How to explain a concept like motivation when it’s difficult to see, understand, or define?
Many concepts addressed in intervention, education, or personal development are abstract. Motivation, confidence, leadership, engagement, perseverance, and collaboration are important concepts, but sometimes difficult to illustrate concretely.
Some people understand better by experiencing something than by listening to an explanation.
As with any intervention, an important question arises:
Will integrating an animal bring real added value to this objective?
Why integrate an animal?
The animal makes it possible to make concepts that are usually invisible visible.
Unlike a theoretical presentation, interactions with an animal allow for observing a concept in action.
For example, motivation can be seen in the animal’s engagement, its desire to participate, its perseverance when faced with a challenge, or in the conditions that foster or diminish its interest.
Participants no longer just talk about motivation: they observe it, experience it, and reflect on the factors that influence it.
For this experience to be rich, the choice of the animal partner is essential.
At Synergie Plumes et Poils, we prioritize an animal motivated to participate in interactions. An engaged partner allows for varied situations where participants can observe the effects of their own behaviors on the animal’s motivation, while respecting its well-being.
A concrete example
Let’s take the example of a group that wants to better understand the concept of motivation.
Rather than starting with a definition, the facilitator offers different interactions with the animal.
Participants are invited to observe:
At what moments does the dog seem most motivated?
What seems to diminish its engagement?
How does it react when the activity is too difficult? Too easy? Uninteresting? When it receives an appropriate reward? When it clearly understands what is expected?
The facilitator then guides the participants in their reflection.
What elements seem to influence the dog’s motivation?
What human behaviors encourage its engagement?
How can one recognize that a partner wants to participate or not?
From these observations, participants gradually build their own understanding of motivation.
The facilitator can then broaden the reflection.
Do the same factors sometimes influence human motivation?
Do we all need the same conditions to want to engage?
What increases or decreases our own motivation?
The goal is not to study only the animal’s behavior.
The goal is to use interactions with it to make an abstract concept concrete, observable, and applicable to the participants’ reality.
Transfer to daily life
The learning gained during the activity then allows participants to look differently at their own motivation and that of others.
Whether at school, at work, in the family, or in intervention, they will be able to question the conditions that promote engagement rather than quickly concluding that a person is simply “unmotivated.”
They will discover that motivation is not a fixed quality, but a state that evolves based on many factors.
Professional practice relies on quality training
Human-animal interactions offer tremendous educational potential, but they require much more than just the presence of an animal.
Professional practice requires determining whether the animal represents real added value to the objective, selecting an animal partner whose characteristics match the proposed experiences, and building interactions that support learning.
It also requires recognizing the animal’s needs, preserving its well-being, and ensuring the safety of all involved.
Being a professional also means recognizing the limits of one’s scope of practice and collaborating with relevant professionals when a person’s needs exceed one’s expertise.
At Synergie Plumes et Poils, we believe that responsible practice relies on a rigorous methodology, respect for animal welfare, interdisciplinary collaboration, as well as selection and certification of animal partners to offer ethical, safe, and adapted interventions for the needs of each client.