The Prep Room Nigeria

The Prep Room Nigeria The prep Room Nigeria is a private tuition service company in Nigeria. We deliver excellent private tuition across the Globe.

17/05/2026

The best foundational classes for children across the world.

17/05/2026

Celebrating my 11th year on Facebook. Thank you for your continuing support. I could never have made it without you. πŸ™πŸ€—πŸŽ‰

Motivation is one of the most critical factors influencing learning and academic performance. It is the internal drive o...
28/07/2025

Motivation is one of the most critical factors influencing learning and academic performance. It is the internal drive or desire that energizes and directs behavior toward a goal. In educational settings, motivation fuels students’ engagement, persistence, and performance. Without it, even the most intelligent or capable learners may struggle to reach their potential.

1. Types of Motivation

a. Intrinsic Motivation:

Originates from within the learner.

Driven by interest, curiosity, or the joy of learning.

Example: A student studying biology because they find life sciences fascinating.

b. Extrinsic Motivation:

Comes from external rewards or pressures.

Driven by grades, praise, money, or avoiding punishment.

Example: A student studying to win a scholarship or avoid failing.

2. Importance of Motivation in Learning

a. Increases Engagement
Motivated learners are more likely to pay attention, participate actively in class, and seek out new learning opportunities.

b. Improves Academic Performance
Students who are motivated tend to put in more effort, study longer, and persist through challenges, which enhances their achievement levels.

c. Encourages Lifelong Learning
Intrinsic motivation fosters a love for learning, making students more likely to continue learning beyond school.

d. Enhances Self-Efficacy
Motivated learners develop confidence in their abilities, which can lead to a stronger belief in their capacity to succeed.

3. Factors That Influence Motivation

Goal Setting – Clear, achievable goals help students stay focused and motivated.

Feedback – Constructive feedback encourages progress and motivates improvement.

Learning Environment – A supportive and positive atmosphere enhances motivation.

Relevance – Students are more motivated when they see how learning applies to real life.

Teacher Influence – Enthusiastic and encouraging teachers can ignite motivation in learners.

4. Strategies to Enhance Motivation

Use a variety of teaching methods to cater to different learning styles.

Set realistic but challenging goals.

Provide regular encouragement and positive reinforcement.

Foster a sense of autonomy and choice in learning tasks.

Make learning activities meaningful.

What is Outcome-based education?Outcome-based education is a model of education that rejects the traditional focus on wh...
17/06/2025

What is Outcome-based education?
Outcome-based education is a model of education that rejects the traditional focus on what the school provides to students, in favor of making students demonstrate that they "know and are able to do" whatever the required outcomes are.

OBE reforms emphasize setting clear standards for observable, measurable outcomes. Nothing about OBE demands the adoption of any specific outcome. For example, many countries write their OBE standards so that they focus strictly on mathematics, language, science, and history, without ever referring to attitudes, social skills, or moral values.

The key features which may be used to judge if a system has implemented an outcomes-based education systems are:

Creation of a curriculum framework that outlines specific, measurable outcomes. The standards included in the frameworks are usually chosen through the area's normal political process.
A commitment not only to provide an opportunity of education, but to require learning outcomes for advancement. Promotion to the next grade, a diploma, or other reward is granted upon achievement of the standards, while extra classes, repeating the year, or other consequences entail upon those who do not meet the standards.
Standards-based assessments that determines whether students have achieved the stated standard. Assessments may take any form, so long as the assessments actually measure whether the student knows the required information or can perform the required task.
A commitment that all students of all groups will ultimately reach the same minimum standards. Schools may not "give up" on unsuccessful students.

Outcomes
The emphasis in an OBE education system is on measured outcomes rather than "inputs," such as how many hours students spend in class, or what textbooks are provided. Outcomes may include a range of skills and knowledge. Generally, outcomes are expected to be concretely measurable, that is, "Student can run 50 meters in less than one minute" instead of "Student enjoys physical education class." A complete system of outcomes for a subject area normally includes everything from mere recitation of fact ("Students will name three tragedies written by Shakespeare") to complex analysis and interpretation ("Student will analyze the social context of a Shakespearean tragedy in an essay"). Writing appropriate and measurable outcomes can be very difficult, and the choice of specific outcomes is often a source of local controversies.

Each educational agency is responsible for setting its own outcomes. Under the OBE model, education agencies may specify any outcome (skills and knowledge), but not inputs (field trips, arrangement of the school day, teaching styles). Some popular models of outcomes include the National Science Education Standards and the NCTM's Principles and Standards for School Mathematics.

Approaches to grading, reporting, and promoting
An important by-product of this approach is that students are assessed against external, absolute objectives, instead of reporting the students' relative achievements. The traditional model of grading on a curve (top student gets the best grade, worst student always fails (even if they know all the material), everyone else is evenly distributed in the middle) is never accepted in OBE or standards-based education. Instead, a student's performance is related in absolute terms: "Jane knows how to write the letters of the alphabet" or "Jane answered 80% of questions correctly" instead of "Jane answered more questions correctly than Mary."

