Motivation in Reading Development

Chapter 3
Assessing Motivation
to Read
Introduction
The Relation Between Reading and Motivation
Motivation Leads to Engagement
The Relation Between Reading and
Motivation
Reading Motivation and Engagement
In summary of research, Commission on Reading noted
positive link between skilled reading and the reader’s interest
in the content, as have other reading experts before them (e.g.,
Anderson, Hiebert, Scott, & Wilkerson, 1985).
Others make even stronger statements. Smith (1988) concluded
that, “the emotional response to reading…is the primary reason
most readers read, and probably the primary reason most
nonreaders do not read” (p. 177).
How Motivation Impacts
Reading Development
Motivation and Learning to Read
Guthrie and Humenick (2004) concluded that, “a motivated
reader is not likely to automatically gain these complex
cognitive competencies [reading skills] independently. The
unmotivated reader, however, is quite unlikely to gain these
reading competencies at all” (p. 351).
Motivation and Learning to Read
Guthrie and Humenick (2004) studied the relation between
motivation and acquisition of comprehension skills.
They identified 12 dimensions of motivation for reading.
They categorized the influence of these 12 dimensions within
three more general types of motivation:
external (or extrinsic) motivation
internal (or intrinsic) motivation
self-efficacy
Importance of Reading Self-Efficacy
Reading Self-Efficacy
Students’ beliefs in their capacity to read well, and their attitudes about
anticipated success or failure
Confident students are more likely to engage in reading and to learn
from text
According to the literature, self-efficacy appears to be the most
important motivational influence (Berkeley, Mastropieri & Scruggs,
2011).
Instructional Practices that Positively Influence
Reading Motivation
Creating knowledge goals that emphasize learning content consistent
with background knowledge, interests, and connections to larger goals.
Allowing student choices regarding reading content and reading time.
Assigning interesting texts based on students interests, use of
illustrations, and consideration of relevance to background knowledge.
Allowing social collaboration based on joint assignments.
 
(Guthrie and Humenick, 2004)
How Reading Attitudes are Formed
From our interactions with reading content itself.
From interactions with models that may influence perceptions
regarding the reading process, such as parents, peers, and
teachers.
Influenced by instructional methods.
Influenced by gender (girls have more positive attitudes toward
reading than boys), but not much by ethnicity.
Reading attitudes tend to worsen over time, particularly for
poor readers.
(McKenna and Stahl, 2009)
Reading Attitudes
Number of reading interests decline with age.
Influence of gender increases with age, but girls are more
likely to read “boy’s books” than are boys to read “girl’s
books”.
Typical male interests include science, machines, sports, and
action/adventure, while typical female interests include
interpersonal relationships and romance, and both males and
females seem interested in humor, animals, and the unusual.
 
