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January 31, 2005

Cracks appearing in "self-esteem" orthodoxy?

Wow...

Quite a remarkable op-ed in the January 25 Los Angeles Times.

Roy Baumeister is one of a multitude of researchers who for decades have pushed the idea that low self-esteem is the root of just about all of society's ills - criminal behavior, domestic violence, teen pregnancy, poor grades, drug abuse, conservatism, etc. (Just kidding on that last one, but only a little) Witness the boundless faith of John Vasconcellos, who was a California Assemblyman when self-esteem fever was beginning to spread (early 1970s):
Vasconcellos even expressed the hope that higher self-esteem would one day help balance the state budget — a prospect predicated on the observation that people with high self-regard earn more than others and therefore pay more in taxes.
It's no wonder that with this kind of potential, the educational and psychological establishment would wholeheartedly endorse and implement programs to promote high self esteem in Americans, "undeterred", Baumeister writes, "by the weakness and ambiguity of the evidence suggesting a benefit in boosting self-esteem; we all believed the data would come along in good time."

Five years ago, Baumeister and a few others were commissioned by the American Psychological Society to "wade with an open mind" through a generation of published research "to assess the benefits of high self-esteem".

What they found was the opposite of what they expected.

Low self esteem does not lead to criminal behavior; in fact, criminals tend to have high self esteem (which is part of the problem).

What about academic achievement?
High self- esteem in schoolchildren does not produce better grades. (Actually, kids with high self-esteem do have slightly better grades in most studies, but that's because getting good grades leads to higher self-esteem, not the other way around.) In fact, according to a study by Donald Forsyth at Virginia Commonwealth University, college students with mediocre grades who got regular self-esteem strokes from their professors ended up doing worse on final exams than students who were told to suck it up and try harder.
Well, what about adults and job performance?
Self-esteem doesn't make adults perform better at their jobs either. Sure, people with high self-esteem rate their own performance better — even declaring themselves smarter and more attractive than their low self-esteem peers — but neither objective tests nor impartial raters can detect any difference in the quality of work.
In general, as it relates to achievement, high self-esteem tends to lead only to self-delusion about one's abilities, while actual ability remains unchanged. It can make someone more outgoing, but, depending on one's personality, that may not be a good thing (e.g. instead of becoming more sociable, one may become a bully).

Baumeister finally cuts to the chase (emphasis added):
In short, despite the enthusiastic embrace of self-esteem, we found that it conferred only two benefits. It feels good and it supports initiative. Those are nice, but they are far less than we had once hoped for, and it is very questionable whether they justify the effort and expense that schools, parents and therapists have put into raising self-esteem.
It's remarkable enough that somebody did this research. It's even more remarkable that the researchers were honest about what they found, given the howls of outrage that are surely coming from the entrenched interests in the education and psychology industries who just removed these guys from their Christmas holiday card lists.

What's most remarkable of all, though, is that Baumeister follows the data to the logical conclusion (emphasis added):
After all these years, I'm sorry to say, my recommendation is this: Forget about self-esteem and concentrate more on self-control and self-discipline.

Recent work suggests this would be good for the individual and good for society — and might even be able to fill some of those promises that self-esteem once made but could not keep.
Wow...

Look for the educational establishment to embrace Baumeister's recommendation eagerly, possibly as early as next century.

By the way, in 2002 Psychology Today reported on a "controversial" British study which echoes many of the findings of Baumeister & co.:
People with high self-esteem may be more of a threat to society than those with a lower sense of self-worth, according to a controversial 100-page report. Nicholas Emler, Ph.D., a social psychologist at the London School of Economics, found that people with high self-esteem are more likely to be racist, violent and criminal. Low self-esteem increases the risk of eating disorders, suicide and depression, but it is not a factor in delinquency or substance abuse, according to Emler.
Wow...

5 comments:

texasbug said...

Wow is right. Thanks for screwing up a couple of generations of American kids with your un-proven psychobabble.

Hopefully now we can return to what we know works: discipline and responsibility for your own actions.

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
texasbug said...

Uh-oh, what did I miss? If it had to be deleted it must've been over the top.

Tim said...

Nothing big.... Just somebody spamming about their own blog. I might have let it go, if that blog had had anything whatsoever to do with the blog entry, but it didn't.

Anonymous said...

Well, it seems I have the same response as you do. Good post. I'm actually about done reading a book by two amazing authors (Sally Satel, M.D. & Christina Hoff Sommers) entitled One Nation Under Therapy. It is one of the better book I've ever read and may have the pleasure of reading for some time to come. It is full of well cited facts, ~80 pages of notes and a good index. It should be considered a mandatory factual reference and historical guide for the intellectual conservative.
I was making this point to a college teacher today when he gave (horrible) quotations instead of definitions for the what "self-esteem means". Further along in the discussion, I needed to make the points about what we're learning being unproven, irresponsible to teach in this day in age and, more to the point, highly likely to be a horrible benchmark for humans. Self-esteem tells me nothing about motive or reason for their belief in their high worthiness. It certainly is likely that a criminal requires an inflated and screwed sense of "self-worth" when they decide they can take the life of someone by cold blooded murder or take what isn't theirs by robbing another of property or even virginity in the case of rape etc. etc.
I intend to have some copies of studies and the like for presentation if I wish to share this wisdom tomorrow. Anyways, thanks the reference to the 2002 Psychology Today report. I'll be sure to read that (if I haven't already read that one).