Additional information
Page Count | 122 |
---|---|
Publisher | Edge Enterprises, Inc. |
Year Printed | 2023 |
FirstAuthor | Michael F. Hock |
SecondAuthor | Jean B. Schumaker |
ThirdAuthor | Donald D. Deshler |
AllAuthors | Michael F. Hock |
“I don’t NEED to learn to do algebra! I’m going be a truck driver when I get out of here!” Sad to say, students make statements like this every day. With the Possible Selves program, however, students not only learn the value of school and the skills they can learn, but they also develop hopeful and exciting plans for the future. They also learn that they have choices among several future paths.
The first step on the road to developing such plans involves identifying strengths and interests, which is exactly what students do. Next, they take a look at themselves as a worker, a learner, a person, and someone who has their special talents (e.g., as an artist, athlete, musician, car mechanic). What are their hopes, expectations, and fears for themselves in each of these roles? Based upon the results of this personal survey, students draw a tree that graphically illustrates their strengths and weaknesses and their hopes, expectations, and fears in each area. Next they set goals to strengthen their trees, which actually represent the students’ lives. Finally, concrete action plans are developed for goals, and a monitoring system is set up for checking progress on action plans. Goals are reviewed regularly throughout the school year, and students adjust their goals as old goals are attained and new goals are needed.
Developed originally for use with college athletes, Possible Selves has also been used successfully with elementary, middle school, and high-school students. The entire program can be completed within a few weeks. The impact, however, can last a lifetime.
* This is a digital version of the “Possible Selves: Nurturing Student Motivation” book. It includes all the pages of the “Possible Selves” book in a PDF format.
* This is the second edition.
$22.50 – $1,125.00
Page Count | 122 |
---|---|
Publisher | Edge Enterprises, Inc. |
Year Printed | 2023 |
FirstAuthor | Michael F. Hock |
SecondAuthor | Jean B. Schumaker |
ThirdAuthor | Donald D. Deshler |
AllAuthors | Michael F. Hock |
Overview
This study investigated the effects of participation in the Possible Selves Program on college students’ performance in college courses. Sixty freshman student athletes were randomly selected into three groups. One group participated in the Possible Selves Program; one group participated in the university’s career-counseling program; and one group was the control group. All of the groups had access to unlimited tutorial assistance in their college courses. Students in all of the groups also met bi-monthly individually with a counselor in the athletic program to discuss academic progress. The Possible Selves Program was taught by a member of the athletic department staff. The career counseling was provided by members of the staff of Counseling and Psychological Services at the university. There were no differences among the groups in ACT scores, ethnicity, gender, reading achievement scores, and personal goals at the beginning of the school year. Outcome measures included student reported goals, semester grades in college courses, and graduation rates.
Results
At the end of the first year of college, the students in the Possible Selves group identified significantly more goals associated with areas outside of athletics than students in the other two groups. Surprisingly, the students in the other two groups wrote fewer goals for themselves at the end of the school year than at the beginning, while students in the Possible Selves group wrote about the same number of goals or more goals. After 6 years had elapsed, the mean GPA for the Possible Selves group was 2.65, for the career-counseling group was 2.41, and for the control group was 2.25. With regard to graduation, 75% of the Possible Selves group had graduated after 6 years, while 60% and 45% of the career-counseling and control groups had graduated, respectively. The six-year graduation rate for the university at large was 54%. These graduation rate results were replicated in a follow-up study where freshmen were taught the Possible Selves Program by 5th-year student athletes.
Conclusions
Thus, the Possible Selves Program is associated with students earning higher grades in courses and with higher graduation rates than a traditional career counseling program. Students who participated in the Possible Selves Program had a graduation rate that was 21 percentage points higher than the university at large, which is a remarkable feat for student athletes, whose graduation rates typically lag behind the rates of university populations at large.
Reference
Hock, M.F., Deshler, D. D., & Schumaker, J. B. (2005). Enhancing student motivation through the pursuit of possible selves. In C. Dunkel & J. Kerpelman (Eds.)Possible selves: Theory, research, and application. Nova Science Publishers.