(McKenna & Stahl, 2009)
Motivation Leads to Engagement:
Reading Engagement
Engaged readers focus on reading to understand, to make
meaning of text, to avoid distractions, and to exchange ideas
and interpretations of text with peers. Their reading behaviors
reflect devotion to reading across time and genre and result in
important learning outcomes.
Disengaged readers are inactive, uninvolved, and tend to
minimize effort during prescribed reading lessons and resist
reading during free time.
Engaged Readers Are Motivated
All experts converge on the notion that engaged readers are
goal driven and strategic; they are motivated to obtain meaning
from text, to read.
Importantly, engaged reading is strongly associated with
reading achievement (Guthrie & Wigfield, 2000).
Engaged Readers Read More
As engaged readers seek reading opportunities, they build
reading skills.
As they become better readers, they tend to read more.
This reciprocal relation has been referred to as the 
Matthew
effect
 by Stanovich (1986), after the Biblical story revealing
the tendency for the rich (using their resources) to get even
richer.
Goals and Grades for Reading
Share goals for reading with students.
Separate grades for effort from grades for achievement.
(Caldwell, 2014)
Students’ intrinsic motivation for learning (and reading specifically)
tends to decrease across  elementary school years and extrinsic
motivation increases as they become more focused on grades and
performance compared to peers, although this pattern does not
characterize all students and has not been found in all studies.
(Gottfried, 1990)
Importance of Assessing Affective Aspects
of Reading
According to Afflerbach and Cho (2010), “Given the potential
power of affect to influence reading development, assessment of
affect should be a priority, yet it isn’t” (p. 498).
Importance of Self-Efficacy
Positive academic self-efficacy is considered critical for
developing academic skills because of its motivational
influence.
First described by Bandura (1977; 1978; 1986), it refers to an
individual’s beliefs about his/her ability to perform an
academic task successfully.
Those beliefs are in turn influenced by students’ 
causal
attributions
, i.e., the extent to which they believe success or
failure results from 
ability
,
 effort
,
 task difficulty
, or 
luck
.
Appendix B
How Reading Motivation Is Assessed
Assessing Motivation
Self-reports
Anecdotal notes
Classroom observations
Reading journals
Interviews and surveys
Sentence completion
Interest inventories
Thought bubble
Attitude inventories: ERAS, RSPS
Classroom Observations:
Figure 3.1
Anecdotal Observations
Nonjudgmental language
Systematic Observation
Frequency Count
Record number of times a particular behavior occurs within a given
time period
Reading Journals
Variety of purposes
Assess reading self-efficacy
Keep record of what student has read
Build writing skills
Gain insight into student’s choices and interests
Should not be treated like book reports
Sentence Completion
“The best thing about school is_____.”
“My teacher helps me ____.”
“The thing I hate most about school is ___.”
“I like to read about____.”
“When I am older I want to read about ____.”
“My friends think reading is ____.”
“My favorite book is ___.”
“The thing I hate most about reading is ____.”
“My favorite time to read is _____.”
The Affective Elements of Reading
Motivation (e.g., Attributions, Beliefs,
Interests, Self-Efficacy)
How Related Affective Elements
Are Assessed
Interest Inventories
Figure 3.4
The Reading and Activity Interest Inventory (RAII)
Attitude Surveys
Elementary Reading Attitude Survey (ERAS)
,  developed by
McKenna and Kear (1990) to determine student attitudes
toward recreational and academic reading activities
Only 20 items
 Assesses academic and recreational reading attitudes
Normed on national database
Attitude Surveys
Reader Self-Perception Scale (RSPS), 
developed by Henk and
Melnick (1995) to assess how students feel about themselves
as readers, consists of 33 items along four dimensions of self-
efficacy
Progress
Observational Comparison
Social Feedback
 Physiological States
RSPS2 is similar to SPS but is appropriate for older students
(i.e., adolescents)
Attitude Surveys
Motivation for Reading Questionnaire (MRQ)
 scale, developed
by McKenna and Stahl (2009) to assess various dimensions of
elementary-age students reading motivations
54-item questionnaire
Takes about 20–25 minutes to administer
Attitude Surveys
Reading Motivation Scale (Bell & McCallum, 2015)
Table 3.1
Determines a student’s level of reading enjoyment and motivation
20-item self-report scale can be administered to students who are
capable of reading the items in group form
Can be read to younger or less capable students
Readability of directions is 5.3 grade level based on Flesch-Kincaid in
Microsoft Word; the actual items are at a much lower readability level
Attitude Surveys
Adolescent Reading Attitudes Survey (ARAS), 
developed by
McKenna, Simkin, Conradi, and Lawrence (2008)
Determines reading attitudes of adolescents regarding recreational and
academic content in either print or digital format
Can be scored to reveal positive, somewhat positive, neutral/indifferent,
somewhat negative or negative attitude about recreational reading in
print settings, recreational reading in digital settings, academic reading
in print settings, and academic reading in digital settings
Interviews
Can help determine student reading-related interests and
motivation
Interview is driven by kind of information sought
Initially ask general, open-ended questions, followed by
increasingly specific questions
Interviews may be helpful in obtaining information about a
student’s goals for reading, interests, hobbies, and beliefs
about reading success and failure (e.g., attributions)
Assessing Attributions
Attributions are studied because of their power to influence
academic and social skills success (Bell & McCallum, 1995)
Ability
Effort
Luck (or Chance)
Task Difficulty (or Context)
Incremental View of Ability
Effortful students are more likely to hold an 
incremental
 view
of intelligence and related abilities, including reading, rather
than an entity or innate view. They are more likely to assume
that their ability is malleable, fluid, and changeable, and so is
reading success.
Students who believe that reading ability is innate, fixed and
stable, i.e., out of their control, have an 
entity
 view and are
more susceptible to the effects of learned helplessness and are
more likely to give up if they perceive reading as difficult.
Student Reading Attribution Scale (SRAS)
Table 3.2
SRAS informally assesses the reading attributions most related
to reading success and failure.
20 hypothetical reading success or failure scenarios (items)
Can be administered in group form or individually
Students rate their level of agreement for two attributions that might
account for outcomes described
Score indicates the extent to which students express incremental versus
entity or innate view of reading success and failure
(Bell & McCallum, 2015)
Teacher Self-Assessment
“My classroom décor promotes interest in reading because ___.”
“I encourage students to read by___.”
“Good things happen in my class when___.”
 
