John’s incoming homework, “Weekly Work Study Homework #13” (pr, sh, th, pl) was done badly at first.
I told John it was “ugly”, erased it, and left it for John to re-do. (Also, note the highlighting to help him match pieces together, and I will fade this prompt ASAP——this tip from Alma Liotta, O.T.R.)
I was in the opposite corner of the house, he had willingly turned off the computer (but I did ask him to), worked on the homework by himself, (I did ask him to “make his teacher happy”) and brought it upstairs to show me when he was done.
I then added more demands & more work to it, and John then brought it back up to me after that.
This is John’s first self-directed homework, and I didn’t hover or micro-manage him.
It still isn’t good, and there is always more to do.
Still, a victory, for what it is.
We have been inching toward this, and so can you.
Motivation is a complex thing, and the magic is when someone triggers self-directed intrinsic motivation: because they want to, and would do it again when no one is looking (or hovering). It is a lifelong tool.
So important to anyone still breathing.
Peace be with us,
Gayle