The Pygmalion Myth
In Greek mythology, Pygmalion was a sculptor who fell in love with his own creation: an impossibly beautiful carving that he named Galatea. The strength of his feelings for Galatea were so intense that Aphrodite, the goddess of love, transformed the sculpture into a real woman. They married and – yep, you guessed it – lived happily ever after.
The Pygmalion Effect
If we have high expectations our of students, they will typically rise to meet them. Conversely, low expectations tend to be conducive to undesirable behaviours (this is called the Golem effect).
The Study
In the 1960s, Robert Rosenthal and Lenore Jacobson conducted an experiment that hinged on a lie: they told teachers that a group of their students were potential high achievers when, in fact, they had been chosen at random. The progress of the students was monitored for a year, and Rosenthal and Jacobson published their findings. The key one is below and, intriguingly, it was very young children, boys and students from minority ethnic backgrounds (i.e. Mexican students in the context of the study) who seemed to particularly benefit.
‘When teachers expected that certain children would show greater intellectual development, those children did show greater intellectual development.’
In the spirit of looking beyond the headlines, if you have the time and inclination, click here to access a paper published by Lee Jussim and Kent Harbour in 2005; they argue that the gains in achievement during the Pygmalion study ‘hinged on the occurrence of bizarre outliers and out-of-range IQ scores’ and that the conclusions were ‘highly limited and constrained.’ The correlation between expectations and achievement isn’t disputed, just the significance of the accumulated benefits.
Classroom Implications
Ultimately, as teachers, we are all responsible for establishing, promoting and exemplifying high expectations.
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Thanks for reading –
Doug