Senin, 03 Oktober 2011

Study in Literature

AESTHETICAL VALUE OF AS YOU LIKE IT 
Written by William Shakespeare

by: Sandi Ferdiansyah


Chapter I
INTRODUCTION

Literature is a branch of the study of a language. It, specifically, discusses the topics of literature and their theories. The teaching of literature has promoted a perspective of enabling the students not only to comprehend but also to value the literary works. This idea is in line with Chambers and Gregory (2006:2) who state that “literature, as a subset of story, acts, as do all other forms of story, to perform such all-important functions as telling human beings what is important in life, telling us what’s worthy of our admiration or our contempt….” It means that literature study in language learning plays an important role to evokes the human’s awareness of literary works and value them. 
There are some literary works in language learning, they are poetry, drama, novel, short story etc. Short story and novel are same based on the genre which is narrative. However, short story is less complicated and shorter. Short story is one of literary works that is written either as imaginative or factual-based story writing. Somehow, Eagleton (2005:2) states that literature is definable not according to whether it is fictional or 'imaginative', but because it uses language in peculiar ways; transforming and intensifying ordinary language, deviating systematically from everyday speech. As it is not written in an ordinary language, comprehending a short story is sometimes felt effortful. It is relatively difficult for the readers to interpret what actually the story is about. Therefore, Chambers and Gregory (2006:11) encourage the readers to develop their own interpretive opinions.   
 One of the famous English literatures in the seventeenth century is William Shakespeare. His writings were mainly in the forms of comedy. But, it is not the same as comedy today which makes the audience laugh. The comedy in Shakespeare’s day might be romantic, bear moral value, and the most important thing was that it was not a tragedy. So that, the analysis of Shakespeare’s short story entitled As You Like It in this writing mostly uses the aesthetical value.


Chapter II
SUMMARY

As You Like It
Written by William Shakespeare
Many years ago there lived a nobleman in England named Sir Rowland De Boys. He had three sons named Oliver, James, and Orlando. When Sir Rowland died, he left his eldest son Oliver is charge of his state, and looked after his youngest brother Orlando. But, Oliver did not treat his youngest brother as his father had wished. He sent James to school but kept Orlando at home. This made Orlando disappointed and angry. He held Oliver firmly till Oliver was difficult to take a breath. Oliver asked him to be released and gave what Orlando demanded with one condition that Orlando and Adam, the servant of the house, must leave the house.
After Orlando and Adam’s leaving, Oliver was introduced to a wrestler named Charles. He was employed by a duke named Frederick. The duke Frederick recently ruled after he had banished his older brother, the old duke. Charles told Oliver about a wrestling match. He also told him that Orlando had challenged him in the match. Charles came to warn Oliver about Orlando’s intention. Somehow, Oliver lied that Orlando insisted on joining the wrestle even Oliver had warned his brother not to join the wrestling match.
The banished duke had a daughter named Rosalind. Rosalind lived with her uncle the duke Frederick. The Duke Frederick had a daughter named Celia. Rosalind and Celia grew together as till it seemed that they could not be separated. One day, while Rosalind and Celia were walking around the palace, they discovered that Charles would wrestle Orlando. Both of them, especially Rosalind, took a pity to Orlando. She tried to warn Orlando not to fight Charles as Charles was strong enough for him to wrestle. But, Orlando denied Rosalind’s advice and insisted on fighting. Some time later, the wrestling match began. To the crowd surprise, Orlando, who was also strong, could throw Charles to the ground. At last he won the match as the judge said that Charles could not continue fighting. However, the duke Frederick hated Orlando when he knew that Orlando was the son of his enemy. So the duke Frederick asked him to leave the palace.

