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Eudora Welty, the famous writer, was once asked
what should be done by society or government to encourage
young writers. Her response, which surprised the questioner,
and me when I heard it, was "Nothing". Welty contended that
a person who was really a writer would be persistent
enough to overcome whatever obstacles were in the way, needing
no interference or support from others.
Clearly persistence and hard work are important for
success and even for creativity. Quite often the reason
people don't solve problems is not that the problems are too
difficult, but rather that people don't try long enough or
hard enough. In the field of chemistry, this becomes evident
from statements made by famous chemists in the Impact series
of interviews that appeared in this Journal in the 1970s.
Here are some examples.
You can get to the big problem only by way of the
staircases of the small ones.
Melvin Calvin
Certainly I try to identify intelligence and creativity
and very importantly, industry; that is, the willingness to
work hard which leads to dedication.
Glenn T. Seaborg
My idea of intuition is that it is merely an
exceedingly careful...an excruciatingly detailed cross-examination
of all the facts.
Robert S. Mulliken
I maintain that an intelligent person can learn all
sorts of things besides his specialty if he works at it.
Harold Urey
I have very little sympathy for people who are
brilliant but refuse to work hard.
Linus Pauling
Welty implies that there is little we as teachers can
do about this, because persistence and its corollary creativity
are inherent characteristics. But I wonder whether they
cannot be cultivated and enhanced. In accepting the Northeast
Regional Award in High School Chemistry, Richard
Brown shared advice for new teachers (see page 1361 of this
issue). The first thing on his list was to set high expectations
for yourself and for your students, and it seems to me that
this might be just what is needed.
A commentary in the local newspaper titled "Why
do students try to be mediocre?" is bound to attract the
attention of the editor of a pedagogical journal. Several
retiring high school teachers were interviewed and provided a
clear message that students are under considerable pressure to
do the bare minimum. One of them said, "It's very uncool
to excel in school." But another related that as students
became more and more apathetic, she was forced to become
more aggressive and assertive as a teacher. This produced good
results, and students who had the satisfaction of meeting
her standards were grateful.
Claude Steele, a professor of social
psychology at Stanford, claims that for many students there is
an effect he calls "stereotype vulnerability". If in
some way or another students in an identifiable group
receive a message stereotyping their group as one
that will perform less well than another group, those
students indeed perform less well. There is evidence
that minority students, female students, and white
male students were all susceptible to stereotype
vulnerability. For example, when female students were told that
men usually scored higher than women on a math test they
were about to take, the female students did not score as well
as the male students. When no such stereotyping was done,
the women scored about the same as men.
Perhaps we can do more than Eudora Welty implied
we could. Setting high standards and rewarding persistence
and effort may well help students to develop ability and even
creativity. One such prescription is provided by
psychologist Lauren Resnick, director of the Learning Research and
Development Center at the University of Pittsburgh,
in Daedalus, Fall 1995, Volume 124, Number 4.
Resnick lists several characteristics of an educational
system that assumes that effort can create ability: clearly
defined achievement standards that are publicly announced and
applicable to everyone; externally set exams graded by
people other than the students' own teachers, together with
external quality control of course grades; real payoffs for
success and celebrations of achievement; allowing students more
or less time (and other resources) to achieve a
pre-established standard, rather than measuring level of achievement
within a given period of time; and assuring all students the right
to expert instruction.
By assuming that our students are capable of
achieving well and letting them know that is what we expect, we
may well be contributing to their ability to achieve. Certainly
we and they will be better off than if we assume the worst
and they confirm our expectations. We can (and should) start
in our own classrooms and laboratories and achieve our
own successes, but a much greater goal could be reached if
we worked in concert to influence others in the educational
system and the public at large. Our entire society could be
improved if it were to adopt higher standards and reward
those who achieve them, thereby helping to convince its
members that hard work and persistence pay off at least as well
as chance and aptitude.
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