1963, Cambridge, MA. A psychologist is about to run an experiment with profound impacts on how instructors view students and leaders view their people.
Bob Rosenthal is about to discover the #Pygmalion Effect.
A thread about unlocking #potential for leaders and instructors
But first, h/t to @rcbregman. You can find this and other lesson on human nature in 'Human Kind'. I highly recommend it.
@rcbregman@UpSkillYourLife@dklineii@SahilBloom Back to Bob. He sets up two cages, each with the same maze. Then puts signs on each cage identifying one group of rats as highly intelligent, and the others as dull and dim-witted.
The catch? Both groups are perfectly normal and exactly the same.
The researchers working with the 'super-intelligent' rats treated them better. They handled them more gently and more warmly and the rats responded better.
It triggers a thought for another experiment...
@rcbregman@UpSkillYourLife@dklineii@SahilBloom 'If rats became brighter when expected to, then it shouldn't be far fetched to think that children could become brighter when expected to by their teachers' he speculated.
His next experiment was the kind of thing you wouldn't get away with these days.
He repeated the experiment at Spruce Elementary school.
Following an IQ test, some randomly selected kids were assigned to a 'high potential' group. The others were told nothing.
The results were startling. They matched what he found with the rats
The largest effect was among the youngest children, who gained 27 IQ points.
In groups normally subject to the lowest expectation the effect was even larger.
Bob named it the #Pygmalion Effect, after the mythological Greek sculptor who fell in love with a statue he had carved
Over the last half a century the effect has been tested in hundreds of studies.
At universities, in families, in courts and, unsurprisingly, in the army. And its still holds.
In 2005 a critical review concluded that 'teacher expectations clearly do influence students'
And there's a flip side to: the Golem effect.
Because it cuts both ways.
If you have a low expectations of your students, trainees or team members you will look at them less, smiles less, help them less. And they will begin to perform worse.
If you are a teacher you have probably learnt this already. How you treat students and what you expect of them matters. A lot.
But there are two lessons that really resonated with me. A lesson about the #culture leaders create, and a lesson about the @Army_Leadership Code.
First, culture.
Perhaps you like to gripe about your people. Or how new recruits are not as good as you were when you joined the Army.
Remember that when leaders do this in private it seeps out into how they act in public. It creates a culture of expectations.
If you are an officer or a senior NCO who denigrates the ability of your soldiers while griping at the bar in your Mess, you are creating a culture of low expectations.
If you are a JNCO swapping stories of how useless your recruits in training are, it's the same.
As Chris Finbow wrote in his letter to new platoon commanders
"All too often you will encounter negativity and bitterness.... It is your responsibility to never deal in it in front of your soldiers"
The Pygmalion Effect means people will perform better if you expect them to
It is backed up by research
It means not setting a culture in private of putting subordinates down
And it means setting high performance expectations so that your people believe in themselves
On 31 Jan we said farewell to Captain Raymond Savage.
A veteran of the #Leicestershire Regiment, he fought in Norway, Malaya, and Singapore before building the Thai-Burma railway.
When he died at 102 last year he was known as 'the last man standing' - for many reasons.
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Each year for Tigers Weekend Raymond would attend the service, march past and lunch in #Leicester. This involved him driving from Devon to Leicester and back the same day. He did this well into his nineties.
But of course his amazing story deserve to be told from the start.
Raymond Savage joined The Artists' Rifles in 1937 and was commissioned into The Leicestershire Regiment in 1939.
He commanded a platoon in Norway in April 1940. The British defence of Norway did not go well. “There was a rather one-sided fight,” said Raymond.
If you are interested in following someone who opens your eyes to what some of our adversaries are doing, then I highly recommend @CalibreObscura. They write articles and threads on non-state armed groups, their TTPs and their #weapons.
Here's a thread of their best work:
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@CalibreObscura How about this: an interview with one Abu TOW, of the most prolific and well-known rebel #ATGM operators in Syria, or indeed globally. He's fired 140 ATGMs - and claims 133 hits. 2/ calibreobscura.com/fighting-with-…
@CalibreObscura Think you 'own the night'? Everyone does. But its worth looking at the low-light capabilities that are being used in Idlib and re-asking yourself if you really do. A fascinating run-down of IR/TI sights in use. 3/ calibreobscura.com/retaking-the-n…
This thread has too many heroes. But two stand out – the BGLO (Maj W) and the A1 Echelon Commander (Capt S).
One organises it, the other carries and distributes it. Nothing can happen without these two.
A1 Echelon can be up to 25 vehicles, if you include its protection. It’s a big beast. But the dozen-or-so SVs can carry all the supplies you need, including spares.