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Prometheus 6

All respect and no restraint

Black Intrapolitics: A message for the Cosbyites

I think I was nice to Juan Williams this morning because there's some stuff the Cosbyites need to hear. It came at the end of my little post.

What bothers me is that your comfort is supported by your discomforting Black folks both unnecessarily and counterproductively.

Fine, you gotta be twice as good, but don't demonize people for being merely human. Be clear you are not talking about solving the problems of the world. You can improve your thing without improving things by one iota, and this is the approach you suggest.

Be clear about that, I have little beef with The Cosbyites. Continue to confuse the issues and you do no one any favors.

Your rhetoric is damaging, and it's not necessary to spur the improvements you're looking for.

Affirmation of Worth Boosts Scores of Black Children

African-American schoolchildren who completed a brief writing assignment designed to reaffirm their sense of self-worth received higher grades at the end of the semester than those given a control intervention, a new study finds. These better-performing children closed the grade gap with their white peers by 40 percent, apparently because the assignment interrupted the harmful effects of declining performance early in the semester.

Researchers have invoked a concept called stereotype threat to help explain why black students in the U.S. consistently perform worse in school than their white counterparts. In this view, members of a minority experience anxiety at the prospect of confirming negative stereotypes about their group, such as low intelligence. This anxiety impedes their performance in tasks that reflect on the stereotype, creating a downward spiral in which anxiety and poor performance feed on one another. In past experiments college students have been told that a test they are about to take is insensitive to race or gender, and such interventions can reduce group differences in test scores. "No one had looked at whether these kinds of processes could be manipulated in the real world and have long-term consequences," says social psychologist Geoffrey Cohen of the University of Colorado at Boulder.

Cohen and his colleagues studied a group of about 250 seventh graders, some black and some white, attending a suburban middle school in the Northeast. The children were randomly chosen to receive a 15-minute writing assignment that asked them to indicate their most important value and why it mattered to them, as a way to affirm their sense of integrity or worth. The remaining students wrote about their least important value and why it might matter to others.

Despite the intervention's brevity, the black children who received the affirmative assignment scored one fourth to one third of a grade point higher in that course than the black control group at the end of the term, and the difference showed up in other classes, too. In contrast, the assignment showed no effect on white students. "What's remarkable about this are the long-term effects on grades. It's just an eye-opener that a 15-minute intervention can have this effect," says Timothy Wilson of the University of Virginia, who was not involved in the study. Cohen agrees: "it's tapping at something that runs really deep in these kids." The intervention is described in the September 1 Science. Whether it would work in other school environments remains to be seen.

Interesting test group as

Interesting test group as the middle school age brings a host of complex psychological variables all its own. It's where kids most often go off the rails, even those who seem to have everything going for them, much less those who do not.

The hook in education needs to be intrinsic. Extrinsic motivators -grades, rewards, etc. can get you to the gate but a sustained run requires activating intrinsic motivation.

I don't think a sustained

I don't think a sustained run is the result of meeting an either/or condition. I graduated from what is now called middle school in June of 1963. I can clearly recall that on our first day in P.E. nearly three years earlier the head gym teacher told my class of nearly 250 seventh graders that our class was 20 percent garbage and that he and the rest of the gym teachers were going to weed out the garbage before we graduated.

The P.E. teachers were the most vocal proponents of this sort of humilating pedagogy but their colleagues on the faculty shared their sentiments. In this type of environment it is extremely difficult for children to succeed and feel motivated. Children need intrinsic and extrinsic motivation. In fact, at this stage of their development they probably need extrinsic motivation more in order to coax what is still unformed and not entirely conscious within them to come alive.

I saw a lot of kids - white, black, brown and yellow - that I attended this particular school with fall apart and never quite recover. By the time we got to high school many of them were lost and I know for a fact some still are. 

" In fact, at this stage of

" In fact, at this stage of their development they probably need extrinsic motivation more in order to coax what is still unformed and not entirely conscious within them to come alive"

I very much agree. To discover any intrinsic value in an activiy you actually have to spend some time doing it and the initial phase is a good time for carrot dangling to entice the uncertain or disinclined to explore or exert themselves.

We lose far too many kids for lack of trying.

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