字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 Thank you that was too kind of an introduction indeed I do study grit and when Nancy gave me just one degree of freedom and said I could talk about what I wanted to I decided not to talk about grit because nobody ever asks me to come talk about self control but indeed by the grant numbers and by the number people our lab works more on self control than it does on grit so the slides are yes the slides are there okay great so I wanna say that I made this quote up in deference to a former APS President Walter Mischel I believe I emailed him one day and I said Walter can I say that you said that the most important scientific discovery about self control in that it can be taught and he wrote back sure I think this is a relatively accurate statement of what Walter does believe I'm of course the popular public knows now his a his marshmallow test which has been on the Colbert report no fewer than three times if you add it all up and I think that that in some ways the predictive power of the marshmallow test belies in a sense the most important insight from Walters decades of research which is that in observing these young children wait for two marshmallows instead of one they employed an array of ingenious strategies in order to delay longer and Walter's strong belief was that those strategies could be directly taught and practiced in my own work on self-control I I beg borrow steal I collaborate with whomever I can and about four years ago I met the incomparable James Gross and I'm guessing that about half of you are currently writing a paper with him even at this moment because because eventually everybody works with James Gross but what really struck me about him was that he was able to bring together so many disparate findings in self regulation now many of you know that James primarily works on grownups and he primarily works on a emotion regulation but the model that he's developed in that realm I think has implications for unifying more broadly what we would consider self-regulation or self control the process model says that impulses develop so they began perhaps quite weak and then gather strength and it is by intervening in the process of impulse generation earlier rather than later then we can be really smart about how to exercise self control in our lives so I'll just take you through from situation selection which is the earliest stage at which you can intervene all the way through to response modulation what I mean and let me illustrate with some data that James in our lab collected recently from a local high school where we presented to students from ninth through twelfth grade a variety of examples of each of the 5 stages in the process model which I'll described to you one by one but I'll just say that when high school students read examples of modifying their situation verses using attention in a strategic way verses cognitively changing the way they think about things the striking finding is that students tell us that to choose your situation or change your situation in ways that are very intentional that's actually probably going to be much more effective than any of the later cognitive strategies so this indeed is the prediction of the process model that intervening earlier should be better than interviewing later I will say that we would have loved for the same students to tell us that each of the subsequent cognitive strategies would just be a little bit less effective but data never cooperate exactly so I think the gist of it is that the students have an intuition that intervening early is better than intervening later now the first thing that one can do according to James and the process model is to choose your situation to choose where to be what what do I mean by that for example all the undergraduates who work in my lab tak an oath that says that they will sit at the front of the classroom the first three rows specifically and I always get the same question oh do you mean in your class no I don't mean in my class I mean in all of your classes do you mean in the psychology classes no I mean every single lecture that you attend course they want an explanation for this and the explanation is that when I was in college taking a class on ancient Chinese bronzes I could do nothing more than just to sit in the front of the class to prevent myself from falling asleep for the entire lecture sitting in the front of the class is putting myself in a situation where social norms and pure shame would be working to my advantage to keep my attention on what I needed to do as opposed to something I'd rather be doing napping you know reading you know anything else verses the the sort of the you know the nosebleed section so you can do things like choose your physical situation you can also choose to some extent your social situation recently we did a focus group of tenth and fifth-graders at a school in New York City a tough neighborhood schools were 100 percent free and reduced-price lunch and I listened to a tenth-grader sagely advised the fifth-grader if I only knew when I was your age what I know now I would have picked my friends differently because I got into the wrong crowd and you never can tell yourself how much your friends are really going to influence you so there's selecting your physical situation to advantage going to the library instead of studying in a noisy house choosing to sit at the front of the class verses the back to class and you can choose your social situation to some extent we think that these are intuitive to students who for example in the same dataset that I mentioned to you before would when asked about you know what tell us about self-control in your own life and tell us a story about you had you know something that you had to resist as a temptation what you did I'll just read two verbatim suggestions of students who in this open-ended prompt gave us things that we classified as being situation selection so I would go to the library as being in a quiet and controlled environment would make me focus I would lock myself in a room without my phone so that it does not become a distraction now many students do not have the liberty or the logistical possibility of changing where they are and so we think that it's also important that they learned to modify their situation and that is to say once choosing where you are or having it foisted upon you you can certainly change physical aspects of the situation now Brian Wansink at Cornell University has a large number studies that have shown that physical cues like is