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Beliefs and Learned Helplessness Sam Johnson Taylor Bednarek.

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Presentation on theme: "Beliefs and Learned Helplessness Sam Johnson Taylor Bednarek."— Presentation transcript:

1 Beliefs and Learned Helplessness Sam Johnson Taylor Bednarek

2 Discussion Question #1: What do you think of when you hear the term learned helplessness? Can you give us an example from your personal experiences?

3 Epistemological Beliefs Beliefs about structure, stability, certainty of knowledge, and how knowledge is best learned

4 Beliefs About Ability Entity View of Ability: belief that ability is a fixed characteristic that cannot be changed Incremental View of Ability: Belief that ability is a set of skills that can be changed

5 Entity Views:Incremental Views: Students with this view: Tend to avoid setting goals in order to not look bad to others Students with this view: Tend to have greater motivation and focus on the process instead of the outcome Teachers with this view: Quicker to form judgements about their students and slower to modify their opinions Teachers with this view: Set mastery goals for their students where students can improve their skills

6 Attribution Theory Descriptions of how individuals' explanations justifications, and excuses influence their motivation and behavior

7 Bernard Weiner Locus - location of the cause (internal or external) Stability - the cause of the events is the same across time and environment Controllability - whether the person can control the cause Main educational psychologist responsible for relating the attribution theory to school learning

8 Attributions in the Classroom people with strong sense of self-efficacy for a given task tend to attribute their failures to lack of effort, misunderstanding directions, or just not studying enough greatest motivational problems arise when students attribute failures to stable, uncontrollable causes

9 Learned Helplessness o the expectation, based on previous experiences with a lack of control, that all one’s efforts will lead to failure

10 Beliefs About Self Worth Mastery Oriented: Students who focus on learning goals because they value achievement and see ability as improvable Failure- Avoiding Students: Students who avoid failure by sticking to what they know, by not taking risks, or by claiming not to care about their performance Failure- Accepting Students: Students who believe their failures are due to low ability and there is little they can do about it

11 Warning for Future Teachers: Self- Handicapping: Students may engage in behavior that blocks their own success in order to avoid testing their true ability Teachers who stress performance, grades and competition can encourage self-handicapping without realizing they are doing so

12 Discussion Question #2: What do can you do as a future educator to keep your students from developing negative beliefs about their own learning?


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