Under OBE, teachers can use any objective grading system they choose, including letter grades. In fact, many schools adopt OBE methods and use the same grading systems that they have always used. However, for the purposes of graduation, advancement, and retention, a fully developed OBE system generally tracks and reports not just a single overall grade for a subject, but also give information about several specific outcomes within that subject. For example, rather than just getting a passing grade for mathematics, a student might be assessed as level 4 for number sense, level 5 for algebraic concepts, level 3 for measurement skills, etc. This approach is valuable to schools and parents by specifically identifying a student's strengths and weaknesses.

In one alternate grading approach, a student is awarded "levels" instead of letter grades. From Kindergarten to year 12, the student will receive either a Foundational level (which is pre-institutional) or be evidenced at levels 1 through to 8. In the simplest implementation, earning a "level" indicates that the teacher believes that a student has learned enough of the current material to be able to succeed in the next level of work. A student technically cannot flunk in this system: a student who needs to review the current material will simply not achieve the next level at the same time as most of his same-age peers. This acknowledges differential growth at different stages, and focuses the teacher on the individual needs of the students.

In this approach, students and their parents are better able to track progress from year to year, since the levels are based on criteria that remain constant for a student's whole time at school. However, this experience is perceived by some as a flaw in the system: While it is entirely normal for some students to work on the same level of outcomes for more than one year parents and students have been socialized into the expectation of a constant, steady progress through schoolwork. Parents and students therefore interpret the normal experience as failure.

This emphasis on recognizing positive achievements, and comparing the student to his own prior performance, has been accused by some of "dumbing down" education (and by others as making school much too hard), since it recognises achievement at different levels. Even those who would not achieve a passing grade in a traditional age-based approach can be recognized for their concrete, positive, individual improvements.

OBE-oriented teachers think about the individual needs of each student and give opportunities for each student to achieve at a variety of levels. Thus, in theory, weaker students are given work within their grasp and exceptionally strong students are extended. In practice, managing independent study programs for thirty or more individuals is difficult. Adjusting to students' abilities is something that good teachers have always done: OBE simply makes the approach explicit and reflects the approach in marking and reporting.

Differences with traditional education methods
In a traditional education system and economy, students are given grades and rankings compared to each other. Content and performance expectations are based primarily on what was taught in the past to students of a given age. The basic goal of traditional education was to present the knowledge and skills of the old generation to the new generation of students, and to provide students with an environment in which to learn, with little attention (beyond the classroom teacher) to whether or not any student ever learns any of the material. It was enough that the school presented an opportunity to learn. Actual achievement was neither measured nor required by the school system.

In fact, under the traditional model, student performance is expected to show a wide range of abilities. The failure of some students is accepted as a natural and unavoidable circumstance. The highest-performing students are given the highest grades and test scores, and the lowest performing students are given low grades. (Local laws and traditions determine whether the lowest performing students were socially promoted or made to repeat the year.) Schools used norm-referenced tests, such as inexpensive, multiple-choice computer-scored questions with single correct answers, to quickly rank students on ability. These tests do not give criterion-based judgments as to whether students have met a single standard of what every student is expected to know and do: they merely rank the students in comparison with each other. In this system, grade-level expectations are defined as the performance of the median student, a level at which half the students score better and half the students score worse. By this definition, in a normal population, half of students are expected to perform above grade level and half the students below grade level, no matter how much or how little the students have learned.

17/06/2025

Problem solving skill.
We are No.1 in the world.

01/06/2025
04/01/2025

Comprehensive advanced learning for primary school pupils in Nigeria.

16/08/2024

No body is a failure in life until he or she gives up.

From the Desk of the Director. 1. Every Child is a Genius, no matter  the gender, tribe or background.2. A teacher must ...
04/08/2024

From the Desk of the Director.
1. Every Child is a Genius, no matter the gender, tribe or background.

2. A teacher must be involved in a student's life to be able to help the student.

3. A teacher is a person that sees potential in a child every other person sees as a failure.

4. A teacher is a person who is able take a student from where he/she is to where they can be.

5. A teacher must be an INSPIRATION to his students. It means our students have to be motivated by the teacher.

6. There's no correlation between a good teacher and his academic ability. Means that having an academic qualification does not automatically make a person a teacher.

7. A teacher is a person who can transfer what he has to his students and for the students to be able to master the subject.

8. A teacher doesn't just dish out instructions to his students.

9. A teacher is a person that goes out of his way to make his students become all they can.

10. A teacher gets involved in the student's life and not just in the classroom.

11. A teacher must believer in his students as not to give up on them.

12. There's no such thing as the most difficult subject.

04/08/2024

We don't just educate the head, we educate the heart.

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