the glass a tall glass or short class is the soup bowl a big bowl or small bowl can dramatically influence eating behavior and this is an example we think of situation modification if it's not Brian Wansink determining the size of your soup bowl but you know determining the size of your soup bowl so we feel like this insight that physical cues matter can be harnessed by the individual to say I'm going to keep the cookies in my house in a cookie jar I can't see through unlike the cookie jar in my house which like most cookie jars is clear and tempts me every time I walk by in terms of students and academic success which is really where my heart is there is the simple modification of closing the laptop while you're sitting in lecture on the left you have the typical scene of students with their laptops open you know on ebay checking their email accounts you know I told my husband that this was generally true of professors who are lecturing in large classes but not not in my class where everybody was really just taking notes and paying rapt attention to me so he went to my class and sat in the back row and took a picture of my class and then pointed out to me that one intrepid student was actually watching a full-length feature film during the hour and twenty-minute lecture which I thought was particularly humiliating I don't know for the student or for me but anyway it wasn't good so you know minor this is of course only if you as a student have a conflict you both wanna go onto Instagram and listen to doctor Duckworth tell you what's on the final exam and if you feel that listening to what's going to be on the final exam is in the long run probably a better use of your time and yet you're pulled by Instagram that's classic self-control conflict and this minor situational adjustment can actually just make it that much easier here are some verbatim suggestions of high school students quote I would shut off my phone and put it under my pillow so I wouldn't be tempted by to touch it quote I would ask my mom to take away my phone and other distractions to make sure I can get it done on time now I won't play this clip I'll just you know fast forward but I'll just say that and we've been very inspired by the behavior change work of folks like Carol Dweck and her kind of extended family her progeny folks like Greg Walton and David Yeager who have shown that in very carefully crafted brief online interventions you can have you know reasonably large effects on on behavior change so so we picked up a bunch of tips from them and we we took the Brian Wansink Research and we created an intervention we taught kids how to modify their situations and I'll try to skip through the actual video we tried to make it cool and fun and in a one-week longitudinal field study with high school students at baseline students were randomly assigned to one of three conditions they learned about situation modification they learned about a later strategy response modulation just kinda good old-fashioned willpower don't do it and then finally a no treatment control condition now at baseline in addition to getting these you know treatment assignments students set an academic goal which they then one week later were asked to report on and in this data you can see that self-reported goal accomplishment was higher in the situation modification group than either of the two comparison groups we replicated this with a large sample of college students again those who were given information about how they can use situation modification to meet their academic goals did better in doing so than two comparisons and importantly we found what we hypothesized which is partial mediation well we would have loved full mediation but but mediation to some extent by self-reported temptation during that week in other words students who learned to turn off their cellphones put away their laptops when they're trying to read a book et cetera felt fewer feelings of temptation towards those other objects and that at least partially explained the effect of the intervention on goal accomplishment now I should say a word about these latter three strategies but I'll be more brief because James and I don't believe that they're as effective as these you know earlier upstream situational strategies so first there is selectively attending looking at things in in ways that you think will make it easier to do the right thing and harder to do the wrong one so for example at the KIPP charter schools and there are many of them in New York but they're now all over the country they have recognized from fairly early in their in their establishment of these schools probably ten or fifteen years ago they recognized that you know for sure it's hard to pay attention to your teacher it's hard to just look at your teacher when you'd rather look elsewhere but they also recognize that by looking at your teacher and I'll give you an example this is a KIPP classroom they're all looking at the teacher at KIPP they call tracking it's tracking the teacher that by accomplishing that you then make it easier to do what's even harder which is to truly you know listen and encode and engage with the academic material in other words you can look out the window if you want to and then it's going to be darn near impossible to pay attention at all or to process the the history lesson or you can track the speaker which they do it KIPP schools and that facilitates you know downstream regulation of the things that you need to do so selectively attending what does it look like when high school students explain they can you know not look at their phone ignore my phone rang or they can direct their internal attention to things that are more useful in terms of regulation remind myself that even the most boring classes count towards my GPA I will note that even though in Walter Mischel 's early studies of the marshmallow students I guess I should say four-year-olds they're not students yet children who selectively look you know at or you know objects are not the marshmallow are able to wait longer so selective attention strategic attention emerged as one the most important strategies in those early preschool studies notably this was the least commonly nominated strategy among among high school students that we surveyed which we haven't quite figured out why but we know the disparity now what do you do once you've chosen where you're going to be modified the situation or not attended to what you've decided to attend to you can of course change your mind you can re-frame or change the cognitive representation