. Dweck put it this way, “Withholding constructive criticism does not help children’s confidence; it harms their future.” If a kid is intrinsically motivated they will look at feedback and failure as an opportunity to learn and grow.

On the other hand, if kids are extrinsically motivated they might internalize their failure. For instance, a kid might think, dad’s disappointed in me because I didn’t win. Alfie Kohn conveys the importance of intentional messages to our kids in his book, The Myth of the Spoiled Child. Kohn offers his opinion by acknowledging how kids might only feel valued “only when they live up to someone else’s standards.”  

3.      Praise Appropriately

Believe it or not, praise can be over-done and even harmful. Because praise is a verbal reward, we need to think about what messages our praise sends to our kids and how they internalize it. Kohn expounds on this idea by saying that it’s not about giving kids a plethora of praises, it’s about thinking about how we praise our kids. “You’re so smart/strong/pretty!” will easily slip from our lips, but it takes practice to learn how to praise effort. For example, you can say something like, “you worked so hard at mowing the lawn, thank you for helping out.”

For more in-depth tips on how to practice this, visit A Big Life Journal blog here. When praise is used appropriately kid’s intrinsic motivation begins to grow. Kohn enlightens us by expressing how verbal rewards can lead to a kid thinking that they only have your love and approval when their behavior and performances are perfect. This point stresses the importance of learning about appropriate praise and how this influences our children’s sense of who they are and where their worth comes from.

Recap
There are many resources out there on how to nurture intrinsic motivation within our kids. As we intentionally practice the above principles we enable ourselves to help our kids be more prepared for their future and more able to passionately pursue their interests and endeavors…

…because they want to.

Books & References Mentioned
  
·         A Hat for Mrs. Godman: A Story About Knitting and Love by Michelle Edwards & G. Brian Karas
·         Larson, R. W., Orson, C., & Bowers, J. R. (2017). Positive Youth Development: How Intrinsic Motivation Amplifies Adolescents’ Social-Emotional Learning. Scientific Advances in Positive Psychology, 165.
·         Mindset: The New Psychology of Success by Dr. Carol S. Dweck
·         Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc by Mark Twain
·         Rapp, D. J., Engelmann, J. M., Herrmann, E., & Tomasello, M. (2017). The impact of choice on young children’s prosocial motivation. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology158, 112-121.
·         The Myth of the Spoiled Child by Alfie Kohn
·         Unconditional Parenting: Moving from Rewards and Punishments to Love and Reason by Alfie Kohn



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