My last column on "Blaming the Victim" was a departure from my usual emphasis on improving learning and memory. But it did set the stage for this current post on the crippling effect of allowing children to make excuses for underperformance in school.
Most of us know how common it is for kids to make excuses ("the dog ate my homework" syndrome). When we adults were young, we also probably made excuses, blaming the textbook, the teacher, the school, and whatever else could serve to avoid facing the real causes of the problems.
Why do kids do that? The main reason is their fragile egos. Confronting personal weakness is especially hard for kids because they are embedded in an adult culture that inevitably reminds them that they are relatively powerless kids.
I remember a recent dinner-table conversation with my competitive 6th grade granddaughter, who was complaining about a test in which some of the questions were not aligned well with the instruction, which itself was deemed confusing. I said, "I understand that others did do better than you on the test. Wasn't everybody facing the same handicap?" No answer. Then I added, "It doesn't matter who the teacher is or what instruction you get. If you are not first in the class, it is your fault." Again, no response.
Source: W. R. Klemm
One approach that parents and teachers use is to bolster children's egos by praising them richly and often. Too much of a good thing is a bad thing. Too much praise makes kids narcissistic. Anybody who is not aware of the raging narcissism in today's youngsters must not be around young people very much. The most obvious sign is the compulsive checking of e-mail and texting, all in an effort by a child to be at the center of attention.
I and other professors notice narcissism in college students. In a selective college, most students think they are "A" students, and because of low standards in secondary school and grade inflation they are actually told they are A students. If they don't make A's in college, it is somebody else's fault (usually the professor).
Scholars are beginning to address this growing narcissism. Eddie Brummelman at the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands and his colleagues studied 565 children between the ages of 7 to 12. They picked this age group because most other such studies have been in adults, and they believed that early adolescence is when children develop narcissistic traits such as selfishness, self-centeredness, and vanity.
Over 18 months, the children and their parents were given several detailed questionnaires that were designed to measure narcissistic traits and parental behavior. There was a small but significant link at each stage between how much parents praised their children and how narcissistic the children were six months later. Because the effect was only small, it suggests that other things also make children selfish and self-centered. I suspect the effect is larger in the U.S.
Maybe school culture is part of the problem. As in Lake Woebegon, "all kids are above average." For brighter students, the instructional rigor is so low that these kids get a false sense of how smart they are and how easy it is to be an "A" student.
I suspect that another factor is that students are not taught enough about how to be realistically self-aware. They may not even know when they are making excuses unless adults call them on it. Too often, parents side with the student in criticizing a teacher when the real problem is with the child.
Some of the blame shifting comes from biology. It is in human nature to claim ownership of things we do that turn out well, but disown actions that yield negative consequences. Experiments support this conclusion. The most recent experiments had a primary focus on our sense of time in association with voluntary actions. The experimental design was based on prior evidence that the perceived estimate of time lag between when we do something and when we think we did it is an implicit index of our sense of ownership. Investigators asked people to press a key, which was followed a quarter of a second later by negative sounds of fear or disgust, positive sounds of achievement or amusement, or neutral sounds. The subjects were then asked to estimate when they had made the action and when they heard the sound. Timing estimation errors were easily measured by computer. Subjects sensed a longer time lag between their actions and the consequences when the outcome (the sound) was negative than when it was positive.
Teaching Kids to Deal with Failure
There is a common denominator to most self-limiting styles of living. It is a fear of failure. Children express this fear by making excuses, which has the unintended effect of blocking the path to success. Excuses may provide immediate relief of anxiety, but it creates a self-limiting learning style that assures continued underachievement.
Whatever one’s station in life, one axiom is paramount: for things to get better for you, you have to get better. This point is well illustrated in an inspiring rags-to-riches success book by A. J. Williams. He points out that a main reason that people do not make the changes they need to is that they are afraid of failure. But, paradoxically, learning from failure is how many people turn their lives around and become happier. Children, I have noticed, are highly resistant to personal change, maybe more so than adults. I am dismayed at how often I show children how to memorize more effectively and they just can't bring themselves to study in a different way. It is as if they don't believe me enough to even try new approaches. Or maybe they have convinced themselves they are mediocre and need the shield of excuses to keep others from detecting their weaknesses.
Louis Armstrong, the famous trumpeter, told an instructive story about fear from when he was a boy. One day when his mother asked him to go down to the levee to fetch a pail of drinking water, he came back home with an empty pail. Upon noticing the empty pail, his mother said, “I told you to bring back a pail of water for us to drink. How come your pail is empty?” Louis replied, “There’s an alligator there, and I was scared to death.” His mother then said, “You shouldn’t be afraid. That gator is as afraid of you as you are of him.” To which Louis answered, “If that’s the case, then that water ain’t fit to drink.”
