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L I B R A R Y


Attribution Theory: Explaining How Students Understand the Causes of Behavior, Success, and Failure
Attribution Theory studies how people explain the causes of events, actions, success, and failure. In education, the theory is especially useful because students are constantly trying to understand why they performed well, why they struggled, why a teacher gave certain feedback, why a classmate succeeded, or why a learning task felt difficult. These explanations are not neutral. They shape confidence, motivation, emotion, persistence, and future behavior. A student who explai
6 hours ago21 min read


Planned Behavior Theory — Predicts Behavior through Attitudes, Social Norms, and Perceived Control: Explaining It to Students
Planned Behavior Theory, more widely known as the Theory of Planned Behavior, is one of the most useful theories for explaining why people decide to act in certain ways. It is especially helpful for students because it connects everyday decisions with three simple questions: What do I think about this action? What do important people around me expect? Do I believe I can actually do it? The theory argues that behavior is usually shaped by #attitudes, #social_norms, and #percei
6 hours ago25 min read


Theory of Reasoned Action: Explaining Behavior Through Intentions, Attitudes, and Social Expectations for Students
The Theory of Reasoned Action is one of the most important theories for understanding how people decide to act. It explains that human #behavior is usually guided by #intention, and that intention is shaped by two main forces: a person’s #attitudes toward the behavior and the #social_norms surrounding that behavior. In simple terms, people are more likely to do something when they believe it is useful, acceptable, or valuable, and when they think important people around them
6 hours ago20 min read


Self-Determination Theory: Explaining Student Motivation through Autonomy, Competence, and Relatedness
#SelfDetermination_Theory is one of the most influential explanations of human #motivation in education, work, sport, health, and social life. It explains why people do not simply act because of rewards, punishment, pressure, or instruction. Instead, it shows that people are more likely to learn, persist, and grow when three basic #psychological_needs are supported: #autonomy, #competence, and #relatedness. For students, this theory is especially useful because it explains wh
6 hours ago19 min read


Equity Theory: Understanding Motivation Through Fairness, Effort, Rewards, and Comparison with Others
Equity Theory explains motivation by focusing on how people judge #fairness in social, educational, and workplace situations. The theory, first developed by J. Stacy Adams, argues that people do not only ask, “What did I receive?” They also ask, “Was what I received fair compared with what I gave, and compared with what others received?” This article explains Equity Theory in simple English for students while maintaining an academic structure suitable for a journal-style publ
6 hours ago23 min read


Goal-Setting Theory: Explaining How Clear, Specific, and Challenging Goals Improve Performance for Students
Goal-setting theory is one of the most practical and widely used theories of #motivation. It argues that people often perform better when they work toward clear, specific, and challenging goals rather than vague intentions such as “do your best.” For students, this theory is especially useful because academic life is full of tasks that require direction, discipline, feedback, and persistence. A student who says, “I want to improve my writing” has a general wish. A student who
6 hours ago21 min read


Expectancy Theory: Explaining Student Motivation Through Effort, Performance, and Rewards
#Expectancy_Theory is one of the most practical theories for explaining why students decide to study, participate, persist, or withdraw from academic tasks. The theory argues that #motivation depends on three connected beliefs: whether students believe their #effort can lead to better #performance, whether better performance will lead to meaningful #rewards, and whether those rewards have personal value. In simple terms, students are more likely to work hard when they believe
6 hours ago22 min read


Theory X and Theory Y: Explaining Two Views of Workers Through Control, Trust, and Motivation
Theory X and Theory Y are among the most useful ideas for students who want to understand how managers think about workers, motivation, and organizational life. Developed by Douglas McGregor in the 1960s, the theory explains two different assumptions about people at work. #Theory_X views workers as people who usually dislike work, avoid responsibility, need close supervision, and must be controlled through rules, pressure, or punishment. #Theory_Y views workers as people who
11 hours ago23 min read


Behaviorism as a Learning Theory: Rewards, Punishments, and Observable Behavior Explained to Students
Behaviorism is one of the most influential theories in the history of #education and #psychology. It explains learning as a change in observable behavior caused by experience, practice, rewards, punishments, and environmental conditions. Unlike theories that focus mainly on inner thoughts, feelings, or personal meaning, behaviorism studies what learners do and how their actions change over time. For students, behaviorism is useful because it explains many familiar experiences
6 days ago21 min read


Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs as a Framework for Understanding Human Motivation in Education, Society, and Personal Development
Maslow’s hierarchy of needs is one of the most widely taught models in psychology, education, management, and social science. It explains #human_motivation as a movement from basic survival needs toward higher forms of growth, meaning, and self-actualization. The model is usually presented as a pyramid with five levels: physiological needs, safety needs, love and belonging, esteem, and self-actualization. For students, the theory is useful because it offers a simple way to un
6 days ago19 min read


The Psychology of Motivation: Why Some Students Keep Going
Why do some students continue studying when learning becomes difficult, while others stop, delay, or lose confidence? This article examines the psychology of #Student_Motivation through a simple academic lens. It focuses on four connected areas: goals, discipline, #Self_Regulation, and #Learning_Habits. The article argues that student persistence is not only a personal trait. It is shaped by the interaction between inner beliefs, daily routines, social background, institution
May 1824 min read
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