Rosalind who admired Orlando was sad to know that he was banished. Then, she gave him her necklace. It made the duke Frederick angry that he found Rosalind began to like Orlando. The duke Frederick, then, decided to banish her too. But, Celia protested her father by warning him that if he had banished Rosalind it meant that he would have banished her daughter too. So both of the girls escaped from the palace accompanied by Touchstone, the duke’s fool. Rosalind disguised herself as a man and named herself as Ganymede and Celia wore an ugly dress and named herself as Aliena. The three of them headed to the Arden forest that night. In the morning, the duke Frederick was furious to discover that his daughter had fled with his niece. He assumed that they went to Oliver’s house where Orlando lived. So he and his men went to Oliver’s house to search his daughter.
Oliver, who knew his youngest brother Orlando had won the wrestling match, made him jealous. So he planned to kill Orlando by the time Orlando had slept. But, Adam, one of the servant told Orlando about his oldest brother’s plan. Orlando thanked Adam for telling him that. Then, both of them left the house and headed to forest of Arden.
Rosalind and Celia (both in disguise) were very tired after a long journey and had a rest under a tree. There, they saw two shepherds were talking about love. Rosalind found out that one of the shepherd, the younger one, was in love with a girl named Phebe. Rosalind then asked for a cottage in where the three of them could pass the time. then, the older shepherd showed their master’s cottage which was left by their master to the town selling some sheep. Meanwhile, Orlando and Adam were also exhausted. Adam, even, gave up continuing their journey. Then, Orlando tried to find some food to eat until he met the Duke Frederick’s older brother and some of his men were going to eat. Orlando stopped them from eating and asked them to wait until he brought Adam back with him. The duke was pity to know it then he asked Orlando to bring his friend. Orlando was also well-welcomed after the Duke had known that Orlando was the son of Sir Rowland.
In another place, the Duke Frederick got very angry as he could not find Orlando in Oliver’s house. Then he ordered Oliver to search Orlando otherwise he would take all of Oliver’s property and belongings. Oliver began to search Orlando in fear immediately.
Orlando who lived in the forest with the real duke began to start his new peaceful life. However, he could not stop thinking of Rosalind. So he wrote many poems for her and hung them in the trees. But, he did not realize that he was actually close to her. Rosalind and Celia were curious about who had written the poems. Then Celia thought that it might be Orlando the man whom Rosalind ever gave the chain to.
One day, Rosalind and Celia (both still in disguise) met Orlando. Rosalind told Orlando that if he would to call her Rosalind then she would be pleasure to take Orlando to Rosalind’s cottage and he would be able to meet the real Rosalind there. Orlando agreed then he called Ganymede Rosalind. Rosaline (in disguise) asked him to promise that he would visit the Rosalind’s cottage in the next morning. However, Orlando failed to come which made Rosalind very upset. Some time later, they met Corin the older shepherd. Corin told them that the younger shepherd named Silvius was truly in love with Phebe but Phebe liked to scorn Silvius lots. This made Rosalind angry with Phebe. Rosalind said that Silvius actually deserved her. Somehow, it made Phebe began to like Rosalind who was in disguise as a man.
Soon after Rosalind and Celia came back to their cottage, Orlando came. Rosalind (in disguise) told how upset she was because of his being late. Orlando was sorry and promised not to be late anymore. But he had to leave both of them as he had a promise to have dinner with the duke.
The next morning, a man, who confessed himself as the Orlando’s oldest brother, came to Rosalind’s cottage telling that Orlando was injured after helping him. He showed the bloody bandage used to wrap Orlando’s wound. It made Rosalind faint. So, he and Celia took a good care of her. This made Oliver and Celia fall in love. Some time later, Orlando who has been healthy came to Rosalind and introduced his oldest brother to her. Oliver had changed his life and returned all of Orlando’s property. Rosalind was very happy to see Orlando back. Then she managed a time to gather all of them including Silvius and Phebe in the Duke’s Forest. There, Orlando married to Rosalind, Oliver to Celia, and Silvius to Phebe. After the old Duke had passed away, Orlando became the duke as the Duke Frederick became a religious man.



