Dan Pink's book Drive argues that traditional reward-and-punishment models of motivation are outdated and do not encourage creativity or fulfillment. Pink proposes Motivation 3.0, which focuses on intrinsic motivation and autonomy. The book reviews research showing intrinsic motivation leads to better performance and satisfaction. It provides practical strategies for educators to incorporate autonomy, mastery, and purpose into their practices to engage students intrinsically. The reviewer, an education professor, believes applying Pink's Motivation 3.0 model could improve 21st century schools by encouraging creativity, problem-solving, and connectivity in students.
Dan Pink's book Drive argues that traditional reward-and-punishment models of motivation are outdated and do not encourage creativity or fulfillment. Pink proposes Motivation 3.0, which focuses on intrinsic motivation and autonomy. The book reviews research showing intrinsic motivation leads to better performance and satisfaction. It provides practical strategies for educators to incorporate autonomy, mastery, and purpose into their practices to engage students intrinsically. The reviewer, an education professor, believes applying Pink's Motivation 3.0 model could improve 21st century schools by encouraging creativity, problem-solving, and connectivity in students.
Dan Pink's book Drive argues that traditional reward-and-punishment models of motivation are outdated and do not encourage creativity or fulfillment. Pink proposes Motivation 3.0, which focuses on intrinsic motivation and autonomy. The book reviews research showing intrinsic motivation leads to better performance and satisfaction. It provides practical strategies for educators to incorporate autonomy, mastery, and purpose into their practices to engage students intrinsically. The reviewer, an education professor, believes applying Pink's Motivation 3.0 model could improve 21st century schools by encouraging creativity, problem-solving, and connectivity in students.
Dan Pink's book Drive argues that traditional reward-and-punishment models of motivation are outdated and do not encourage creativity or fulfillment. Pink proposes Motivation 3.0, which focuses on intrinsic motivation and autonomy. The book reviews research showing intrinsic motivation leads to better performance and satisfaction. It provides practical strategies for educators to incorporate autonomy, mastery, and purpose into their practices to engage students intrinsically. The reviewer, an education professor, believes applying Pink's Motivation 3.0 model could improve 21st century schools by encouraging creativity, problem-solving, and connectivity in students.
A Review of Drive: The Surprising Truth about What
Motivates Us Reviewed by Kathleen Fite Professor of Education, Texas State University San Marcos Pink, D.H. (2009). Drive: The Surprising Truth about What Motivates Us. Riverhead Books: New York. 242 pages Okay, I admit it. I am a fan of Dan Pink. After a friend suggested I read his book A Whole New Mind, I made a mental note to buy it. Serendipitously, he came to our university campus; I met him and heard him speak. He talked about his new book Drive. I knew it was a book I would buy; the next day I did.
and avoided punishment, referred to Type X
(extrinsic reward) behavior. This operating system has remained in place for a long time; however, it does not address the distinctly human traits of autonomy and intrinsic motivation that are at the heart of Motivation 3.0 and Type I behavior.
This three-part, six-chapter book has taught
me, an educator, more about motivation than any other resource I have used in the past. Part One encourages us to think beyond our rewardand-punishment system to a new way of thinking about motivation. Part Two presents what he refers to as Type I, intrinsic behavior where we have an innate need to direct our lives and how we learn; and, how this type of behavior enhances performance and satisfaction. Part Three, referred to as the Type I Toolkit, provides a variety of resources designed to support Type I behavior. Pink makes connections to business as well as schools. It is these latter connections that educators and administrators should closely examine as I think they offer promise for 21st century school improvement.
In what has become classic Pink style, the
author supports his tenets with a plethora of research findings and references. Support for his beliefs span from seminal research on intrinsic motivation, such as that by Harry Harlow, and contemporary research, such as Edward Deci and Richard Ryans selfdetermination theory (SDT) and Teresa Amabiles work on creativity, to examples of successful entities such as Google, Zappos, and Wikipedia. Though much of his book references the business world, his examples are relevant to the field of education and personal fulfillment. Teacher researchers could benefit from reading the research findings and examining if their own practices reflect mostly if-then reward behaviors, or if they help the students connect to a greater cause or purpose and reach within themselves to uncover solutions.
