The Edvocate

Top Menu

Main Menu

  • Start Here
    • Our Brands
    • Governance
      • Lynch Education Consulting, LLC.
      • Dr. Lynch’s Personal Website
      • Careers
    • Write For Us
    • Books
    • The Tech Edvocate Product Guide
    • Contact Us
    • The Edvocate Podcast
    • Edupedia
    • Pedagogue
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
  • PreK-12
    • Assessment
    • Assistive Technology
    • Best PreK-12 Schools in America
    • Child Development
    • Classroom Management
    • Early Childhood
    • EdTech & Innovation
    • Education Leadership
    • Equity
    • First Year Teachers
    • Gifted and Talented Education
    • Special Education
    • Parental Involvement
    • Policy & Reform
    • Teachers
  • Higher Ed
    • Best Colleges and Universities
    • Best College and University Programs
    • HBCU’s
    • Diversity
    • Higher Education EdTech
    • Higher Education
    • International Education
  • Advertise
  • The Tech Edvocate Awards
    • The Awards Process
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2025 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2024 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2023 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2021 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2022 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2020 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2019 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2018 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2017 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Award Seals
  • Apps
    • GPA Calculator for College
    • GPA Calculator for High School
    • Cumulative GPA Calculator
    • Grade Calculator
    • Weighted Grade Calculator
    • Final Grade Calculator
  • The Tech Edvocate
  • Post a Job
  • AI Powered Personal Tutor

logo

The Edvocate

  • Start Here
    • Our Brands
    • Governance
      • Lynch Education Consulting, LLC.
      • Dr. Lynch’s Personal Website
        • My Speaking Page
      • Careers
    • Write For Us
    • Books
    • The Tech Edvocate Product Guide
    • Contact Us
    • The Edvocate Podcast
    • Edupedia
    • Pedagogue
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
  • PreK-12
    • Assessment
    • Assistive Technology
    • Best PreK-12 Schools in America
    • Child Development
    • Classroom Management
    • Early Childhood
    • EdTech & Innovation
    • Education Leadership
    • Equity
    • First Year Teachers
    • Gifted and Talented Education
    • Special Education
    • Parental Involvement
    • Policy & Reform
    • Teachers
  • Higher Ed
    • Best Colleges and Universities
    • Best College and University Programs
    • HBCU’s
    • Diversity
    • Higher Education EdTech
    • Higher Education
    • International Education
  • Advertise
  • The Tech Edvocate Awards
    • The Awards Process
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2025 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2024 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2023 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2021 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2022 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2020 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2019 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2018 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Finalists and Winners of The 2017 Tech Edvocate Awards
    • Award Seals
  • Apps
    • GPA Calculator for College
    • GPA Calculator for High School
    • Cumulative GPA Calculator
    • Grade Calculator
    • Weighted Grade Calculator
    • Final Grade Calculator
  • The Tech Edvocate
  • Post a Job
  • AI Powered Personal Tutor
  • The Changing Landscape of Special Education Policy

  • Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion: A Contested Terrain

  • Research Challenges in Special Education Inclusion

  • School Safety and Communication Technologies

  • Special Education Leadership: Preparing for Future Challenges

  • Budget Challenges and Institutional Sustainability

  • Career and Technical Education: Preparing for Future Workforce Needs

  • Funding Challenges in Special Education

  • Artificial Intelligence and Education: Navigating a Technological Revolution

  • Cybersecurity in Education: A Growing Imperative

Teachers
Home›Teachers›Excitement Equals Excellence: How Educators Can Rile Up Student Motivation

Excitement Equals Excellence: How Educators Can Rile Up Student Motivation

By Matthew Lynch
July 30, 2016
0
Spread the love

No matter what model is used in managing a classroom, no matter what kind of curriculum structure is implemented, one of the biggest factors in student success is how engaged they are in the learning process. Put simply: student motivation equals student excellence.

However, one of the pitfalls in motivating students is that teachers become too fixated on curriculum. Teachers are afraid that when students fall behind the set curriculum, it will be reflected on external examinations. Encourage your students to be energetic and to find learning experiences interesting, satisfying, and sometimes challenging. Your goal as the teacher is to prepare students for their later lives, to educate and guide them for further learning and fulfillment.