Chapter III
ANALYSIS

Most of literary works are written beautifully. This, according to Eagleton (2005:2) because of the texture, rhythm and resonance of your words are in excess of their abstract-able meaning - or, as the linguists might more technically put it, there is a disproportion the signifiers and the signified. Then, it is assumed that the literary work employs the aesthetical value. The word aesthetic (adj), according to Hornby (2005:19) concerned with beauty and the appreciation of beauty. And value is moral or professional standards of behavior, principles (Hornby, 2005:1319). Furthermore, Wikipedia.com states that aesthetics (also spelled aesthetics or esthetics) is a branch of philosophy dealing with the nature of beauty, art, and taste, and with the creation and appreciation of beauty. Therefore, the analysis of aesthetical value of the short story entitled As You Like It in this writing refers to the beauty of the sentences, phrases, or words used by the writer in writing the story in the sense of how each goes within the context or situation.
3.1 The aesthetical value of the story As You Like It
            First of all, (at p.37) after being called as “old dog” by Oliver, Adam, the servant of the Sir Rowland said, hurt deeply, “is old dog my reward? I have lost my teeth in your service. My old master sir Rowland would not have spoken like that.” The words old dog used are not actually a reward, Hornby (2005:1008) reward is something given in return of doing something good. Adam said it as a hint to Oliver for he even had lost his teeth that might be caused by Oliver during his service.
            Next, (at p.39) before Orlando fought Charles in a wrestle match he was advised by the girl named Rosalind not to fight. However, he said, “…if I am killed, I am willing to die and shall do my friends no wrong, because I have none. Nobody will sorrow at my death.” What Shakespeare intended to tell the reader in his story was that all about an honor. Orlando would keep fighting even his opponent might be stronger than him as he had accepted the challenge and there was no excuse for him to abandon it.
            Further, (at p.43) when Orlando escaped from the Oliver’s house, Adam asked to follow him. He said, “I have five hundred pounds which I saved while working for your father. Take that, and let me be your servant. Though I look old, I am still strong, I will follow you until my death with truth and loyalty.” This expresses the strong willing of Adam to serve Orlando loyally and truthfully.
            P.46 Orlando met some strangers in the forest of Arden when he was looking for some food after Adam had suffered from exhaust. He calmed himself down after one of the strangers said something wisely to him. He said, “…but whoever you are that live under the shade of these branches, if you have looked on better days, and been where bells called you to church, and sat at any good man’s feast, and wiped a tear from your eyelids, and known what it is to pity and be pitied, take no notice of my show of force. Listen, instead, to the request of a gentleman.” Orlando said such words to indicate his apology for being rude to the band of the strangers. What he probably wanted to say …if you have looked on better days… was that he had been living in sadness and sorrow thus he wondered if the man could share of his happiness. …been where bells called you to church… was might be the man was a religious one who could lead him as a religious one too, …and sat at any good man’s feast… if the man he was talking to was a generous man, he would be happy to be together with the man as he would be taken to some feast with the man, …wiped a tear from your eyelids… the word tear is close to a sadness wiped a tear can mean end the sadness. The man had lived in happiness so that Orlando really wanted to end his sorrow and live happily.
            Jacques (P.46), one of the strangers, said, “all the worlds is a stage and all the men and women merely players. They have their exits and entrances, and one man in his time plays many parts through his seven ages. At first the infant in the nurse’s arms…. The last scene of all, that ends his strange eventful history, is a second childhood, without teeth, without eyes, without taste, and without anything.” These words are very beautiful and of course value aesthetics. Shakespeare, through the characters of his story, probably tried to attract reader’s attention about the essence of life. Human had nothing in the beginning of his life, he needs the other to grow up, …the infant in the nurse’s arms… That likely reflect in the last of his life that what he has will disappear, …and without anything. 
            P.49 the next interesting scene in the story happens when Orlando met Rosalind. Their talk about love is very attractive. Rosalind pretended to ask the time to Orlando. Then, Orlando said, “there’s no clock in the forest.”
“then, there’s no true lover in the forest, Said Rosalind, because lovers sighing every minute and groaning every hour show the passing of time as well as clock.”
This was continued by Rosalind, she said, “love is just a madness, she replied, I cured a man of it once in this way. He was to pretend that I was his loved one, and pay me compliments every day. I would keep changing. I would be full of tears, then full of smiles, I would like him, and then hate him. I would weep for him, then spit at him. In this way I cured him of his love, and I would cure you, if you just call me Rosalind,…” Rosalind was in disguise so that Orlando could not recognize her. Rosalind did this to know how much Orlando loved her. When Rosalind said that there’s no true lover in the forest because lovers sighing every minute and groaning every hour show the passing of time as well as clock what she meant actually was that she wanted to tell Orlando how sad the lover had been if he or she could not have met the true lover. Next, what Rosalind meant by love is a madness was that love sometimes could be very confusing. When the woman was given some compliments by her lover, she would be very happy. But once she would be very sad when her lover failed to cheer her up. Therefore, the girl would keep changing from being happy to being sad, smile to tear, just to make her lover keep loving her and she loved him more. That way would cure and keep their love.
            P.50 another interesting talk happened between Phebe and Silvius. Phebe who did not like Silvius said, “You tell me there is murder in my eye. Now I frown on you with all my heart, and if my eyes can wound, then let them kill you now. Don’t lie and say my eyes are murderers! Show me the wound my eyes has made in you. My eyes do not hurt you, and I am sure there is no force in eyes that can do hurt.” The words that are written in the story not actually based on the lexical meaning. Therefore, it cannot be discovered easily what the writer meant. Just like the word murder, Hornby (2005:765) defines murder as the illegal deliberate killing of a human being. So that, it is, simply, impossible that eyes can hurt and murder. This part of talking was actually preceded by a story in which Phebe always scorned Silvius for she did not like him. That made Silvius’ love likely have been murdered.
            Next, P.52 Rosalind was so upset to know Orlando was late that she said, “Yes, a snail, because, though he comes slowly, he carries his house on his head-more than you can offer a woman, I think. But now beg me to love you. Now I am in a good mood, and likely enough to say I will.” It is interesting when Rosalind hinted Orlando like a snail. It does not mean that she meant what she talked about. However, it was just to tempt him and thus he would not be late anymore.




