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  • The Pygmalion effect, or Rosenthal effect, is the phenomenon whereby the greater the

  • expectation placed upon people, the better they perform. The effect is named after the

  • Greek myth of Pygmalion. Pygmalion was a sculptor who fell in love with a statue he had carved.

  • A corollary of the Pygmalion effect is the golem effect, in which low expectations lead

  • to a decrease in performance. The Pygmalion effect and the golem effect are forms of self-fulfilling

  • prophecy. People will take the belief they have of themselves and attribute traits of

  • the belief with themselves and their work. This will lead them to perform closer to these

  • expectations that they set for themselves. Within sociology, the effect is often cited

  • with regard to education and social class. Studies of the Pygmalion effect have been

  • difficult to conduct. Results show a positive correlation between leader expectation and

  • follower performance, but it is argued that the studies are done in an unnatural, manipulated

  • setting. Scientist argue that the perceptions a leader has of a follower cause the Pygmalion

  • effect. The leader's expectation are influenced by their perception of the situation or the

  • followers themselves. Perception and expectation may possibly be found in a similar part in

  • the brain.

  • RosenthalJacobson study Robert Rosenthal and Lenore Jacobson's study

  • showed that if teachers were led to expect enhanced performance from children, then the

  • children's performance was enhanced. This study supported the hypothesis that reality

  • can be positively or negatively influenced by the expectations of others, called the

  • observer-expectancy effect. Rosenthal argued that biased expectancies could affect reality

  • and create self-fulfilling prophecies. All students in a single California elementary

  • school were given a disguised IQ test at the beginning of the study. These scores were

  • not disclosed to teachers. Teachers were told that some of their students could be expected

  • to be "spurters" that year, doing better than expected in comparison to their classmates.

  • The spurters' names were made known to the teachers. At the end of the study all students

  • were again tested with the same IQ-test used at the beginning of the study. All six grades

  • in both experimental and control groups showed a mean gain in IQ from before the test to

  • after the test. However, First and Second Graders showed statistically significant gains

  • favoring the experimental group of "spurters." This led to the conclusion that teacher expectations,

  • particularly for the youngest children, can influence student achievement.Rosenthal believed

  • that even attitude or mood could positively affect the students when the teacher was made

  • aware of the "spurters." The teacher may pay closer attention to and even treat the child

  • differently in times of difficulty. Jane Elliott incorporated this into her study of the classroom

  • when racially profiling her children when creating her responses to her "inferior" or

  • "superior" children. Rosenthal predicted that elementary school

  • teachers may subconsciously behave in ways that facilitate and encourage the students'

  • success. When finished, Rosenthal theorized that future studies could be implemented to

  • find teachers who would encourage their students naturally without changing their teaching

  • methods. The prior research that motivated this study was done in 1911 by psychologists

  • regarding the case of Clever Hans, a horse that gained notoriety because it was supposed

  • to be able to read, spell, and solve math problems by using its hoof to answer. Many

  • skeptics suggested that questioners and observers were unintentionally signaling Clever Hans.

  • For instance, whenever Clever Hans was asked a question the observers' demeanor usually

  • elicited a certain behavior from the subject that in turn confirmed their expectations.

  • For example, Clever Hans would be given a math problem to solve, and the audience would

  • get very tense the closer he tapped his foot to the right number, thus giving Hans the

  • clue he needed to tap the correct number of times.

  • A major limitation of this experiment was its inability to be replicated well. "Most

  • studies using product measures found no expectancy advantage for the experimental group, but

  • most studies using process measures did show teachers to be treating the experimental group

  • more favorably or appropriately than they were treating the control group...because

  • teachers did not adopt the expectations that the experimenters were attempting to induce,

  • and/or because the teachers were aware of the nature of the experiment."

  • Students' views of teachers Teachers are also affected by the children

  • in the classroom. Teachers reflect what is projected onto them by their students. An

  • experiment done by Jenkins and Deno submitted teachers to a classroom of children who had

  • either been told to be attentive, or unattentive, to the teachers' lecture. They found that

  • teachers who were in the attentive condition would rate their teaching skills as higher.