“I hold students accountable (nonpunitively) for reading by___.”
“When I model reading behavior, students ___.”
“When I encourage weak readers to read more, they ___.”
“When I encourage good readers to try new genres, they ___.”
Summary
The Relation Between Reading and Motivation
Motivation Leads to Engagement
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Explore the vital role of motivation in reading skills acquisition and comprehension. Discover how motivation impacts engagement, self-efficacy, and learning to read. Learn about instructional practices to enhance reading motivation and self-efficacy, ultimately fostering a love for reading and improving reading outcomes.

  • Motivation in Reading
  • Reading Development
  • Self-Efficacy
  • Instructional Practices
  • Engagement

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  1. Chapter 3 Assessing Motivation to Read

  2. Introduction The Relation Between Reading and Motivation Motivation Leads to Engagement

  3. The Relation Between Reading and Motivation

  4. Reading Motivation and Engagement In summary of research, Commission on Reading noted positive link between skilled reading and the reader s interest in the content, as have other reading experts before them (e.g., Anderson, Hiebert, Scott, & Wilkerson, 1985). Others make even stronger statements. Smith (1988) concluded that, the emotional response to reading is the primary reason most readers read, and probably the primary reason most nonreaders do not read (p. 177).

  5. How Motivation Impacts Reading Development

  6. Motivation and Learning to Read Guthrie and Humenick (2004) concluded that, a motivated reader is not likely to automatically gain these complex cognitive competencies [reading skills] independently. The unmotivated reader, however, is quite unlikely to gain these reading competencies at all (p. 351).

  7. Motivation and Learning to Read Guthrie and Humenick (2004) studied the relation between motivation and acquisition of comprehension skills. They identified 12 dimensions of motivation for reading. They categorized the influence of these 12 dimensions within three more general types of motivation: external (or extrinsic) motivation internal (or intrinsic) motivation self-efficacy

  8. Importance of Reading Self-Efficacy Reading Self-Efficacy Students beliefs in their capacity to read well, and their attitudes about anticipated success or failure Confident students are more likely to engage in reading and to learn from text According to the literature, self-efficacy appears to be the most important motivational influence (Berkeley, Mastropieri & Scruggs, 2011).

  9. Instructional Practices that Positively Influence Reading Motivation Creating knowledge goals that emphasize learning content consistent with background knowledge, interests, and connections to larger goals. Allowing student choices regarding reading content and reading time. Assigning interesting texts based on students interests, use of illustrations, and consideration of relevance to background knowledge. Allowing social collaboration based on joint assignments. (Guthrie and Humenick, 2004)

  10. How Reading Attitudes are Formed From our interactions with reading content itself. From interactions with models that may influence perceptions regarding the reading process, such as parents, peers, and teachers. Influenced by instructional methods. Influenced by gender (girls have more positive attitudes toward reading than boys), but not much by ethnicity. Reading attitudes tend to worsen over time, particularly for poor readers. (McKenna and Stahl, 2009)

  11. Reading Attitudes Number of reading interests decline with age. Influence of gender increases with age, but girls are more likely to read boy s books than are boys to read girl s books . Typical male interests include science, machines, sports, and action/adventure, while typical female interests include interpersonal relationships and romance, and both males and females seem interested in humor, animals, and the unusual. (McKenna & Stahl, 2009)

  12. Motivation Leads to Engagement: Reading Engagement Engaged readers focus on reading to understand, to make meaning of text, to avoid distractions, and to exchange ideas and interpretations of text with peers. Their reading behaviors reflect devotion to reading across time and genre and result in important learning outcomes. Disengaged readers are inactive, uninvolved, and tend to minimize effort during prescribed reading lessons and resist reading during free time.

  13. Engaged Readers Are Motivated All experts converge on the notion that engaged readers are goal driven and strategic; they are motivated to obtain meaning from text, to read. Importantly, engaged reading is strongly associated with reading achievement (Guthrie & Wigfield, 2000).

  14. Engaged Readers Read More As engaged readers seek reading opportunities, they build reading skills. As they become better readers, they tend to read more. This reciprocal relation has been referred to as the Matthew effect by Stanovich (1986), after the Biblical story revealing the tendency for the rich (using their resources) to get even richer.

  15. Goals and Grades for Reading Share goals for reading with students. Separate grades for effort from grades for achievement. (Caldwell, 2014) Students intrinsic motivation for learning (and reading specifically) tends to decrease across elementary school years and extrinsic motivation increases as they become more focused on grades and performance compared to peers, although this pattern does not characterize all students and has not been found in all studies. (Gottfried, 1990)

  16. Importance of Assessing Affective Aspects of Reading According to Afflerbach and Cho (2010), Given the potential power of affect to influence reading development, assessment of affect should be a priority, yet it isn t (p. 498).