of the situation there are many ways to do this but one very important way relevant to self control self-regulation is reconstruing the distance of the situation psychological distancing so in one random assignment study in collaboration with you Ethan Cross kids in fifth grade were either chosen to replay an event of an angry memory as it unfolds in their own eyes that's the first person immersed egocentric control condition or alternatively in the intervention to replay the event as it unfolds as they observe their distance self the third person or most effectively it's like you're in a YouTube video oh okay now I know what you mean okay so this is very facilitative of emotion regulation in particular regulating the negative the lingering negative emotions of that angry memory easier when you're seeing yourself in the third person like you are the fly on the wall in the situation verses from the first person egocentric perspective I recently had an argument with my spouse and tried to do this I was like oh okay Angela Duckworth had an argument with her spouse it didn't really work actually I was you know flooded with emotion but I will say this I think that in general the very exciting work on psychological distancing and reconstrual you know it opens up a whole doorway of things like just the very idea that the mental representation that there's still some agency there that that there's still on an opportunity there for us to regulate that I think is very important here's some verbatim suggestions of high school students quote I would plan something for myself that I'd only do if I got straight A's so I would sorta think about pairing the you know the the homework with you know later reward I would set goals break the project up into pieces I will say this and I know there's not opportunity for questions and discussion categorizing what students you know in this open-ended way would just tell us they would do was very difficult and also made me realize some the limitations of the process model which have these five neat you know distinctions but actually in reality end up being you know not distinctions that are very well respected by high school students who tell us that they do you know more than one strategy at once were you know things that are hard to categorize things that are kind of on the border so let me just tell you about the last stage which doesn't need much telling at all because this is really just good old-fashioned don't do it or do do it depending on what you're trying to as the Buddhists would say and as the Buddhists would disrecommend this is simply crushing mind with mind right and I think you know just in thinking about the work that was presented earlier in some ways you know this discussion of you know early self-regulation leading to sort of higher order more sophisticated ways of regulation and I think of this as kinda you know as executive function in its rawest form there's almost no art or strategy to it at all what does that look like if you're talking about high school students don't be a baby and just study just deal with it and study just do it just focus and get my work done and we actually use the word just in our coding manual as a sign that really kids were you know talking about this last stage I wanna end by saying that you know whatever strategy it is that you use to sit in the front of the lecture hall to you know turn your phone off to look at the teacher not look out the window to frame a situation a particular way it of course helps to do some advance planning and I think that the work of Gabriele Oettingen and Peter Gollwitzer could not be more influential for myself as a scientist as as well as almost everybody I know who works on behavior change so I'll just quickly say that their work where students are encouraged in a very systematic way to set goals and to in advance plan how they hope to act in a certain situation so goal-setting and goal planning seems to for example in our joint work in a random assignment placebo-controlled longitudinal field study over the course of half of an academic year this brief intervention is able to improve GPA from school records as well from school records school attendance you know being on time and teachers who are blind to condition their ratings of classroom conduct during that semester it is not a miracle so you know subsequently you know behavior returns and there is you know the difference between the control group and the intervention group a road to non-significance but I do think it's really a promising direction in order for us to put everything together that's known about these higher level metacognitive strategies so so all the things I talked about in the process model kind of get wrapped in a way in the kinda mental contrasting and implementation intention work that Gabriele and Peter are doing and then finally I will just say to expand the scope even you know broader than what I've tried to do already believe that there's a role for habit habit formation that has just begun to get you know some traction on in our work we find that more self control individuals more self control students in particular have stronger study habits they study at that same time every day they study in the same place every day my daughter is an exception to this she feels like it's much better to wake up every day and decide on the spot what you're gonna do and how you're gonna do it I'm in a more reactive way and you know I'll show her this figure when I get home which is that more self-controled kids tend to have these habits and those habits mediate to a large extent the positive effects of self-control on things like studying when things are difficult and also grades and so let me and end with this slide from from William James and in his classic work in 1899 said virtues virtues are habits as much as vices our nervous systems grow to the way in which they have been exercised just as a sheet of paper once creased or folded tends to fall for ever afterward into the same identical folds so let the children learn the process model strategies and let them learn mental contrasting in implementation intentions let them learn the folds that we think will set them up for success later in life and thank you for your attention thank you Nancy for having me I really appreciate the opportunity thanks
B1 中級 美國腔 安吉拉-達克沃斯,賓夕法尼亞大學---學齡兒童的自我控制策略。 (Angela Duckworth, University of Pennsylvania - Self-Control Stategies for School-Age Children) 948 66 Mandy Sue 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日 更多分享 分享 收藏 回報 影片單字