The Science Behind The Straight A Conspiracy
The Science Behind The Straight A Conspiracy
The Science Behind The Straight A Conspiracy
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Some of the students that weve met have been affected by these
generalized stereotypes. But more often, students develop damaging
theories about their own specific capabilities, like those that we present
in the opening chapter. These self-theoriesas Stanford psychologist
Carol Dweck has termed themhave been shown to make students
less motivated, less persistent, and less likely to seek help when theyre
struggling. Unsurprisingly, students who are less motivated, less
persistent, and less likely to seek help tend to get bad grades, which
in turn make their original self-theories seem all the more accurate.
But to really appreciate the power of these academic self-theories,
it is important to understand that they are one variety of the much
larger field of psychology pioneered by Martin Seligman. In 1967,
Seligman and his colleagues conducted an experiment in which dogs
were placed in electrified kennels. One group of dogs was free to move,
while another was chained in place. Predictably, the dogs that were
free to move jumped out of the kennels to avoid being shocked. The
other group strained to get away, but couldnt and eventually resigned
themselves to being shocked. When those same dogs were subsequently
unchained, Seligmans group found that although they now had the
ability to jump out of the kennel, they simply lay down and accepted
shock after shock. This state is now known as learned helplessness
and has since been used to explain human behavior in a wide variety
of contexts.
Crucially, in humans, this learned helplessness is triggered by how
we explain what happens to us. If we view our circumstances as being
in our control, we improve them. If we dont, we devote our energies to
coming to terms with what we view as an unchangeable reality. What
is important to note is that, when the dogs were unchained, they didnt
even see the obvious things they could do to improve their situation. In
studies of learned helplessness in humans, the same effect is observed.
Students who feel like their level of intelligence is out of their control
often dont even see that simple actions would allow them to get good
grades. However, time and time again, studies have found that shaking
students out of their state of learned helplessness is as simple as
showing them just how much control they do have over how intelligent
they become.
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Training-induced Neuroplasticity
One of the biggest problems in modern education is that people
everywhere continue to believe that the brain is a fixed organ with a
fixed capacity, despite the fact that in the last forty years, scientists
have discovered that the brain is, in fact, incredibly flexible. Research
has shown that myelination and increased area of activity are just two
of the many ways in which the brain can become better able to perform
a task. Training has also been observed to cause the growth of new
neurons, the expansion of particular brain structures, and changes in
the ways in which neurons interact with each other. Its not only the
degree to which the brain can change that is impressive. It is also the
speed with which those changes can happen. Amazingly, observable
changes in the structure of the brain can happen in as little as five days.
Read this: The Brain That Changes Itself by Norman Doidge, In Search
of Memory by Eric Kandel
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End Notes
that our feelings are facts nave realism. As shown in the Emotions
chapter of the main text, our emotions often conspire to validate our
self-theories. However, it is important to note that in various studies in
this area, subjects who were made aware of how nave realism distorts
our view of reality were better able to do something about it. In other
words, awareness facilitates progress.
On a more refined level, psychologists and behavioral economists
have uncovered that our decision-making relies heavily on shortcuts
known as heuristics. (hyu-RIS-tiks) These shortcuts are generally
helpful to our decision-making abilities. For example, doctors have
to use mental shortcuts when diagnosing patients in emergency
situations, but sometimes those shortcuts can lead to misdiagnoses.
Rather than eliminating those shortcuts, people in the medical field
work to make them better. In fact, one of the defining characteristics
of experts in any field is that they use more effective heuristics than
amateurs do. In school, the most easily recognizable heuristic is the
way in which students consistently look to their peers performances
to determine how they should be performinga shortcut which,
as we have seen in this book, is not always productive. Much of this
books textculminating in the chart used in Generation Genius
aims to help students find new, more productive shortcuts to enable
them to quickly diagnose what is going wrong with their work and
subsequently move forward in the best possible way.
Read This: Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman, Nudge by
Cass R. Sunstein and Richard H. Thaler
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material, students are digging beyond the surface facts to discover the
framework that connects them. The framework may be the chronology
of historical events or the causal relationship within a biological process.
No matter the subject, taking advantage of the inherent schemasas
researchers usually call these frameworksnot only makes it easier to
organize and memorize the material when its new, but it also makes
that information easier to retain over the long term.
The scientifically demonstrated contextual nature of human
memory is the basis for the assertion in this book that more is more.
Study after study has shown that experts in a given field learn new
facts related to their field extremely quickly. Thats because they have
such a rich context in which to anchor those facts. However, it takes
them just as long as it would anyone else to learn new facts in fields
unrelated to their field of expertise. This is why minimizing the amount
of information you need to study, or relying exclusively on the broad
outlines provided by book summaries and study guides is not actually
the most effective way to speed up your study timeor to make it
memorable.
Read This: Moonwalking With Einstein by Joshua Foer
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End Notes
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Metacognition
Reviewing these disparate fields, it becomes possible to see that
the key to maximizing your efforts in school is metacognition. In every
field that weve discussed in this section and in the main text of the
book, awareness of your thoughts, perceptions, and actions is the
key to overcoming the things that are standing in your way. That the
National Academy of Sciences chose to underscore metacognition as a
unifying characteristic of effective teaching and learning in their report
How Students Learn presents hope that a broad-based consensus can
be built around this idea. In all of our thousands of hours of tutoring
experience, what we have consistently observed is that the vast majority
of the stress, frustration, shame, and whatevering that happens in
school is a result of students desire to not look at whats really going
onor, more specifically, going wrongin their work. Stressedout academic superstars and students who are failing have more in
common than they realize. For them, school is a feat of endurance;
they both devote a tremendous amount of energy to justifying a lessthan-ideal experience rather than using that energy to improve it.
The impulses to do well in school and to actually enjoy your life are
both totally valid. With metacognition, they no longer work against
each other; rather, they complement each other. Doing well generates
enjoyment. Enjoyment generates greater engagement, which leads
to better performance. By cultivating a deep-seated trust that our
students can do well and an understanding that using their mistakes
will get them there, we can help our students realize that doing well
in school is actually the least stressful and most fun way to spend your
teenage years.
SELECTED REFERENCES
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