Chapter IV
CONCLUSION

The story written by Shakespeare entitled As You Like It belongs to comedy. However, it is not only about joke but also tend to talk about love in different side. This story values aesthetic as it appreciates the nature of beauty. It is reflected by some citations written in the story. The followings are some expressions which value aesthetic that are taken from the story:   
Page
Sentences or phrases
Description
37
Is old dog my reward?
This implies the beauty of the servant’s bravery after being hurt against the master’s bad behavior.
39
If I’m killed I am willing to die… nobody will sorrow at my death
This implies the beauty of Orlando’s willing to keep fighting to defend his honor
43
I will follow you until the death with truth and royalty
This implies the beauty of a loyalty
40
If you’ve looked at better days….wiped a tear from your eyelids
This implies the beauty of Orlando’s confession to commit his fault
46
All the world’s a stage… without anything
This implies the beauty of Jacques’ illustration about human’s life
49
There’s no true lover…as the passing time as well as clocked
This implies the beauty of Rosalind’s expression to catch the Orlando’s attention of love
50
You tell me there’s murder in my eyes… that can do hurt
This implies the beauty of Phebe’s words in denying the love of Silvius
52
Yes, a snail… enough to say I will
This implies the beauty of Rosalind’s hint to Orlando of being late

From the above table, therefore, it is clear that the story of As You Like It values aesthetic.




Reference

Chambers, E. and Gregory, M. 2006. Teaching and Learning English Literature. London: Sage Publications Ltd.

Eagleton, T. 2005. Literary Theory: An Introduction. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing.

Hornby, A.,S. 2005. Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary. Oxford: Oxford University Press

Shakespeare, W. 2003. (Ed). Four Shakespeare Comedies: As You Like It. Jakarta: PT Gramedia Pustaka Utama.

www.Wikipedia.com/ aesthetic (retrieved on 15 September 2011)

Senin, 15 Agustus 2011

Study in Learners' psychology

Motivating Students in Classroom: a Perspective of Directing the extrinsic motivation into intrinsic

by: Sandi Ferdiansyah

Abstract
Children are obviously not blank sheets that parents or teachers can write anything on them. It is essential for parents or teachers to be wise and fully understand that they grow up and be what they want to be with their own potencies. It is a fatal error that mostly parents or teachers direct them without knowing much what they actually need. So that, the children sometimes break loose and in particular blame their parents because they do not have any chances to tell and show their talents and interests. Furthermore, at school, they are less motivated so that they do not enjoy studying. In the classroom, the students who have lack of motivation tend to talk much with their desk mate rather than paying attention to the teacher’s explanation and get involved in the classroom activities. A mishandling towards such students’ behavior will likely put themselves into a permanent dislike of learning. This is not absolutely expected by anyone who concern to the students’ future as the next generation. In hence, understanding the students’ need is essential as the foundation to build their confident and self-esteem. Therefore, it is not more than just a direction that is expected by the students but also a motivation or support either form their parents or their teachers.