Michael F. Hock, Ph.D.
Affliations
My Background and Interests
My first experiences with learning as a student taught me that students who learned at a different rate or who had interests other than those presented in formal classroom situations faced the possibility of being left behind academically. At the same time, I understood that many of these students were very capable and motivated to learn but perhaps under different circumstances where different techniques were being used. I grew to admire those few teachers who recognized the potential of all students to be successful and in the way in which they crafted their instruction so as not to leave anyone behind. At the time, I had no plans for becoming a teacher, but thoughts of those teachers who had been instrumental in helping students attain academic success never left me. Later in life, I was able to match an interest in history with a growing interest in teaching, and I discovered that education was my calling. I have never regretted the decision to enter the classroom as a teacher and to eventually become an educational researcher.
After graduating from Mankato State University, I became a teacher in Dubuque, Iowa. I was a high school history and government teacher and later a teacher of students with learning disabilities and behavioral disabilities. As I was looking for instructional materials and methods to help my students become better learners, I went to a series of workshops on learning strategy instruction. After I had taught some of the learning strategies, I realized that I had finally found an instructional model and materials that worked with students who struggled with learning. I began doing action research with learning strategy instruction in my classroom and shared my results with others. I also became a certified professional development specialist associated with the Center for Research on Learning where the learning strategies were initially developed. I had my first experience with conducting formal research when I was asked by Don Deshler, Jean Schumaker and Jan Bulgren to field test the Paired Associates Strategy in my classroom.
After that field test study was a success, Don and Jean recruited me to the University of Kansas to direct the academic support program for student athletes. They supported my desire to pursue a Ph.D. in special education, and, later, I started to work full time as a researcher with the Center for Research on Learning. My current research interests relate to teacher-driven professional-development models, the school-reform process, and intensive literacy interventions for students who struggle with reading. I am particularly interested in developing programs for teaching reading skills and strategies to underprepared adolescents for supporting their development as independent learners.
The Story Behind the Possible Selves Program
While I was directing the academic support program for student athletes at the University of Kansas, I noticed that although we were teaching the students the skills and strategies that they needed to succeed at the college level, many of them did not seem motivated to earn good grades and complete their college degrees. Their ideas focused on becoming professional athletes, and they viewed college as an unwanted, but necessary, steppingstone to the pros. I knew that the very large majority of them had no chance of ever reaching the professional ranks, and I wanted to help them open their minds to other possibilities for their futures.
As I was researching possible options for programs for motivating these students, I came upon the concept of “possible selves.” Possible Selves is a concept that was first introduced by Hazel Markus of Stanford University. The basic notion associated with this concept is that most people have visions of themselves in the future. Once these visions are clearly articulated or surfaced, they can be motivational. That is, people will strive to attain these visions of what is possible for them while avoiding what they don’t wish to become. The Possible Selves program is designed to open students’ minds to the wide variety of possible futures that they might experience, including the futures that they dream about, the futures that they expect, and the futures that they fear. I reasoned that joining the professional ranks in a sport might be a “dreamed about” future, but that there were other possibilities that the students should be considering. I worked with Don and Jean to develop a program that could be used with the student athletes to put them in touch with their possible selves beyond the athletic domain and then broadened the program to apply to younger students as well.
My Thoughts about the Possible Selves Program
The Possible Selves Program has now been tested with students at the elementary, middle-school, high-school, and college levels and has been successful at all levels. As a result of the program, students set more goals for themselves in many more areas than they do before they participate in the program, and they achieve more success within educational settings than do students who do not participate in the program.
Teacher and Student Feedback on the Possible Selves Program
Teachers and students rate the Possible Selves Program highly. The program has been adopted as a part of two adolescent literacy programs that are being used nationally.
My Contact Information
Center for Research on Learning
517 J. R. Pearson Hall
2211 W. Campus Rd.
Lawrence, KS 66045
785-864-0567
mhock@ku.edu