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npj Science of Learning È una rivista ad accesso completamente aperto che si propone di offrire un forum per la ricerca all'intersezione tra neuroscienze, psicologia e teoria dell'educazione. Pubblica ricerche di alta qualità su tutti gli aspetti dell'apprendimento e della memoria, dalle basi genetiche, cellulari e molecolari, alla comprensione di come bambini e adulti apprendono attraverso l'esperienza e la pratica dell'istruzione formale. npj Science of Learning è lieta di ospitare una raccolta che unisce le scienze sociali e comportamentali per affrontare la disuguaglianza nei risultati scolastici.

Eddie Brummelman was a first-generation student, meaning he was the first in his immediate family to attend university. His parents taught him that people can achieve anything they want if they work hard enough, just like The Little Engine That Could. However, he came to realize that this platitude isn’t actually true, and that educational settings create unfair disadvantages for some children. Eddie tells Annie Brookman-Byrne about how this realization motivated his research on children’s self-views and praise.

Annie Brookman-Byrne: What are you trying to understand about inequality in education?

Eddie Brummelman: I was brought up to believe that we can all achieve anything with hard work. As a student, however, I realized that this belief is false, and that children from low socioeconomic status (SES) backgrounds are often disadvantaged in educational settings. My research seeks to understand why.

“Children from low socioeconomic status backgrounds are often disadvantaged in educational settings.”

Ultimately, this is a question of unfulfilled potential. My lab, KiDLAB, and I want to understand why some exceptionally talented children do not perform well in school, and what we as developmental scientists can do to help all children fulfill their potential. One focus of our work is to find out how praise affects children’s motivation, stima di sé, e realizzazione. 

ABB: Come possiamo aiutarti? lode contribute to inequality, and what have you learned from your recent research on the praise children receive from teachers?

EB: Imagine you and your friend both got a B+ on a test, and the teacher lavishes inflated praise on you—but not your friend: “terribile! What an stupefacente achievement!” How would you feel?

Teachers want to combat inequalities in their classroom. Despite their good intentions, however, they sometimes inadvertently reinforce existing inequalities by doling out inflated praise. Instead of telling children that they have done a good job, teachers may say that they have done an stupefacente job. Rather than simply saying that a task was well done, teachers may tell children that they did incredibilmente bene.

Since teachers, like most people, appreciate effort, we suspected that teachers would give more inflated praise to children from low- than high-SES backgrounds. Children from low-SES backgrounds are stereotyped as being less academically able than their peers, and thus teachers may be inclined to attribute these students’ success to hard work rather than to ability, and to offer excessive praise.

More from Eddie
La delicata arte di accrescere l'autostima dei bambini.

However well-intentioned it may be, inflated praise can suggest to children that their success is due to extraordinary effort—and not so much to extraordinary ability. My former student Emiel Schoneveld and I set out to test these ideas in two preregistered experiments, as part of his Master’s thesis project.

In our first experiment, involving 106 primary school teachers, we found that teachers tend to attribute the success of children from a low-SES background more to hard work, and to deliver more inflated praise such as “You did incredibly well!”

Our second experiment involved 64 primary school children aged 10-13. Children learned that a classmate had received inflated praise while a child who had performed just as well had received modest praise or none at all. We found that children perceived the child who was praised more lavishly to be more hardworking but meno inteligente.

ABB: What can teachers learn from your findings?

EB: Our results show that teachers’ inflated praise, although well-intentioned, can cause children from low-SES backgrounds to be perceived as less smart, thereby reinforcing negative stereotypes about these children’s academic abilities. Good intentions can sometimes lead teachers astray.

“Teachers’ inflated praise, although well-intentioned, can cause children from low-SES backgrounds to be perceived as less smart.”

At least in Western countries, teachers tend to believe that lavishing children with praise will boost their self-esteem and increase their motivation. But it can actually make children seem less smart in the eyes of their classmates. Children are sensitive to minor variations in teachers’ wording—even a single word, like “incredibly,” can have the effect of devaluing a child’s ability.

ABB: Has studying praise changed anything in your own life?

EB: It has changed the way I respond to children’s achievements. The education scholar Alfie Kohn once wrote that “the most notable feature of a positive judgment isn’t that it’s positive, but that it’s a judgment.” When children show me their drawings or other achievements, I share their joy and express interest in their work. This tells them that I care about them and what they have accomplished, without judging them or their work. This can be especially important for children from disadvantaged backgrounds, who may worry that I will perceive them to be less capable than other children.

Partner

npj Science of Learning

npj Science of Learning È una rivista ad accesso completamente aperto che si propone di offrire un forum per la ricerca all'intersezione tra neuroscienze, psicologia e teoria dell'educazione. Pubblica ricerche di alta qualità su tutti gli aspetti dell'apprendimento e della memoria, dalle basi genetiche, cellulari e molecolari, alla comprensione di come bambini e adulti apprendono attraverso l'esperienza e la pratica dell'istruzione formale. npj Science of Learning è lieta di ospitare una raccolta che unisce le scienze sociali e comportamentali per affrontare la disuguaglianza nei risultati scolastici.

Leggi altri articoli di questa serie

In che modo la scienza può aiutare gli insegnanti a ridurre le disuguaglianze nell'istruzione?

Le note

Eddie Brummelman è professore associato presso l'Università di Amsterdam, un Jacobs Foundation Ricercatore associato 2021-2023 e Presidente della Young Academy (De Jonge Akademie) della Reale Accademia Olandese delle Scienze e delle Arti (KNAW).

Il lavoro di Brummelman si colloca all'intersezione tra psicologia dello sviluppo e scienze dell'educazione. Studia lo sviluppo del sé: come i bambini sviluppano la propria autopercezione, come questa influenzi la salute mentale e i risultati scolastici e come gli interventi mirati a modificare l'autopercezione possano aiutare i bambini a rischio a prosperare. Brummelman si impegna a utilizzare la ricerca scientifica di base per affrontare i problemi sociali, come il crescente problema della disuguaglianza nell'istruzione.

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Eddie Brummelman contributed to a special collection on understanding and addressing disuguaglianza nell'istruzione nella rivista npj Science of LearningQuesta intervista fa parte di una serie dedicata alla condivisione di spunti pratici e riflessioni personali degli autori.

L'intervista è stata modificata per maggiore chiarezza.

Leggi altri articoli di questa serie

In che modo la scienza può aiutare gli insegnanti a ridurre le disuguaglianze nell'istruzione?