Invitation to Psychology

(Barry) #1

328 Chapter 9 Learning and Conditioning


showing up for class? Or who did all the required
reading, but without understanding it?

Why Rewards Can Backfire. Most of our ex-
amples of operant conditioning have involved extrin-
sic reinforcers, which come from an outside source
and are not inherently related to the activity being
reinforced. Money, praise, gold stars, applause, hugs,
and thumbs-up signs are all extrinsic reinforcers. But
people (and probably some other animals as well)
also work for intrinsic reinforcers, such as enjoyment
of the task and the satisfaction of accomplishment.
In real-world settings, extrinsic reinforcement some-
times becomes too much of a good thing because if
you focus on it exclusively, it can kill the pleasure of
doing something for its own sake.
This downside of extrinsic reinforcement
was dramatically revealed in a classic study of
how praise affects children’s intrinsic motiva-
tion (Lepper, Greene, & Nisbett, 1973). Nursery
school children were given the chance to draw
with felt-tipped pens during free play and ob-
servers recorded how long each child spontane-
ously played with the pens. The children clearly
enjoyed this activity. Then the researchers told
some of the children that if they would draw with
felt-tipped pens they would get a prize, a “Good
Player Award,” complete with gold seal and red
ribbon. After drawing for six minutes, each child
got the award as promised. Other children did
not expect an award and were not given one.
A week later, the researchers again observed the
children’s free play. Those children who had ex-
pected and received an award spent much less time
with the pens than they had before the start of the

extrinsic reinforcers
Reinforcers that are not
inherently related to the
activity being reinforced.


intrinsic reinforcers
Reinforcers that are in-
herently related to the
activity being reinforced.


The Problems With Reward LO 9.15
So far, we have been praising the virtues of praise
and other reinforcers. But like punishers, rewards do
not always work as expected. Let’s look at two com-
plications that arise when people try to use them.

Misuse of Rewards. For decades, teachers have
been handing out lavish praise, happy-face stick-
ers, and high grades,
even if students don’t
deserve them, in
hopes that students’
performance will im-
prove as they learn
to “feel good about
themselves.” Scientifically speaking, however, this
approach is misguided. Study after study finds
that high self-esteem does not improve academic
performance (Baumeister et al., 2003). The reason
is that academic achievement requires effort and
persistence, not self-esteem (Duckworth et al.,
2011). It is nurtured not by undeserved rewards
but by a teacher’s honest appreciation of the con-
tent of a student’s work, and by specific construc-
tive feedback on how to correct mistakes or fix
weaknesses (Damon, 1995). These findings from
psychological science have begun to influence
some teachers, who are now shifting away from
doling out unwarranted “self-esteem boosters”
and focusing on helping students appreciate the
benefits of diligence and persistence.
One obvious result of the misuse of rewards
in schools has been grade inflation at all levels of
education. In colleges and universities, grades have
risen steadily since the 1970s but graduation rates
have not. Moreover, the literacy of graduates has
declined, as have scores on entrance exams. At many
schools, Cs, which once meant average or satisfac-
tory, are nearly extinct. One study found that a third
of college students expected Bs just for showing up
to class, and 40 percent felt they were entitled to a B
merely for doing the required reading (Greenberger
et al., 2008). We have talked to students who feel
that hard work should even be enough for an A.
If you yourself have benefited from grade in-
flation, you may feel it’s a good thing—but remem-
ber that critical thinking requires us to separate
feelings from facts. The problem is that rewards,
including grades, serve as effective reinforcers only
when they are tied to the behavior one is trying
to increase, not when they are dispensed indis-
criminately. Getting a good grade for “showing-
up-in-class behavior” reinforces going to class, but
not necessarily for learning much once you are
there. Would you want to be treated by a doctor,
represented by a lawyer, or have your taxes done
by an accountant who got through school just by

About Rewards

Thinking
CriTiCally

“That is the correct answer, Billy, but I’m
afraid you don’t win anything for it.”

© The New Yorker Collection 1986 Lee Lorenz from cartoonbank.com. All rights reserved.
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