  • Similar findings by Herrell stated that when a teacher was preconditioned to classrooms

  • as warm or cold, the teacher would start to gravitate towards their precondition. To further

  • this concept, Klein did the same kind of study involving teachers still unaware of any precondition

  • to the classroom but the class was full of confederates who were instructed to act differently

  • during periods over the course of the lecture. Though "Klein reported that there was little

  • difference between students behaviors in the natural and the positive conditions." In a

  • more observational study designed to remove the likes of the Hawthorne effect, Oppenlander

  • studied the top and bottom 20% of students in the sixth grade from a school that tracks

  • and organizes its students under such criteria. Applications to racism

  • According to the once often-cited, but controversial, non-scientific study of Jane Elliott, the

  • Pygmalion effect can play a role in racial expectations and behavior. Elliott was an

  • American teacher and an anti-racism activist who devised an exercise to determine the effects

  • of expectations and discrimination upon children. She used differences in eye color to distinguish

  • between perceptions and expectations of "inferior" and "superior". In this exercise, one group

  • was given preference and regarded as "superior" in intelligence and learning ability because

  • of their eye color, while the other group was intentionally associated with inferiority.

  • On the second day of the experiment, the groups were completely reversed, with those previously

  • considered inferior one day being regarded as superior the next. She had taken on students

  • deemed as inferior due to their lack of ability to read well and put them through her experiment.

  • Almost half of the class went on after high school to higher schooling; this was considered

  • impressive for their status when she first did the study. The children of the study felt

  • more in control when it came to discrimination. They said the agony was worth the perspective

  • they had on life. One even stated that when he sees discrimination he wishes he could

  • tell the person of his experience and would urge the person to look at their lives through

  • their eyes. They realized that what was considered normal or accepted was not always the right

  • thing. Elliott found that 4 students in particular

  • were distinctly affected by this experiment. These students had advanced years past their

  • age level when tested by the Stanford Achievement Test. Elliot asked one why this was and the

  • student responded with "I found out I was as good as you said I was. You told me I could

  • do anything, and I can I'm smart!" Jane Elliott has done the same non-scientific

  • experiment with adults in workshops. The results are similar to those of the children in her

  • classroom. Chen and Bargh study

  • Chen and Bargh did an automatic behavioral confirmation study in 1997. Participants were

  • subliminally exposed to African American or Caucasian faces. They were then instructed

  • to play a game of "Catch Phrase" with another participant who was not subliminally exposed

  • to any faces. Both the primed and non-primed participants acted more hostile when the primed

  • participants were subliminally primed with black rather than white faces. Because the

  • participant was primed with a stereotypical hostile face, they perceived the other participant

  • as hostile and treated them as such. This relates in reverse to the Pygmalion effect.

  • Because the stereotype allowed for a negative perception, one participant had a negative

  • expectation of the other. Pygmalion in the workplace

  • Leader expectations of the employee may alter leader behavior. This behavior that is expressed

  • toward an employee can affect the behaviors of the employee in favor of the leader's expectations.

  • The more an employee is engaged in learning activities, the higher the expectation is

  • from the leader. In turn, the employee participates in more learning behavior. Leaders will show

  • more leader behaviors such as leader-member exchange, setting specific goals, and allowing

  • for more learning opportunities for employees, and giving employees feedback. These factors

  • were brought about by Rosenthal's model of the Pygmalion effect.

  • Quotations James Rhem, executive editor for the online

  • National Teaching and Learning Forum, commented:

  • "When teachers expect students to do well and show intellectual growth, they do; when

  • teachers do not have such expectations, performance and growth are not so encouraged and may in

  • fact be discouraged in a variety of ways." "How we believe the world is and what we honestly

  • think it can become have powerful effects on how things will turn out."

  • "When people say you're dumb, you feel dumb, you act dumb" "But when you're on top and

  • you're told you can do no wrong, you can't. You have the classroom in the palm of your

  • hand, and you go" A student recounting his experiences in Jane Elliott's classroom.

  • "Whether you think you can or whether you think you can't, you're right." – Henry

  • Ford In 2004, US President George W. Bush referred

  • to "the soft bigotry of low expectations" as one of the challenges faced by disadvantaged

  • and minority students. “Pessimism becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy;

  • it reproduces itself by crippling our willingness to act.” Howard Zinn

  • "I think I can! I think I can!" The Little Blue Engine

  • See also Hawthorne effect

  • Placebo effect Sports psychology

  • Stereotype threat References

  • Further reading Feldman, Robert S.; Prohaska, Thomas. "The

  • student as Pygmalion: Effect of student expectation on the teacher". Journal of Educational Psychology

  • 71: 485–493. doi:10.1037/0022-0663.71.4.485.  Jussim, L.; Harber, K. D.. "Teacher Expectations

  • and Self-Fulfilling Prophecies: Knowns and Unknowns, Resolved and Unresolved Controversies".

  • Personality and Social Psychology Review 9: 131–155. doi:10.1207/s15327957pspr0902_3. 

  • External links Pygmalion effect in banks, at school, and

  • in the army Pygmalion Effect Video

The Pygmalion effect, or Rosenthal effect, is the phenomenon whereby the greater the

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