Pink begins by providing the reader with the
basics of what he calls Motivation 1.0. Early man was trying to survive, and his behavior reflected that goal. But, as society advanced, the purely biological drive yielded to a second drive, Motivation 2.0, where we sought reward Fite
He writes with unmistakable clarity and
presents his documentation so well that the lay population will be able to understand how drive and motivation work. Behemoths like 1
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Google provide examples of a result-only work
environment (ROWE), and concepts like a FedEx day, where employees are given a day to solve a problem or tackle a project utilizing principles of Motivation 3.0, place value on autonomy and reflect an inherent understanding that intrinsic motivation evokes creativity. We tend to think it is high salary and prestige we seek in our lives; however, it is the fulfillment we derive from our deeds that tends to win out in the log run. The Sawyer Effect, coined from the story about Tom Sawyer where work can be turned into play or play into work, is used as a metaphor for taking the drudgery out of what could otherwise be the mundane. In education we have not always valued play and play environments as being conducive to learning. Practicing teachers and administrators would do well to look at challenging behaviors and projects with lenses more reflective of the Sawyer Effect, where participants became eager to participate and value community rather than dread involvement. Pink fills the pages of his book with point after point emphasizing that we need to encourage Type I behaviors and utilize the principles of Motivation 3.0. The current revamping of our educational system, referred to as 21st century schools and skills, could benefit from encouraging these types of behaviors and ways of thinking. We need to encourage connectivity and creativity in our students. Motivation 3.0 theory has shown that rewards dont always yield the results we are after; they often encourage the fastest route to an end or a myopic focus rather than encouraging divergent thinking and problem solving. Obtaining a tangible reward does not necessarily mean that self-fulfillment will follow. Pink stresses the power of intrinsic motivation and Type I behavior and describes the concept of what Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi calls flow when people are functioning in a sort of Goldilocks zone where things are not too hard or easy, challenging or simple; and, the person forgets himself in the task or moment. An autotelic, or self-directed, experience can be a reward in itself. Fite
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The book incorporates practical resources for
reinforcing Pinks tenets. His Type I Toolkit has a variety of interesting and valuable ideas and references, including Nine Strategies for Awakening Your Motivation and Nine Ideas for Helping Our Kids (He is a father.). In this section, Pink identifies and describes select Type I schools (which include Montessori schools) and names gurus (Douglas McGregor, Peter Drucker, Jim Collins, Cali Ressler and Jody Thompson, and Gary Hamel) who embody and encourage the Type I persona. Also included are: a glossary, books he considers essential to read for understanding motivation by such authors as Carse, Colvin, Csikszentmihalyi, Deci and Flaste, Dweck, Gladwell, and Senge, fitness tips, and condensed summaries for each of the chapters. Especially helpful to teachers will be his section for parents and educators. He offers some glaringly practical ideas for determining if homework is appropriate and offers suggestions for creativity building as well as do-it-yourself (DIY) report cards. Teachers could develop a home survey where parents and children are asked to rate the value of aspects of homework and offer suggestions how assignments could be improved or to survey the students to find ways to give them more ownership of their work by encouraging selfgrading and reflective narrative and sharing. Pink references the work of Carol Dweck to help us see how there are different and more effective ways to praise behaviors and how specific praise choices yield changes in behavior. He also reminds us of the importance for the child, as well as the teacher and administrator, to connect activity to a bigger picture and see the cause and effect of our actions. Taking a macro view of teacher and student behaviors and the consequences of those behaviors could help us better understand the ripple effect of what we do and say. This book offers a lot of information for the money. Pink tells us what drives our behavior and how we develop a sense of worth, 2
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fulfillment, and connectedness. Now it is our
turn to do something with the information. Education in the 21st century needs to move beyond a mere carrots and sticks modus operandi to encouraging attributes of autonomy, mastery, and purpose so that we
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move up front to the drivers seat rather than
being strapped in the back seat and driven. Pink has given us the key; it is up to us as educational leaders to start the engine and move forward.