Key words: motivation, extrinsic and intrinsic motivation, motivating students in classroom

Learn and learning theories
Before going on the discussion about how to motivate students specifically in classroom, for teachers especially, it is better to discuss what is meant by learn and the theories of learning. To learn means to acquire knowledge, information, or experience. In hence, according to Gage (1984) in Dahar (1988:12) to learn is a process in which an organism can change its attitude as the impact of the experience. It is supported by Baharuddin (2010:162) who states that to learn means an activity done by someone to get a change through practices and experiences. It can simply means that a child is educated to get a better change on his or her life, i.e. unknowing becomes knowing or being unable becomes able through the practices that he or she has done and experiences that he or she has got which then transformed as a knowledge.
Gage (1984) in Dahar (1988:15-21) classifies five learning forms, they are briefly described as follow:
  1. Responsive learning
The theory of responsive learning was actually proposed by a well-known Russian Psychologist named Ivan Pavlov. In this learning form, a response is issued by a stimulus that has been known. Pavlov observed that a dog would get a small effect of spitting when the light was on. Then, the dog was given some meat powder which made it spit. The lamp was lighted right before giving the meat powder. After some time, the dog spitted even the light was on. The theory of responsive learning happens in real life. Dahar (1988:17) figures out that when a child is on the first day of school he or she perhaps becomes afraid after he or she gets unfriendly welcome from his or her teachers and friends. It of course induces the negative stimulus towards that him or her and that makes him or her afraid or going to school.
  1. Contiguous learning
Some scientists claim that the relationship between unconditional stimulus and response is not necessary. A simple close association (contiguous) between a stimulus and response can result a change on one’s attitude. Or simply it can be said that a man can change as a result of experiencing a pairing events. For an instance: the students are asked to fill the following problems: four times four equals….; Oprah Winfrey is a…… ; Nill river is in…… etc. the answers sixteen; a smart woman; India show that one can learn because of close event that happen in the same time.
  1. Operant learning
In operant learning, reinforcement is the key word. It plays an important role in changing one’s attitude. Slavin (1988) in Dahar (1988:19) says that the reinforcement refers to a consequence that empowers one’s attitude.
  1. Observational learning
The concept of the observational learning is that someone can learn by observing someone else what he or she can do. For an example, observing someone who has a good manner and attitude will make the learner change his or her as a learner with a good personality.

  1. Cognitive learning
Cognitive learning is very much different with those four learning forms. It fully concerns on mental process. This kind of learning focuses on how brain keeps the information and then how it is used to carry out the problem.
The five principles of learning theories which have been described above represent the thoughts of how human learns, makes up their knowledge, and maximizes the potencies. Therefore, it is clear that a student obtains knowledge differently with others in terms of the learning style, as Reid (1995, p. viii), quoted by Dornyei (2005:121) states that the standard definition, they refer to “an individual’s natural, habitual, and preferred way(s) of absorbing, processing, and retaining new information and skills”. Next, the learning style impacts on how the students develop the knowledge obtained into a certain application. The application depends on what skill the students have mastered. The process of developing the knowledge has put teachers as an important influence. Baharuddin (2010:165) says that the teaching learning process that is managed by teachers correlate towards the students’ learning achievement. This may imply what Piaget has already proposed after his years experience, in which he states that the intellectual development of the human in the transition phase is effected by five factors, they are maturation, physical experience, logico-mathematical experience, social transmission, and equilibration (in Philips, 1981 as quoted by Dahar (1988:188).

Motivation
According to Bandura (1977) in Dahar (1988:34) there are four phases in learning, they are attentional phase, retention phase, reproduction phase, and motivational phase. See the following figure a.



Adopted from observational learning analysis by Gage (1984) in Dahar (1988:34)

In motivational phase, students will imitate a model because they feel that they can increase the probability of the reinforcement that they will obtain (Dahar, 1988: 36). On the other hand, and Baharuddin (2010:73-74) states that motivation is one of maturation factors. The maturation is important to establish the readiness. Therefore, there is an assumption that motivation has become one of important factors that influences the students’ achievement.
Reid (2009:19) states that motivation is the key of success, meanwhile Dornyei (2005:66) states the motivation is of a great importance. Those ideas put motivation as a significant factor in students’ developmental process. According to Hornby (1995:758) to motivate means to stimulate the interest of somebody; to cause somebody to want to do something. It means that to be motivated, someone requires stimuli in order to make him himself motivated or to motivate others.
Motivation according to Brown (2007:87) can be classified into two; they are extrinsic motivation and intrinsic motivation (self-motivation). The extrinsic motivation is considered as an appreciation (Reid, 2009:19). This appreciation can come from parents at home, teachers at school, and friends as a wider environment context. Furthermore, a student deserves to get an appreciation when they suffer from learned-helplessness. Such motivation typically can be in the form of rewards and certain types of positive feedback (Brown, 2007:88). However, Reid (2009:19) argues that motivation should be intrinsic by means that the students must have self-motivation. This idea is supported by Brown (2007:89) who states that a convincing stockpile of research on motivation strongly favors intrinsic drives, especially for long term retention.
Furthermore, Edward Deci (1975, p.23) in Brown (2007:88) defines intrinsic motivation as intrinsically motivated activities are ones for which there is no apparent reward except the activity itself…intrinsically motivated behaviors are aimed at bringing about certain internally rewarding consequences, namely feelings of competence and self determination. In addition, self-motivation is built by a good mental attitude. Gie (1986:17) states that good mental attitude will enable the students to survive through the difficulties in learning. He further suggests four mental attitudes students have to establish, they are: understanding the aims of leaning, understanding the interest of learning, empowering the self-confident, and willing to be hardworking students. Therefore, it is obvious that self-motivation should be able to build belief or self-confident that the students have the ability to produce results, accomplish goals, or perform tasks competently.


