Motivation: Intrinsic & Extrinsic
Motivation is the inner state that energises, directs and sustains effort, and CTET's favourite distinction is intrinsic versus extrinsic. Intrinsic motivation comes from within — the child works because the task is interesting, enjoyable, satisfying or builds a sense of mastery (a student who reads extra stories just for the pleasure of reading). Extrinsic motivation comes from outside — marks, prizes, stars, praise, or avoiding scolding and punishment (a student who studies only to win a prize). Both can drive learning, but research consistently finds intrinsic motivation is more durable and leads to deeper, longer-lasting learning, because the reward is built into the activity itself; extrinsic motivation fades when the external reward stops. There is even a caution that over-using rewards for something a child already enjoys can undermine intrinsic interest, and that praise works best when it is specific and tied to effort rather than vague or tied only to ability. Maslow's hierarchy of needs reminds us that motivation has levels: lower needs — physiological, then safety, belonging and esteem — must be reasonably met before a child is free to pursue self-actualisation, the drive to fulfil one's potential. Closely related is achievement motivation, the desire to meet a standard of excellence and succeed at challenging tasks.
✅ Solved examples
✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed
📝 Topic test — 8 questions
Auto-graded with full solutions; saved to your dashboard. Use the calculator and formula sheet (top-right) any time.
Key Concepts — Quick Reference
The three learning paradigms (know who said what)
| Behaviourism | Learning = conditioned response · Pavlov, Skinner, Thorndike, Watson |
|---|---|
| Cognitivism | Learning = inner mental processing · attention, memory, insight |
| Constructivism | Learning = active meaning-making · Piaget, Vygotsky, Bruner |
| Key contrast | Behaviourism = outside-in (stimulus); constructivism = inside-out (the learner builds) |
Motivation at a glance
| Intrinsic | Drive from WITHIN — interest, curiosity, mastery, enjoyment |
|---|---|
| Extrinsic | Drive from OUTSIDE — marks, prizes, praise, avoiding punishment |
| Maslow's hierarchy | Physiological → Safety → Belonging → Esteem → Self-actualisation |
| Durability rule | Intrinsic motivation lasts longer; over-rewarding can erode it |