Title: The Problem With Praise
1The Problem With Praise
- Cindy Sheets
- cindysheets_at_smsd.org
- Kathy Jones
- kathyjones_at_cableone.net
2Success Defined
- The achievement of something desired, planned, or
attempted - Success is the accomplishment of goals and
objectives necessary to achieve a particular
task, realize a particular dream or satisfy a
particular need or want, for a particular period
of time. - Maryse A. Nelson
3 Questions to Ponder
- Are you more intelligent than you were 5 years
ago? 10 years ago? 20 years? - Do you believe that intelligence is an innate
ability and doesnt change? - Do you believe that you can improve skills and
abilities by practicing or learning new
techniques? - Do you believe that its important for your
childs success to tell them that theyre smart?
4- A Columbia University survey learned that 85 of
American parents think that its important to
tell their kids that theyre smart. - A large percentage of gifted students severely
underestimate their own abilities and adopt lower
standards for success. They expect less of
themselves.
5Emily
- Enjoyed school, especially science
- High achiever, identified gifted
- Non-traditional science fair project
- I learned what I wanted to learn
- Self directed autonomy
- Always ready for the next challenge
6Linda
- Identified gifted 1st grade
- Hesitant to initiate activities
- Asked for help with everything
- Parents often resorted to force
- By 3rd grade, initiates activities and willing to
take risks
7David
- High performance and praised by teachers and
parents - Never worked hard to achieve goals
- New tasks difficult avoided them
- Began to doubt his abilities
- Backed out of honors/advanced class opportunities
- Little engagement in classroom activities
- Grades began to drop
- Refused to ask for help or accept help
8Locus of Control
9Attribution Theory - Weiner
- To what do you attribute your success or failure?
- Luck
- Ability
- Difficulty of Task
- Effort
10Attributing the Cause of Events
- I just cant do this stuff. Im no good at it
- Lack of ability
- I didnt do so well, but I knew I wouldnt. I
didnt study hard enough. - Lack of effort
- I didnt know what the heck was going on and I
got a B. The teacher must not have read my paper! - Luck
11- Research suggests that teaching children and
adults to attribute their successes and failures
to internal, controllable events such as effort
leads to people developing more control over
situations and their life choices.
12Carol S. Dweck, Research StudyEffects of Praise
- 400 5th grade students, New York
- Randomly divided into two groups
- Given individual nonverbal IQ test consisting of
puzzles (easy) - Group 1. Praised for intelligence
- You scored ____. You must be smart at this.
- Group 2. Praised for effort
- You scored ____. You must have worked really
hard.
13Part 2 of study
- Students given a choice
- More difficult test but youll learn a lot
- Easy test, similar to the first one
- Group 1 (intelligence)
- Majority chose the easy test
- Group 2 (effort)
- 90 chose the more difficult test
14Part 3
- Very difficult test (2 yrs above level)
- No choices. All students failed the test
- Group 1 (intelligence) were miserable
- Failure interpreted as evidence they werent
really smart - Group 2 (effort) stayed engaged in the test,
very persistent - Failure interpreted as their lack of focusing
hard enough. Some even said this was their
favorite test
15Part 4
- Tests easy as the first
- Group 1 (intelligence)
- Scored about 20 lower than first test
- Group 2 (effort)
- Increased scores by about 30
16Conclusions
- Emphasizing effort gives students a variable that
they can control - Praising intelligence sends a message Look smart
dont risk mistakes.
17Theories of Intelligence (perception)
- Dweck in our self perception of what
intelligence is like, we either hold an entity
theory or incremental theory of that
intelligence
Also called fixed or growth mindsets
18Entity TheoryIntelligence is Fixed
- Important to appear smart with little effort
- Need to achieve for specific performance goals,
(which assess an ability) - Low risk takers
19Entity (fixed)
- Failure will be perceived as evidence of low
intelligence - Develop goals based on being the best, or
avoiding failure - May believe circumstances are beyond their
control and give up - Past or present success does not ensure future
success - Those with success history may be most vulnerable
(learned helplessness)
20David
- High performance and praised by teachers and
parents - Never worked hard to achieve goals
- New tasks difficult avoided them
- Began to doubt his abilities
- Backed out of honors/advanced class opportunities
- Little engagement in classroom activities
- Grades began to drop
- Refused to ask for help or accept help
21Incremental Theory (Growth)Intelligence can be
Changed
- Enjoy challenge even if makes them appear less
smart - Learning goals and persistence are valued
(mastering new things) - Ready for next challenge rather
- than repeating success
22Incremental (growth)
- Remain interested in learning and challenge even
after failure - Belief that Effort (through increased learning
and strategy development) will increase
intelligence
23Emily
- Enjoyed school, especially science
- High achiever, identified gifted
- Non-traditional science fair project
- I learned what I wanted to learn
- Self directed autonomy
- Always ready for the next challenge
24Dwecks Conclusions
- praise for intelligence rather than effort
creates vulnerability in high-ability students
that does not show up until they experience
setbacks and failure
25Secondary Study
- Life Sciences Magnet, East Harlem
- Low performing in math
- Study Habits and Skills sessions
- Control group 2- 50 minute lessons
- The brain is a muscles and it gets stronger with
effort and exercise - Control group showed improved study habits and
grades in just one semester
26So What About
27Self Esteem?
