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The Competitive Ethos and Democratic Education

TLDR
The authors argue that children are increasingly prone to take superiority over others as the definition of success and that an emphasis on interpersonal competition, which permeates Western society, exacerbates this egotistical tendency and results in diminished accomplishment and alienation from school.
Abstract
Young children and even infants work hard at mastering various kills and show spontaneous pleasure at their own accomplishment. John Nicholls explores the conditions that cause students to lose their unselfconscious involvement in a game or task and become concerned with how they are stacking up against others. Charting the development of children s concepts of luck, effort, and ability, he argues that with age they are increasingly prone to take superiority over others as the definition of success. An emphasis on interpersonal competition, which permeates Western society, exacerbates this egotistical tendency and results in diminished accomplishment and alienation from school.To overcome these problems, Nicholls argues, we must become as little children for whom absorption in exploration and accomplishment come naturally, even when those around them are more competent. This ideal is unlikely to be promoted through technical approaches to education, or by the current emphasis on the role of education in economic development. Instead, Nicholls calls for a progressive approach to education. Difficult though it is to implement, this approach is most likely to increase equality of motivation for intellectual development, substantial accomplishment, satisfaction in work, and more productive relations with others. These are important ideas for anyone interested in achievement motivation, for those professionally involved in education, and for nonspecialists interested in, or worried about, how we educate our children."

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Journal ArticleDOI

Classrooms: Goals, structures, and student motivation.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the classroom learning environment in relation to achievement goal theory of motivation and argue for an identification of classroom structures that can contribute to a mastery orientation, a systematic analysis of these structures, and a determination of how these structures relate to each other.
Book ChapterDOI

The role of goal orientation in self-regulated learning.

TL;DR: In this paper, a general framework of mastery and performance goals is proposed to conceptualize the academic achievement goals that students may adopt in classroom settings and their role in facilitating or constraining self-regulated learning.
Journal ArticleDOI

A hierarchical model of approach and avoidance achievement motivation

TL;DR: In this paper, a hierarchical model of approach and avoidance achievement motivation was proposed and tested in a college classroom and the results indicated that mastery goals were grounded in achievement motivation and high competence expectancies; performance-avoidance goals, in fear of failure and low competence expectation; and performance-approach goals were in ach.
Journal ArticleDOI

Approach and avoidance motivation and achievement goals

TL;DR: In this paper, an argument is made for incorporating the distinction between approach and avoidance motivation into the performance-mastery dichotomy, and a revised, trichotomous framework of achievement goals comprising mastery, performance-approach, and performance-avoidance goals is described and reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Approach and avoidance achievement goals and intrinsic motivation: A mediational analysis.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed an approach-avoidance achievement goal conceptualization in the intrinsic motivation domain, where only performance goals grounded in the avoidance of failure undermined intrinsic motivation and task involvement was validated as a mediator of the observed effects on intrinsic motivation.
Trending Questions (1)
What is the competitive sports?

The paper does not specifically mention competitive sports.