  17. Importance of Self-Efficacy Positive academic self-efficacy is considered critical for developing academic skills because of its motivational influence. First described by Bandura (1977; 1978; 1986), it refers to an individual s beliefs about his/her ability to perform an academic task successfully. Those beliefs are in turn influenced by students causal attributions, i.e., the extent to which they believe success or failure results from ability, effort, task difficulty, or luck.

  18. Appendix B

  19. How Reading Motivation Is Assessed

  20. Assessing Motivation Self-reports Anecdotal notes Classroom observations Reading journals Interviews and surveys Sentence completion Interest inventories Thought bubble Attitude inventories: ERAS, RSPS

  21. Classroom Observations: Figure 3.1 Anecdotal Observations Nonjudgmental language Systematic Observation Frequency Count Record number of times a particular behavior occurs within a given time period

  22. Reading Journals Variety of purposes Assess reading self-efficacy Keep record of what student has read Build writing skills Gain insight into student s choices and interests Should not be treated like book reports

  23. Sentence Completion The best thing about school is_____. My teacher helps me ____. The thing I hate most about school is ___. I like to read about____. When I am older I want to read about ____. My friends think reading is ____. My favorite book is ___. The thing I hate most about reading is ____. My favorite time to read is _____.

  24. The Affective Elements of Reading Motivation (e.g., Attributions, Beliefs, Interests, Self-Efficacy) How Related Affective Elements Are Assessed

  25. Interest Inventories Figure 3.4 The Reading and Activity Interest Inventory (RAII)

  26. Attitude Surveys Elementary Reading Attitude Survey (ERAS), developed by McKenna and Kear (1990) to determine student attitudes toward recreational and academic reading activities Only 20 items Assesses academic and recreational reading attitudes Normed on national database

  27. Attitude Surveys Reader Self-Perception Scale (RSPS), developed by Henk and Melnick (1995) to assess how students feel about themselves as readers, consists of 33 items along four dimensions of self- efficacy Progress Observational Comparison Social Feedback Physiological States RSPS2 is similar to SPS but is appropriate for older students (i.e., adolescents)

  28. Attitude Surveys Motivation for Reading Questionnaire (MRQ) scale, developed by McKenna and Stahl (2009) to assess various dimensions of elementary-age students reading motivations 54-item questionnaire Takes about 20 25 minutes to administer

  29. Attitude Surveys Reading Motivation Scale (Bell & McCallum, 2015) Table 3.1 Determines a student s level of reading enjoyment and motivation 20-item self-report scale can be administered to students who are capable of reading the items in group form Can be read to younger or less capable students Readability of directions is 5.3 grade level based on Flesch-Kincaid in Microsoft Word; the actual items are at a much lower readability level

  30. Attitude Surveys Adolescent Reading Attitudes Survey (ARAS), developed by McKenna, Simkin, Conradi, and Lawrence (2008) Determines reading attitudes of adolescents regarding recreational and academic content in either print or digital format Can be scored to reveal positive, somewhat positive, neutral/indifferent, somewhat negative or negative attitude about recreational reading in print settings, recreational reading in digital settings, academic reading in print settings, and academic reading in digital settings

  31. Interviews Can help determine student reading-related interests and motivation Interview is driven by kind of information sought Initially ask general, open-ended questions, followed by increasingly specific questions Interviews may be helpful in obtaining information about a student s goals for reading, interests, hobbies, and beliefs about reading success and failure (e.g., attributions)

  32. Assessing Attributions Attributions are studied because of their power to influence academic and social skills success (Bell & McCallum, 1995) Ability Effort Luck (or Chance) Task Difficulty (or Context)

  33. Incremental View of Ability Effortful students are more likely to hold an incremental view of intelligence and related abilities, including reading, rather than an entity or innate view. They are more likely to assume that their ability is malleable, fluid, and changeable, and so is reading success. Students who believe that reading ability is innate, fixed and stable, i.e., out of their control, have an entity view and are more susceptible to the effects of learned helplessness and are more likely to give up if they perceive reading as difficult.

  34. Student Reading Attribution Scale (SRAS) Table 3.2 SRAS informally assesses the reading attributions most related to reading success and failure. 20 hypothetical reading success or failure scenarios (items) Can be administered in group form or individually Students rate their level of agreement for two attributions that might account for outcomes described Score indicates the extent to which students express incremental versus entity or innate view of reading success and failure (Bell & McCallum, 2015)

  35. Teacher Self-Assessment My classroom d cor promotes interest in reading because ___. I encourage students to read by___. Good things happen in my class when___. I hold students accountable (nonpunitively) for reading by___. When I model reading behavior, students ___. When I encourage weak readers to read more, they ___. When I encourage good readers to try new genres, they ___.

  36. Summary The Relation Between Reading and Motivation Motivation Leads to Engagement

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