If there is an alligator keeping you away from what you need to do, have faith you will prevail over your demons. But as long as a child lets fear get in the way, her pail will stay empty.
Other kinds of fear are also self-limiting. Many children fear commitment to learning. Commitment exacts an emotional price requiring dedication, passion, and self-discipline. Children fear confusion and difficulty. They fear disapproval.
Kids need to put their under-performance in perspective. Failure and under-achievement are not permanent. They are not pervasive reflections of inadequacy. Children can acquire learning skills that lead to success. Unfortunately, schools don't teach much about learning skills, being focused on teaching to high-stakes tests.
Kids need to recognize their weakness and strive to fix them. But to bolster their motivation and general attitude about school, they need to recognize what they have done well and strive to do even more of that. Dwelling on under-performance is counter-productive.
The Most Important Thing Kids Need to Learn
Excuse-making prevents a child from developing the attitude that will best serve them throughout life: a sense of personal efficacy, a state of perceived control over one's life. I explain this more thoroughly in my book, "Blame Game, How to Win It." But a summary here will have to suffice.
How children perceive their personal power determines how much effort they will expend to control their lives. If they lack a genuine sense of power, excuse-making applies salve to their wounded egos. Self-efficacy is not the same as self-esteem. Psychologist, Albert Bandura, puts it this way: “Perceived self-efficacy is concerned with judgments of personal capability, whereas self-esteem is concerned with judgments of self-worth.” Both are important for happiness, but it is perceived self-efficacy that drives academic achievement. One practical application where this distinction is apparently not recognized is with school teachers who think the cure for low achievement in school is to foster self-esteem. Teachers should emphasize self-efficacy. Children learn self-efficacy from teachers and parents who enable them to master their environment. Students who are filled with self-doubt do not put much effort into school work. They make excuses. As kids are progressively given the skills to achieve, they develop a sense of confidence in their ability to succeed, which will motivate them to strive for more achievement. When I was a kid, I only became a good student when I discovered, more or less by accident, that I could make good grades. Discovering that I could make good grades if I tried motivated me to do just that. This sense has to be earned. It does not come from excuses.
DH and I really struggled with our oldest son. He didn't do well in school. It was a constant battle. We met with the principal, teachers, made a plan, disciplined, etc. And, he wasn't a bad kid at all, just kind of inattentive and forgetful with homework, etc. No real conduct issues per se. But, finally, we just took our hands off the wheel. And said, we don't care WHY. WHY doesn't matter. You either did what you are supposed to do or you didn't, period. No more baloney, because we dont' care what the baloney excuses are anymore! After awhile, I think that sunk in. Now, he is a responsible young man!
We are supposed to have our children read a book out loud every night, then talk about it afterwards, to promote comprehension. There are nights where they don't want to read, don't like the book Mr. FNW picked out, or whatever. During this struggle, I get up and say, "oh, sweetie, it's okay. I'll just go write down on your log that you didn't want to read this night so the teacher can give you an incomplete." He will stop me and say, "no!!!" Then read.
Both my boys are doing well in school, but I do have problems at home with #1 when it comes to playing games of any sort. If he isn't winning, he has a meltdown. He will call the game off, ask to start over, say it isn't fair, say I'm cheating, whatever. I've gotten to the point where I tell him I no longer want to play with him because he's trying to bully me into losing. I'm really not sure what I can do.
We are supposed to have our children read a book out loud every night, then talk about it afterwards, to promote comprehension. There are nights where they don't want to read, don't like the book Mr. FNW picked out, or whatever. During this struggle, I get up and say, "oh, sweetie, it's okay. I'll just go write down on your log that you didn't want to read this night so the teacher can give you an incomplete." He will stop me and say, "no!!!" Then read.
Both my boys are doing well in school, but I do have problems at home with #1 when it comes to playing games of any sort. If he isn't winning, he has a meltdown. He will call the game off, ask to start over, say it isn't fair, say I'm cheating, whatever. I've gotten to the point where I tell him I no longer want to play with him because he's trying to bully me into losing. I'm really not sure what I can do.
The point I had to make with my kids, more than once, was that
people get better with practice. People figure things out with practice and repetition.
At one point, DS2 was angry that he wasn't as good at a video game as his older brother. I took a small paper cup, put a handful of toothpicks in it,
and told him the toothpicks were "quarters" he would use to start the "arcade" video game. He shouldn't be disappointed about losing or having trouble with it, until he ran out of toothpicks.