Motivating the students in the classroom
There are two characteristics of students in term of motivation strength. Students with high motivation tend to perform and accomplish the tasks easier that those who are low. They have been able to manage what and how to do it even without the teacher’s direction or help. However, the students who tend to be helplessness learners are absolutely becoming the teacher’s concern. Reid (2007:20) states that not all students are motivated intrinsically and intuitively to learn. Therefore the need to be motivated and teachers should be able to develop the facility and method that is possible and easy to motivate. This is in line with Dornyei (2005:66) who states that without sufficient motivation, even individuals with the most remarkable abilities cannot accomplish long-term goals, and neither are appropriate curricula and good teaching enough on their own to ensure student achievement. Therefore, when the students have been extrinsically motivated by the teachers they are expected to be intrinsically motivated and be independent. The following is a table of how extrinsic motivation builds the intrinsic motivation which creates the students’ motivation results.
Table a. From extrinsic to intrinsic motivation in educational institution
Extrinsic pressures
Intrinsic innovations
Motivational results
School Curriculum
Learner-centered
Personal goal setting
Individualization
Self-esteem
Self-actualization
Decide for self
Parental expectations
Family solidarity
Negotiated agreements
Love, intimacy
Acceptance, respect for wisdom
Society’s Expectation
Security of comfortable routines
Task based teaching
Community, belonging
Identity, harmony
Security
Tests and exams
Peer evaluation
Self-diagnosis
Level-check exercise
Experience
Self knowledge
Immediate gratification
Set long term goals
Focus on big picture
Patience will reward
Experience
Self-knowledge
Make money
Content-based teaching
Vocational education workplace ESL, ESP
Self-actualization
Competition
Cooperative learning
Group work
The class is a team
Cooperation harmony

Never fail
Risk-taking,
Innovation, creativity
Learn from mistakes
Nobody’s perfect
“c’est la vie”
Adapted from: Brown (2007:91)
A good teacher is someone who is not only able to teach or transfer the material of the lesson but also able to educate. Baharuddin (2010:200) says that a qualified teacher is a teacher who is able to understand and master the problems of teaching and educating they are the whole components that deal with the implementation during the teaching and learning process. In relation to motivation, Reid (2010:24) proposes twenty four strategies in developing motivation, they are:
  1. Support the varieties of learning style
  2. Support the creativity
  3. Make sure the success through little steps
  4. Give positive feedback to the students about their progress
  5. Build the students’ belief about their own capability
  6. Confess the style of each student
  7. Make sure that the task is appropriate with their talent and age
  8. Observe to know the students’ preference towards the study and environment
  9. Focus on the task and curriculum
  10. Use various teaching strategies in the classroom
  11. Ensure that the learning is meaningful
  12. Minimize the pressure
  13. Develop group working
  14. Arrange self-evaluation
  15. Show the capability
  16. Avoid stigma
  17. Return the responsibility to the students
  18. Support the students’ choice
  19. Give the students responsibility
  20. Focus on learning as well as teaching
  21. Involve the students in decision making
  22. Celebrate the success
  23. Give positive feedback
  24. Push the self-evaluation

In addition, prior to its application in the classroom, Brown (2007:92) suggests the following activities to be considered that capitalize on the intrinsic by appealing to learner’s self-determination and autonomy:
  1. Teaching writing as a thinking process in which learners develop their ideas freely and openly
  2. Showing learners strategies of reading of reading that enable them to bring their own information to the written word.
  3. Language experience approaches in which students create their own reading language material for others in the class to read
  4. Oral fluency exercises in which learners talk about what interests them and not about a teacher-assigned topic
  5. Listening to academic lecture in one’s own field of study for specific information that will fill gap for the learner
  6. Communicative language teaching, in which language is taught to enable learners to accomplish certain language function
  7. Grammatical explanations a potential for increasing their autonomy in a second language.

