Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation
π 9.4 Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation
π§ What is Motivation?
Motivation is an internal process that initiates, guides, and sustains goal-directed behavior. It answers:
Why do we do what we do?
π Definitions
Type | Definition |
---|---|
Intrinsic Motivation | Motivation driven by internal rewardsβa sense of enjoyment, purpose, curiosity, or personal fulfillment. |
Extrinsic Motivation | Motivation driven by external rewardsβmoney, grades, praise, punishment, fear, or recognition. |
π‘ Key Differences
Feature | Intrinsic Motivation | Extrinsic Motivation |
---|---|---|
Source | Internal (within the person) | External (outside stimulus) |
Goal | Personal satisfaction or growth | Tangible rewards or avoidance of punishment |
Examples | Studying for love of learning | Studying to get a rank or avoid failure |
Sustainability | Long-lasting | Short-term; fades if rewards stop |
Effect on Creativity | Enhances creativity and exploration | May restrict creativity (focus on reward) |
π§ͺ Real-Life Examples
β Intrinsic Motivation
- UPSC aspirant studies Indian polity out of genuine interest and desire to serve the nation.
- IAS officer volunteers for disaster relief work out of compassion and public service drive.
- Child learns a musical instrument purely for fun and self-expression.
β Extrinsic Motivation
- A student memorizes facts to score high in CBSE exams.
- A corporate employee works overtime to earn a bonus.
- A social media influencer creates content only for followers and sponsorships.
π When Extrinsic Motivation Undermines Intrinsic
This is called the “Overjustification Effect”:
- When people are rewarded too much for something they already enjoy, their intrinsic interest can decrease.
- Example: A child who loved drawing starts doing it only for praise, and may lose joy in the process.
π Application in Education and Civil Services
Domain | Application Example |
---|---|
Education | Encouraging learning for curiosity vs grades; NEP 2020 promotes intrinsic learning |
Workplace | Intrinsic: Autonomy, mastery, purpose; Extrinsic: Pay, promotions, awards |
UPSC Prep | Toppers often driven by intrinsic goals (nation-building) along with extrinsic goals (rank) |
Parenting | Rewarding children with praise wisely to retain internal love of learning or discipline |
π Balancing Both Types
- Best outcomes often occur when extrinsic rewards support, not replace, intrinsic motivation.
- Example: A scholarship (extrinsic) helps a student pursue their passion for environmental science (intrinsic).
π¬ Research Support
- Deci & Ryanβs Self-Determination Theory:
- Autonomy, competence, and relatedness foster intrinsic motivation.
- Controlled environments (punishments/rewards) reduce it.
- Maslowβs Hierarchy: Lower needs (extrinsic) must be met before self-actualization (intrinsic) is possible.
ποΈ Application in Governance and Policy
Field | Motivation Type | Example |
---|---|---|
Public Schemes | Extrinsic | Direct Benefit Transfers (monetary rewards) |
Swachh Bharat | Both | Pride in cleanliness (intrinsic) + rewards |
Digital India | Intrinsic (empowerment) | Citizens adopting technology for participation |
CSR Initiatives | Often extrinsic | Companies comply for branding or legal obligations |
βοΈ Model 10-Marker Answer Structure
- Define motivation and distinguish intrinsic vs extrinsic.
- Discuss psychological bases with examples.
- Explain effects on behaviour, learning, creativity.
- Mention relevant theories (Deci & Ryan, Maslow).
- Add Indian examples from education/governance.
- Conclude on the importance of balancing both.
π§ Summary Chart
Motivation
βββ Intrinsic
β βββ Enjoyment, Curiosity, Purpose
β βββ Internal rewards (e.g., satisfaction)
βββ Extrinsic
βββ Money, Praise, Grades, Threat
βββ External rewards or punishments