Most of us have been in a class we found boring, and our mind either wandered, or we started dozing off. Most of us can probably also think of a situation when the whole class, teachers, and curriculum came together to create a perfect harmony, when students couldn’t wait to learn and teachers couldn’t wait to teach. These situations usually lead to interactive, real learning.

The challenge for teachers to make the classroom learning interesting and fit the curriculum has always existed. Education philosopher John Dewey was a pioneer in this topic. Dewey promoted the idea that school learning should relate to skills and knowledge that will be useful for life outside of school, advocating that students would have a better learning experience by relating the two different worlds, which in turn motivates further learning.

Dewey believed that a classroom of passive students, with the teacher simply feeding the knowledge, was ineffective, and that a mutual effort was necessary for an optimal learning experience. Dewey suggested that the prevention of classroom misbehavior, and the encouragement of student participation, had to have a link between a student’s classroom learning and current interests and experiences. This suggestion does not mean that Dewey disregarded school curriculum in support of individual learning. His suggestions and examples are summed up here:

  • Students should help teachers select specific reading assignments after they get a clear idea about the goals of the class.
  • Students should be able to decide on and work on topics that are of personal interest.
  • Teachers should be open about learning from students while bringing their own experience and interests to the class.
  • Students should gain in-depth knowledge by participating in the world away from the classroom.

As you can see, such classrooms will have plenty of flexibility. Although teachers should have plans to meet the goal for the whole class, there should be enough flexibility to facilitate individual students’ goals. This approach will facilitate student willingness to learn effectively. Students do not merely memorize, but gain the advantage of understanding and take the learned skills with them for the rest of their lives.

TagsedchatEdtechEducationelearningk12ntchatSTEMteachered
Previous Article

What You Need to Know About the ...

Next Article

What You Need to Know as an ...

Matthew Lynch

Related articles More from author

  • Uncategorized

    PCG Education Will Present ‘My Brother’s Keeper’ Summit at the SXSWedu Conference

    March 8, 2016
    By Matthew Lynch
  • Uncategorized

    Using blended learning to increase reading proficiency in early grades

    August 17, 2016
    By Matthew Lynch
  • EdTech & InnovationTeachers

    The value of student and teacher input in EdTech

    June 9, 2016
    By Matthew Lynch
  • Teachers

    A Look at the Long Influence of Professional Organizations

    September 2, 2016
    By Matthew Lynch
  • Modern Parenting

    How to Improve Your Child’s Social Skills

    September 11, 2018
    By Matthew Lynch
  • Policy & Reform

    5 Steps to Data-Based School Reform—the Common Sense Way

    February 14, 2016
    By Matthew Lynch

Search

Registration and Login

  • Register
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Newsletter

Signup for The Edvocate Newsletter and have the latest in P-20 education news and opinion delivered to your email address!

RSS Matthew on Education Week

  • Au Revoir from Education Futures November 20, 2018 Matthew Lynch
  • 6 Steps to Data-Driven Literacy Instruction October 17, 2018 Matthew Lynch
  • Four Keys to a Modern IT Approach in K-12 Schools October 2, 2018 Matthew Lynch
  • What's the Difference Between Burnout and Demoralization, and What Can Teachers Do About It? September 27, 2018 Matthew Lynch
  • Revisiting Using Edtech for Bullying and Suicide Prevention September 10, 2018 Matthew Lynch

About Us

The Edvocate was created in 2014 to argue for shifts in education policy and organization in order to enhance the quality of education and the opportunities for learning afforded to P-20 students in America. What we envisage may not be the most straightforward or the most conventional ideas. We call for a relatively radical and certainly quite comprehensive reorganization of America’s P-20 system.

That reorganization, though, and the underlying effort, will have much to do with reviving the American education system, and reviving a national love of learning.  The Edvocate plans to be one of key architects of this revival, as it continues to advocate for education reform, equity, and innovation.

Newsletter

Signup for The Edvocate Newsletter and have the latest in P-20 education news and opinion delivered to your email address!

Contact

The Edvocate
910 Goddin Street
Richmond, VA 23230
(601) 630-5238
[email protected]
  • situs togel online
  • dentoto
  • situs toto 4d
  • situs toto slot
  • toto slot 4d
Copyright (c) 2025 Matthew Lynch. All rights reserved.