The Science of Motivation: Research-Based Mastery

Apply Self-Determination Theory, goal-setting, flow, and self-regulation research to drive real performance

This course contains the use of artificial intelligence.

Motivation is the most misunderstood lever in personal and professional performance. Bookshelves overflow with pep talks, hustle slogans, and recycled pyramids, while the actual scientific findings on why people initiate, sustain, and direct effort sit quietly in journals. This course closes that gap. You will learn what decades of rigorous psychological research reveal about motivation — and just as importantly, what popular advice gets wrong and why it keeps failing the people who follow it.

You will work through the foundations of motivation science and then dive into Self-Determination Theory, including autonomy, competence, and relatedness, the undermining effect of poorly-designed rewards, and the conditions under which extrinsic incentives help or hurt. You will master goal-setting theory, learn to write specific and challenging goals, build implementation intentions that survive contact with reality, and recognize the dark side of aggressive targets. You will study Vroom's expectancy theory, Bandura's self-efficacy and its four sources, learned helplessness and its reversal, Csikszentmihalyi's flow conditions and triggers, temporal motivation theory, hyperbolic discounting, the contested story of ego depletion, and the self-regulation strategies that actually replicate.

The course is designed for managers, team leaders, coaches, educators, HR professionals, and anyone serious about understanding and applying motivation research to their own performance or to the people they lead. You will leave able to diagnose motivational failures in jobs, classrooms, teams, and personal goals, to design environments that support intrinsic drive, to deploy behavioral-design tools like temptation bundling and commitment devices, to navigate social comparison and competition without burning people out, and to sustain motivation through plateaus and setbacks using mastery framing and attributional repair.

What makes this course different is its commitment to evidence over inspiration. You will not be told to believe in yourself harder. You will be handed the mechanisms, the experiments, the boundary conditions, and the practical levers — the same material taught in graduate motivation psychology programs, translated into language you can use on Monday morning. Enroll now and trade motivational folklore for a working scientific model of why effort happens and how to engineer more of it.

  • No prior background in psychology is required
  • Curiosity about evidence-based explanations of human behavior
  • Willingness to question popular motivational advice you may already follow
  • A current goal, role, or team you can use as a working example throughout the course
  • Comfort with conceptual frameworks and short reasoning chains in English
  • Apply Self-Determination Theory to satisfy autonomy, competence, and relatedness needs
  • Diagnose when rewards undermine intrinsic motivation and when they help
  • Write specific, challenging goals supported by if-then implementation intentions
  • Use Vroom's expectancy model to find broken links in any motivational system
  • Build genuine self-efficacy through mastery experiences and the four classical sources
  • Engineer flow by tuning the challenge-skill balance and activating flow triggers
  • Beat procrastination using temporal motivation theory and temptation bundling
  • Separate replicated self-regulation findings from the ego-depletion story that did not hold up
  • Managers and team leaders who want to motivate without manipulating
  • Coaches, trainers, and educators who shape effort and learning in others
  • HR and organizational development professionals designing roles and incentives
  • Founders and operators tuning culture, goals, and feedback systems
  • Self-directed learners applying motivation science to personal performance and habits