Next, Wolters (1999) in Dornyei (2005:66) identifies eight key strategic ways in which students can regulate their motivation:
  1. Self-consequating: Identifying and administering self-provided extrinsic rewards or punishments for reinforcing one’s desire to reach particular goals associated with completing an academic task. The rewards can be concrete such as buying an ice-cream or more subtle such as making self-praising verbal statements.
  2. Goal-oriented self-talk: Using subvocal statements or thoughts designed to increase one’s desire to complete a task. This self-talk is similar to the self-reinforcing verbal statements mentioned above but the content goes beyond mere praises. Instead, students intensify their focus by elaborating on or making salient various reasons for persisting with the task, thereby ‘talking themselves into’ increased performance.
  3. Interest enhancement: Increasing one’s intrinsic motivation by using strategies that promote the immediate enjoyment or situational interest of an activity, for example by turning the task into a game.
  4. Environmental structuring: Decreasing the possibility of off-task behavior by reducing the probability of encountering distractions or reducing the intensity of distractions.
  5. Self-handicapping: Manufacturing obstructions before or during a task to make the task more difficult. By doing so, students in effect create a kind of ‘win-win’ situation for themselves because if they fail, they can use the obstacle as a mitigating circumstance, and if they succeed against the odds, that put them in a particularly good light.
  6. Attribution control: Causal attributions, however, can also be manipulated after task completion in a way that they positively impact motivation by the purposeful selection of causal explanations that put students in a positive light.
  7. Efficacy management: Monitoring, evaluating, and purposefully controlling one’s own self-efficacy for tasks by applying one of three methods: (a) proximal goal setting—that is, breaking complex tasks into simpler and more easily completed segments, associated with straightforward, specific, and short-term goals, (b) defensive pessimism—highlighting one’s level of unpreparedness or lack of ability in order to increase anxiety that will strategically increase one’s effort to prepare, and (c) efficacy self-talk—engaging in thoughts or subvocal statements, such as “You can do it!” to increase one’s perceived self-efficacy.
  8. Emotion regulation: Regulating one’s emotional experience in a constructive way, for example by reducing negative affective response or using wishful thinking.
The three ideas of arousing the students’ motivation in learning, proposed by Reid, Brown, and Wolters, have been enlightened into the following concepts and perspectives, they are:
  1. Supporting the idea of students’ variety in learning has built a concept of creating the strategies in teaching and learning that are suitable with the students’ preference. It also implies that the teaching strategies should be able not only to make the students enjoy learning but also perform the learning objectives into practice. Communicative language teaching including group working can be taken as consideration.
  2. Giving the positive feedback as the result of monitoring and evaluating during the teaching and learning process will make the students become motivated. The positive feedback must not always in the form of rewards, score or something like that but also appreciation. The words like “good job”, “that’s great”, or “well done” will be significantly attract the students’ motivation to be better even if they are wrong.
  3. Guiding the students during a certain assignment. This includes the activities of question and answer. From the questions and answer the teacher will find out the difficulty and the students’ need. Therefore it is important to conduct self-handicapping to assist the students. Further, it will be a next step to be an autonomous learning in which the students understand what to do and how to do it.
The above strategies of changing the students’ condition from lack motivation to high motivation are beneficial to apply in the classroom activity. To sum up, Brown (2007:90) says that if the learners in the classroom are given an opportunity to do language for their own personal reasons of achieving competence and autonomy, those will have a better chance of success than if they become dependent on external rewards for their motivation.

Discussion
Classroom with a small number of students may easily managed, however, a large number of students require great attention and good class-management. During teaching learning process, most of teachers find their students talking behind them. The objectives of learning sometimes fail to achieve as the students do not get involve well. Let us see the following finding.
Figure b. the topic of students’ talk during class



A survey was conducted to investigate the students’ motivation in learning by distributing a questionnaire. The questionnaire was distributed to 460 students of the X class at MAN Banyuwangi in the 2011/ 2012 academic year. The respondents consisted of 310 female students and 150 male students. It was surprised to know that 35% students or 161 students out of 460 talked about love. They shared with their friends about their boy friends or girlfriends. In the other hand, there were only 15% or 69 students out of 460 who discussed the teachers’ assignment. Next, the respondents were asked about why they did not pay much attention to the teachers’ explanation during the class. The respondents’ answer can bee seen in the figure c below:
Figure c. the reasons why the students were talking during the class