It worked.
I'm assuming that when you play games with him, you're not in "KILL" or "GOTCHA" mode, but in "parenting" and "teaching" mode.
I hope this is helpful.
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The Principle of Least Interest: He who cares least about a relationship, controls it.
We are supposed to have our children read a book out loud every night, then talk about it afterwards, to promote comprehension. There are nights where they don't want to read, don't like the book Mr. FNW picked out, or whatever. During this struggle, I get up and say, "oh, sweetie, it's okay. I'll just go write down on your log that you didn't want to read this night so the teacher can give you an incomplete." He will stop me and say, "no!!!" Then read.
Both my boys are doing well in school, but I do have problems at home with #1 when it comes to playing games of any sort. If he isn't winning, he has a meltdown. He will call the game off, ask to start over, say it isn't fair, say I'm cheating, whatever. I've gotten to the point where I tell him I no longer want to play with him because he's trying to bully me into losing. I'm really not sure what I can do.
We have the bad attitude when losing issue pop up at our house from time to time. When it does, whichever child starts throwing the fit, they get one warning, then they are disqualified from game play. The other players continue. Usually what happens is the fit thrower leaves the table, realizes that they are missing out on the fun and comes back with an apology. We then let them back in on the next game. If the behavior continues, they are out for the remainder of game play. That's only happened once. The first scenario used to happen frequently, but not only happens about once in ever 10 game sessions or so. At the end of the game, we make sure to shake hands, congratulate the winner and say good game all around.
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"I have a very strict gun control policy. If there's a gun around, I want to be in control of it." - Clint Eastwood
I am in teaching mode and there are times when I let him win. But there are times when I think he needs to learn to lose and the tantrums kick in, mostly when it's just him and me or him and my husband playing...not as much when his brother is playing with us. So really, if he's out of the game, the game is over because there's no one else left, if that makes sense.
I understand completely. That has happened a time or two as well. If it's just two of us, I have been known to announce the game is over due to unsportsmanlike conduct and I start putting it away. The gist of the rule in our house is that behaving appropriately means you still have a chance at a comeback. Resorting to a tantrum or cheating results in an automatic loss.
We also reiterate that the point of games is to do our best and have fun, not win. Sometimes we will win, sometimes we will lose. We need to learn to handle both gracefully.
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"I have a very strict gun control policy. If there's a gun around, I want to be in control of it." - Clint Eastwood
many years ago, when I was first learning to slalom I kept falling over and over and was about to the point of quitting it altogether--my father took me to a tournament held on town lake and one of the lapoint brothers was skiing in the event--he was one of the best that's ever lived and he made it look simple, effortless, perfect--my father looked at me ( believe I was twelve or so) and said: " looks simple, doesn't it ? but what you CAN'T see is all the times he fell, was hurt and kept trying--again and again--till he got to here, what you see now--it's about talent, sure, but it's also about PRACTICE, about staying with it till you get better--you can ski like he does, you just have to keep practicing and maybe one day some father and son will be sitting here watching YOU and wondering how you're able to ski like that--and the dad will say the same thing--PRACTICE--it's up to you. "
and it still is
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" the only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. "--edmund burke
I am in teaching mode and there are times when I let him win. But there are times when I think he needs to learn to lose and the tantrums kick in, mostly when it's just him and me or him and my husband playing...not as much when his brother is playing with us. So really, if he's out of the game, the game is over because there's no one else left, if that makes sense.
I appreciate the advice! I'm really at a loss.
How old is he? I think that has a lot to do with it.
I did the whole teachers, meetings plans and all that with mine.
Then I realized my boys were hating school, and home and it was just a big battle and I was tired of living that way and I know they were.
So I called one more meeting.
After I was told about the lack of homework, how the daily work was not up to their expectations and what they thought I should do, I asked for the boys grades. They were more than passing. I asked about tests. They always made between 90-100 on every test. And finally I pulled out their CRCTs a showed how they were actually above their grade level.
Then I told them to back off my kids.
I backed off my kids.
I told the boys, who were in the meeting, that I knew they were capable of the work. They were responsible for their work. They must keep a solid grade of at least C or better but they were not going to hate school anymore because of the pressure we were putting on them and that home would no longer be a battle ground.
The principal started to argue but I stopped her. Told her if my kids were not trouble makers. They were more than passing and the whole thing was over.
My boys went from one extreme to the other. They began looking forward to school. They relaxed at home. And they were getting their work done. They were always on honor roll. And they excelled in everything after that.
I really think their is too much pressure on kids to keep schools funded.
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A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.