- 15,000 scholarly articles 1970-2000 supporting
connection between self-esteem and praise - Reviews in 2003 only 200 met rigorous
scientific standards - None of these showed the connection
28Unrealistic Self-Expectations
- After self-esteem movement
- 95 of seniors said they will enroll in college
- 62 actually did
- Before self esteem movement
- 50 of seniors said they would enroll in college
- 50 actually did
29- The surest path to high self-esteem is to be
successful at something one perceived would be
difficult! Each time we steal a students
struggle, we steal the opportunity for them to
build self-confidence. They must learn to do
difficult things to feel good about themselves.
Sylvia Rimm
30Praise Whats Your Style?
- Simon Cowell
- Or
- Paula Abdul
31Wulf-Uwe Meyer Study observation of others
- Only children under age 7 take praise at
face-value - By age 12, teacher praise seen as evidence that a
student needs help and encouragement and lacks
ability - Teacher criticism was interpreted as showing
belief in students ability to do better
32Praise Pressure
- Liberal use of unqualified praise leads to
students questioning themselves - Is this right? Is this OK?
- Seeking reassurance
- Must keep up image to keep the praise coming
become praise junkies
33Results of Over-Praising (Dweck)
- Become risk-averse
- Lack perceived autonomy
- Image maintenance becomes main concern
- May lie or cheat to maintain image
- Lack strategies for handling failure
34Enron Malcolm Gladwell
- Collapse of Enron due to talent obsessed culture
- Executives celebrated and rewarded for their
innate talent - Rather lie than admit to problems and work to fix
them
35- Failure to live up to ones potential may be
associated with an inability to take - realistic risks.
36Benefits of Risk Taking
- Increases confidence about abilities
- Increases self-efficacy
- Develops skills for managing fears
- Provides practice in decision making
- Opportunity for growth and leadership
37Linda
- Identified gifted 1st grade
- Hesitant to initiate activities
- Asked for help with everything
- Parents often resorted to force
- By 3rd grade, initiates activities and willing to
take risks
38Dr. Robert Cloninger Brain Research
- Ability to repeatedly respond to failure by
exerting effort develops persistence and ability
to delay gratification - Brain actually develops circuitry for persistence
with intermittent reinforcement - Missing with constant reward (praise)
39- Parents should not shield or try to protect
children from risks or hard work. Parents also
need to allow children to experience the tensions
and stress that rise from challenging ideas and
high expectations.Olszewski-Kubilius, 2000
40- Extraordinary achievement is primarily attributed
to nonintellectual factors, especially
perseverance.
41In Risk-Friendly Environments
- Mistakes are viewed as opportunities
- Goals are stressed over procedures
- We are actively seeking change
- We are playful
- We expect individuals to set their own
goals - We allow people to choose their own risks
42But shouldnt we praise our kids?
- All Praise is NOT equal
- Praise CAN be effective
- Use the right kind of praise
- Use at the right time
- Not confused with encouragement
- Not confused with manipulation
43Good Praise Practice
- Be specific
- Constructive feedback
- Be sincere
- No empty praise
- Dont praise undeserved success!
- Praise the process not the person
- Strategies, decisions, work accomplished
- Praise at the END of the work process
44Helping our Children Meet Success What Can We
Do?
- Reward effort not perfection
- Reward risk and progress
- Applaud persistence
- Break tasks down into small steps
- Acknowledge learning not work
- Honor time invested
- Help them learn to prioritize
45Resources
- Social Emotional Needs of the Gifted What Do
We Really Know? Prufrock Press, NAGC - Self-Theories Their role in motivation,
personality and development. Carol Dweck
Philadelphia Psychology Press 1999 - Mindset The New Psychology of Success, Random
House (February 28, 2006) - The Problem with Praise
- http//www.onpointradio.org/shows/2007/02/20070216
_b_main.asp - Why Praise Can be Bad For Kids by Anne Pleshette
Murphy Jennifer Allen - http//abcnews.go.com/GMA/AmericanFamily/story?id
2877896page1
46- How Not To Talk To Your Kids The Inverse Power
of Praise, by Po Bronson - http//nymag.com/news/features/27840
- The Effort Effect
- Stanford Magazine, March/April 2007
- http//www.stanfordalumni.org/news/magazine/2007/m
arapr/features/dweck.html - A Motivational Approach to Reasoning, Resilience
and Responsibility (chapter of book) - http//aim.psch.uic.edu/documents/Good.DweckCh.pdf
- Stanford University Research Report
- http//newsservice.stanford.edu/news/2007/february
7/dweck-020707.html
47- Research Works by Carol S. Dweck
- Mueller, C. M. Dweck, C. S. (1998).
Intelligence praise can undermine motivation and
performance. Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology ,75, 33-52. - Dweck, C.S. (1998). The development of early
self-conceptions Their relevance for
motivational processes. In J. Heckhausen C.S.
Dweck (Eds.), Motivation and self-regulation
across the life span. Cambridge Cambridge
University Press.