The result of the second questions was also surprising. It was known that 40% or 184 students out of 460 students disliked the lessons in which it was likely had a correlation between the material itself and how the teacher explained it. It was reasonable because 20% or 92 students disliked the way how the teachers explained the lesson. The last question was quite interesting to discuss that was 35% or 161 students out of 460 students said they were always motivated by their teachers, but there were 25% or 115 out of 460 students felt that their teacher never motivated them. See figure d.
Figure d. The frequency of the students being motivated by the teachers




The result of the questionnaire above can become the reference of what should be done by the teachers to make a better change in teaching. The topic of what the students mostly discussed in the classroom does not actually matter as Biehler (1972) in Baharuddin (2010:149-150) points out five emotional characteristics of teenager at the age of 12 – 15 years old, they are:
  1. At this age, a child tends to be introvert and cannot be guessed. It is probably caused by biological changes that are related to sexual maturation and some of them are confused to decide whether she or he is a child or adult.
  2. A student may behave rudely to cover the lack of confidence.
  3. The explosion of anger may happen. This is caused by a combination of psychological tension, unstable biological change, and being exhaust after too much work and other inappropriate life style.
  4. A teenager tends to be intolerant to other people and correct his/ or her opinion because of lack of confidence. They argue that they have absolute answer and it is only they who know it.
  5. Students of junior high school start to observe their parents and teachers more objectively and get easily angry if they are imitated by teacher who pretends to know about it.
What Biehler (1972) has mentioned above indicates what the students actually did in the classroom was normal. Love becomes the most favorite subject in the classroom was just because they experienced a sexual maturation. Next, that they disliked the lesson as well as the teacher indicates that at this emotional development phase they were able to propose reasons of abjection. A monotonous teaching method would lead them into boredom so that they likely preferred talking with their friends to listening the teacher’s explanation. In addition, being less motivated, the students would keep doing that as they never knew what they did was actually meaningless. Therefore, the last data of the questionnaire result should get much attention among teachers.
The perspective of redirecting the teacher’s motivation towards the students (extrinsic motivation) to the establishment of students’ motivation (intrinsic motivation) is very much essential to carry out the problems. As Brown (2007:89) states that delivering positive feedback in a classroom is seen by students as a validation of their own critical thinking ability, and self-fulfillment, can increase, or maintain intrinsic motivation. Thus, feedback in teaching learning process is important. In addition Reid (2009:129) classifies three types of feedback, they are:
  1. Monitoring: feedback becomes a facility to monitor the students’ learning that they have to respond about what they have achieved and what they need to achieve
  2. Constructive: feedback should be given to increase the motivation. starting by giving a positive comment about what they have achieved
  3. Negative: this kind of feedback happens when the aim of the feedback is to evaluate the students’ work. Red ink is often used to get the students attention that they actually did something wrong

Figure e. The illustration of redirecting the extrinsic motivation to intrinsic motivation




From the above flow chart, it can be seen that the teacher becomes an important role in encouraging the students. When the students’ motivation increases, they will be able to take a decision and implement it into an action in learning so that result an autonomous learning which is important not only for cross sectional goal but also the long term goal. To sum up, Baharuddin (2010:198) says that teacher is a leader by mean that the teacher becomes a guide who watches and educates the students towards the increase of science quality and quantity.
Reference


Baharuddin. 2010. Pendidikan dan Psikologi Perkembangan. Jogjakarta: Ar-Ruzz Media

Brown, H. D. 2007.Teaching by Principles: An Interactive Approach to Language Pedagogy. New York: Pearson Longman

Dahar, R. W. 1988. Teori – Teori Belajar. Jakarta: Departemen Pendidikan dan Kebudayaan Direktorat Jendral Pendidikan Tinggi Proyek Pengembangan lembaga pendidikan tenaga kependidikan

Dornyei, Z. 2005. The Psychology of the Language Learner: Individual Differences in Second Language Acquisition. New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc., Publishers
Gie, T. L. 1986. Cara Belajar yang Efisien. Yogyakarta: Pusat kemajuan studi

Hornby, A.S. 1995. Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary. Oxford: Oxford university press

Reid, G. 2009. Memotivasi Siswa di Kelas: Gagasan dan Strategi. Jakarta Barat: PT Indeks