Why You Shouldn’t Reward Students For Good Behavior — Smart Classroom Management →

adventuresinlearning:

For real, lasting behavior improvement, focus instead on creating a classroom that nurtures intrinsic motivation.

And leave the bribery to the trainers at Sea World.

Here’s why:

1. Rewards turn good behavior into work.

Rewarding good behavior sends the message to your students that if they have to be paid for it, then it must be work. They logically conclude that being well behaved must be something difficult or noteworthy. Otherwise, why would they be rewarded for it?

This effectively makes good behavior less desirable… and more like an effort your students deserve to be paid for.

2. Rewards lead to entitlement.

When you offer rewards in return for good behavior, you create in your students a peculiar sense of entitlement. They’ll feel entitled to receive something for merely doing what is expected.

It leads them to believe that they’re behaving and following rules for you, and thus are owed something from you. After all, if they’re getting a reward for it, there must not be anything in it for them.

3. Rewards cheapen the intrinsic motivation to behave.

Being rewarded to behave cheapens the intrinsic merit of being a valued citizen of your class. In other words, it puts a price tag on the priceless.

Have you ever had a student who was uncomfortable or less than thrilled with public recognition, drummed up awards, or excessive praise? This is a person with already strong, deep-rooted intrinsic motivation who would prefer that you didn’t barter with it.

4. Rewards lead to more and more and more.

When you put a price tag on good behavior by offering rewards, your students will demand higher and more frequent payments. Rewards, you see, are not only ineffective in the long term, but they weaken over time.

If you’ve used rewards in the past, you’ve experienced this. What is exciting and fun at first, like extra recess, becomes boring and not a big deal after awhile. Therefore, you have to continue to increase the payment or the frequency of the reward.

This post has 104 notes.
  1. sugartech reblogged this from adventuresinlearning
  2. educationandperformingarts reblogged this from teacher-woman and added:
    For real, lasting behavior improvement, focus instead on creating a classroom that nurtures intrinsic motivation. And...
  3. teacher-woman reblogged this from adventuresinlearning
  4. biigmistake reblogged this from adventuresinlearning and added:
    read full article…this...every Asian parent’s philosophy.
  5. misseducate reblogged this from adventuresinlearning
  6. kkcomm reblogged this from adventuresinlearning
  7. hellnawhellnaw reblogged this from adventuresinlearning
  8. mylovehatethings reblogged this from adventuresinlearning
  9. adventuresinlearning reblogged this from swim-again and added:
    recommend reading the whole post and look into his book. I am not saying he...correct, but...
  10. camstevens76 reblogged this from adventuresinlearning
  11. fundamentaleducation reblogged this from adventuresinlearning
  12. monasequeda reblogged this from adventuresinlearning and added:
    not only goes against everything I have ever been taught about classroom management (and I’ve sat through
  13. theromillyanomaly reblogged this from adventuresinlearning
  14. crajee reblogged this from adventuresinlearning
  15. dakilangprocrastinator reblogged this from adventuresinlearning
  16. swim-again reblogged this from geofaultline and added:
    I don’t buy it. Operant conditioning is real, and very effective, and it works as well on humans as other animals....
  17. zumbamama reblogged this from adventuresinlearning
  18. geofaultline reblogged this from adventuresinlearning
  19. This was featured in #Education
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