Monday, May 23, 2011

Drive?

I saw this video from RSA Animate earlier today, and it really struck a chord. Even though the video was intended to target audiences in the corporate world, I have seen the total disconnect between reward and performance very often in myself and many of my friends in the strikingly similar situation so many students find themselves in today. The people that succeed the most in school are the people who are personally motivated in class- they like the teacher and don't want to disappoint them, they take pride in being the best or better than others, or they are held accountable to highly motivated parents who will not let them take risks with their transcripts. Rarely, at least in my experience, have I found that these students spend countless hours doing busywork simply because they actually enjoy a class. At many levels, the stress levels required to prepare for the standardized tests that monopolize class time make it impossible to slow down or bask in the beauty of learning. This is identical to the effect described by the video, where focus on economic success prevents inspiration, the only difference being that in school, students are too preoccupied with grades to learn or learn to enjoy learning, which has many more long-term negative effects.

Unfortunately, there are many students, at least as far as my experience has gone, that do not really care about the teacher's opinion of them, do not feel the need to compete for grades, and do not enjoy the majority of the classes they chose, or more often, were required to take. Although I often find myself lagging and questioning the "why" behind everything involved in the school "process," I am able to manufacture in myself a sort of synthetic motivation that gets me through, however frustrating it sometimes feels. However, in tasks that fulfill the three requirements put forth in the video (autonomy, mastery, and purpose, for those who didn't watch), my "less motivated" friends and I become much more productive than we would ever have expected, staying up until the early hours of dawn to finish some program we felt like making, or simply debating the merits of privatized health care or funding for NASA.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Apologies.

My apologies for the lack of activity in this blog. Right after I created it, I was hit by a perfect storm of college stuff I needed to do, exams, planning an internship and various other personal things that completely sucked away my time and made it difficult to work up the energy to write something here. However, now I have finished the AP exams, prepared what I need so far for college, and am interning with the author of A Purpose Linked Organization, working on developing a student tool. It's certainly been an interesting few months, and this internship is proving to be very rewarding. I don't have much time today, because I need to get back to work, but at some point later in the week I'll try to post something a little more insightful and interesting to read.

Apologies,
Fabian