Thursday, July 19, 2007

Motivating our Teachers

In my setting, motivation is mainly extrinsic. Teachers are rewarded by providing less teaching time. Teachers are rewarded by promotion and teachers are also rewarded by providing breakfast or lunch. Staff members are also motivated by giving praise.
Understanding what motivated employees and how they were motivated was the focus of many researchers following the publication of the Hawthorne Study results (Terpstra, 1979). Five major approaches that have led to our understanding of motivation are Maslow's need-hierarchy theory, Herzberg's two- factor theory, Vroom's expectancy theory, Adams' equity theory, and Skinner's reinforcement theory. According to Maslow, employees have five levels of needs (Maslow, 1943): physiological, safety, social, ego, and self- actualizing. Maslow argued that lower level needs had to be satisfied before the next higher level need would motivate employees. Herzberg's work categorized motivation into two factors: motivators and hygienes (Herzberg, Mausner, & Snyderman, 1959). Motivator or intrinsic factors, such as achievement and recognition, produce job satisfaction. Hygiene or extrinsic factors, such as pay and job security, produce job dissatisfaction.
Many contemporary authors have also defined the concept of motivation. Motivation has been defined as: the psychological process that gives behavior purpose and direction (Kreitner, 1995); a predisposition to behave in a purposive manner to achieve specific, unmet needs (Buford, Bedeian, & Lindner, 1995); an internal drive to satisfy an unsatisfied need (Higgins, 1994); and the will to achieve (Bedeian, 1993). For this paper, motivation is operationally defined as the inner force that drives individuals to accomplish personal and organizational goals.
Why do we need motivated employees? The answer is survival (Smith, 1994). Motivated employees are needed in our rapidly changing workplaces. Motivated employees help organizations survive. Motivated employees are more productive. To be effective, supervisors need to understand what motivates employees within the context of the roles they perform. Of all the functions a supervisor performs, motivating employees is arguably the most complex. This is due, in part, to the fact that what motivates employees changes constantly (Bowen & Radhakrishna, 1991). For example, research suggests that as employees' income increases, money becomes less of a motivator (Kovach, 1987). Also, as employees get older, interesting work becomes more of a motivator. The ranked order of motivating factors based on research were: (a) interesting work, (b) good wages, (c) full appreciation of work done, (d) job security, (e) good working conditions, (f) promotions and growth in the organization, (g) feeling of being in on things, (h) personal loyalty to employees, (i) tactful discipline, and (j) sympathetic help with personal problems.

3 comments:

margaret said...

It is important that teachers are motivated to inspire student achievement. When are teacher's needs are met, then they are able to respond to the mission, vision and goals of the school community.

Maslow's and Herzberg's theories are very relevant in our work environments today, and should be recognized in our educational settings.

As administrators, we must remember throughout the school year to reward, recognize and celebrate our teacher colleagues.

Anonymous said...

Michael, I would imagine things would be somewhat different in New York than here in South Carolina, but there doesn't seem to be much difference when it comes to motivating teachers. You wrote that you found the following in your research:
The ranked order of motivating factors based on research were: (a) interesting work, (b) good wages, (c) full appreciation of work done, (d) job security, (e) good working conditions, (f) promotions and growth in the organization, (g) feeling of being in on things, (h) personal loyalty to employees, (i) tactful discipline, and (j) sympathetic help with personal problems.
I agree and witness on a daily basis the same factors as motivators in my district. Some very powerful motivators in my small schools are the feeling of being in on things, feeling appreciated and receiving sympathetic help with personal problems.
Dedra Baskin

Anonymous said...

Michael, I would imagine things would be somewhat different in New York than here in South Carolina, but there doesn't seem to be much difference when it comes to motivating teachers. You wrote that you found the following in your research:
The ranked order of motivating factors based on research were: (a) interesting work, (b) good wages, (c) full appreciation of work done, (d) job security, (e) good working conditions, (f) promotions and growth in the organization, (g) feeling of being in on things, (h) personal loyalty to employees, (i) tactful discipline, and (j) sympathetic help with personal problems.
I agree and witness on a daily basis the same factors as motivators in my district. Some very powerful motivators in my small schools are the feeling of being in on things, feeling appreciated and receiving sympathetic help with personal problems.
Dedra Baskin