How to Learn with Joy: Rethinking Student Motivation đ±đ
- Benjamin Burg
- Jun 11
- 3 min read
Updated: Jun 16

My school badge growing up said, "We Learn with Joy." âš

It wasnât just a motto. It was a quiet philosophy woven into everything we did at Kimberton Farms School. And today, I want to begin by thanking that school (now Kimberton Waldorf School) and that message for shaping my journey.
Now, as a teacher, academic life coach, and builder of educational tools, I find myself returning to that phrase often. Because if weâre being honest, many students today donât learn with joy. They learn with stress. With deadlines. With pressure. With grades that matter more than growth.
And it's not their fault.
Many students have been trained to perform, not to learn. To play the game, not to explore the process. Weâve built systems where effort doesnât always countâbut results do. Where a loophole or a last-minute fix can replace a season of steady growth.
Take, for example, a recent directive from the Board of Education in Warsaw, Poland :
It is unjustified to average the original grade with the improved one. Only the improved grade should count. Original Polish text "Nieuzasadnione jest stosowanie Ćredniej z obu ocen, tj. oceny poprawianej i oceny uzyskanej w wyniku poprawy." (KOG.571.73.2025, May 19, 2025)
On the surface, this sounds generous. But in practice, it undermines the role of consistent effort. It tells students, "Donât worry about the processâjust get it right at the end."
This isnât malice. Itâs part of a deeper shiftâfrom group-centered learning to performance-based individualism. Itâs subtle, but the message is loud: only the end product matters.
But thatâs not how real learning works.
Real learning is like a garden. If you donât water and care for it regularly, the harvest wonât comeâno matter how much you scramble at the end. You can only reflect and try again next season.
As I sit grading assignments, another troubling pattern stands out: Students increasingly say, âI didnât know about the assignmentââeven if it was clearly given, discussed in class, and part of their ongoing responsibilities. If every detail isnât perfectly documented, they argue for a higher grade. And under pressure, teachers often concede.
But what are we really teaching?
That itâs okay to tune out, delay responsibility, and avoid effort in the momentâbecause you can always claim confusion later. Simply being marked present should mean the student was paying attention, taking notes, asking questions. If they were truly engaged, there wouldnât be misunderstandings to fix six months later.
Weâre eroding one of the most important life skills: active listening. As Bernard Baruch once said:
âMost of the successful people Iâve known are the ones who do more listening than talking.â
In a time of endless information and distractions, the ability to listenâand act on what you hearâisnât just helpful. Itâs essential for success.
Thatâs why Iâm building something new: Gratifu. đ
Gratifu is a motivation system designed to reward steady effort, visible progress, and internal growth. Itâs not just another points app. Itâs a reflection of something deeper: our belief that motivation should come from care, not panic.
Iâm designing Gratifu using a mindset I call vibe coding. It's not a formal method. It's a creative practice of blending AI tools with human intuitionâof building with the tools of the future while staying grounded in the values that matter: joy, growth, and meaningful connection.
This project is personal. It's a way for me to stretch, to learn, and to contribute to a better system. Even if I eventually bring others on to help develop it further, Iâll know it began with intention.
In my book project, I explore the four stages of motivation and learning:

Too many students are stuck in Stage 2. And hereâs the problem: when we inflate grades or soften feedback, we may actually prevent them from moving forward. They lose the chance to struggle, reflect, and build the confidence needed to reach Stage 3âwhere real learning begins.
Thatâs the shift we need.
If we want a society that values self-direction, creativity, and joy in learning, we need to stop rewarding shortcuts and start celebrating the process. We donât need more pressure. We need better signals. We need systems that say:
â Your effort matters.
đ Your progress is visible.
đ And your joy is part of the journey.
Thanks for reading. đ
If this message resonates with you, I invite you to join the journey. Take our short survey and help shape the future of Gratifuâfor students, parents, and educators alike.
âBenjamin Burg
Founder, Learn Compass
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