How Children Learn & Motivation • Topic 6 of 6

Factors Affecting Learning

Whether and how well a child learns depends on a web of factors, which CTET groups broadly into personal (within the learner) and environmental (around the learner). Key personal factors include maturation — the biological readiness of the body and brain, so a task pitched before the child is developmentally ready will not be learned well; motivation — the will to engage, without which even an able child does little; attention — the ability to focus and sustain concentration on the task; and aptitude and prior knowledge — the child's existing abilities, intelligence and what they already know, on which new learning is built. Other personal factors are interest, health and emotional state. Environmental factors include the home (parental support, language, books, economic conditions, encouragement), the school (resources, class size, atmosphere), the teacher (the single most powerful school factor — teaching method, expectations, warmth and feedback), and peers (group climate, cooperation or competition, friendship). A weakness in any of these — an unready child, low motivation, a distracting environment, an unsupportive home or poor teaching — can hold learning back, while strengths in several together produce the best learning.

✅ Solved examples

1. A teacher tries to teach formal long division to a six-year-old who simply cannot grasp it. The most likely missing factor is:
Maturation / developmental readiness — the child is not yet biologically and cognitively ready for the task, so it cannot be learned well however hard it is drilled.
2. Among all school-based factors, which has the strongest influence on a child's learning?
The teacher — through teaching method, expectations, encouragement and feedback, the teacher is the most powerful school factor in learning.
3. A capable student who simply will not put in effort is most likely lacking in which personal factor?
Motivation — the inner will to engage; without it even high ability does not translate into learning.
4. Home background (parental support, books at home, encouragement, economic conditions) is classified as which type of factor?
An environmental factor — it lies outside the learner but strongly shapes the conditions for learning.

✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed

1. The biological readiness of the body and brain for a particular kind of learning is called:
You cannot rush it.
Readiness from within.
Maturation
2. The ability to focus and sustain concentration on a learning task is the personal factor of:
Easily lost in a noisy room.
Stay on task.
Attention
3. A child’s existing abilities and capacity to learn a particular skill is referred to as:
Natural potential for a task.
Often paired with intelligence.
Aptitude
4. Classmates who cooperate, compete or distract are which kind of factor in learning?
Environmental, not personal.
Same-age group.
Peer / peer-group factors
5. Broadly, the two big categories of factors affecting learning are personal factors and:
Everything around the learner.
Home, school, teacher, peers.
Environmental factors

📝 Topic test — 8 questions

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