mirror of
https://git.savannah.gnu.org/git/emacs.git
synced 2024-12-24 10:38:38 +00:00
177 lines
8.6 KiB
Plaintext
177 lines
8.6 KiB
Plaintext
STUDIES FIND REWARD OFTEN NO MOTIVATOR
|
|
|
|
Creativity and intrinsic interest diminish if task is done for gain
|
|
|
|
By Alfie Kohn
|
|
Special to the Boston Globe
|
|
[reprinted with permission of the author
|
|
from the Monday 19 January 1987 Boston Globe]
|
|
|
|
In the laboratory, rats get Rice Krispies. In the classroom the top
|
|
students get A's, and in the factory or office the best workers get
|
|
raises. It's an article of faith for most of us that rewards promote
|
|
better performance.
|
|
|
|
But a growing body of research suggests that this law is not nearly as
|
|
ironclad as was once thought. Psychologists have been finding that
|
|
rewards can lower performance levels, especially when the performance
|
|
involves creativity.
|
|
|
|
A related series of studies shows that intrinsic interest in a task -
|
|
the sense that something is worth doing for its own sake - typically
|
|
declines when someone is rewarded for doing it.
|
|
|
|
If a reward - money, awards, praise, or winning a contest - comes to
|
|
be seen as the reason one is engaging in an activity, that activity
|
|
will be viewed as less enjoyable in its own right.
|
|
|
|
With the exception of some behaviorists who doubt the very existence
|
|
of intrinsic motivation, these conclusions are now widely accepted
|
|
among psychologists. Taken together, they suggest we may unwittingly
|
|
be squelching interest and discouraging innovation among workers,
|
|
students and artists.
|
|
|
|
The recognition that rewards can have counter-productive effects is
|
|
based on a variety of studies, which have come up with such findings
|
|
as these: Young children who are rewarded for drawing are less likely
|
|
to draw on their own that are children who draw just for the fun of
|
|
it. Teenagers offered rewards for playing word games enjoy the games
|
|
less and do not do as well as those who play with no rewards.
|
|
Employees who are praised for meeting a manager's expectations suffer
|
|
a drop in motivation.
|
|
|
|
Much of the research on creativity and motivation has been performed
|
|
by Theresa Amabile, associate professor of psychology at Brandeis
|
|
University. In a paper published early last year on her most recent
|
|
study, she reported on experiments involving elementary school and
|
|
college students. Both groups were asked to make "silly" collages.
|
|
The young children were also asked to invent stories.
|
|
|
|
The least-creative projects, as rated by several teachers, were done
|
|
by those students who had contracted for rewards. "It may be that
|
|
commissioned work will, in general, be less creative than work that is
|
|
done out of pure interest," Amabile said.
|
|
|
|
In 1985, Amabile asked 72 creative writers at Brandeis and at Boston
|
|
University to write poetry. Some students then were given a list of
|
|
extrinsic (external) reasons for writing, such as impressing teachers,
|
|
making money and getting into graduate school, and were asked to think
|
|
about their own writing with respect to these reasons. Others were
|
|
given a list of intrinsic reasons: the enjoyment of playing with
|
|
words, satisfaction from self-expression, and so forth. A third group
|
|
was not given any list. All were then asked to do more writing.
|
|
|
|
The results were clear. Students given the extrinsic reasons not only
|
|
wrote less creatively than the others, as judged by 12 independent
|
|
poets, but the quality of their work dropped significantly. Rewards,
|
|
Amabile says, have this destructive effect primarily with creative
|
|
tasks, including higher-level problem-solving. "The more complex the
|
|
activity, the more it's hurt by extrinsic reward," she said.
|
|
|
|
But other research shows that artists are by no means the only ones
|
|
affected.
|
|
|
|
In one study, girls in the fifth and sixth grades tutored younger
|
|
children much less effectively if they were promised free movie
|
|
tickets for teaching well. The study, by James Gabarino, now
|
|
president of Chicago's Erikson Institute for Advanced Studies in Child
|
|
Development, showed that tutors working for the reward took longer to
|
|
communicate ideas, got frustrated more easily, and did a poorer job in
|
|
the end than those who were not rewarded.
|
|
|
|
Such findings call into question the widespread belief that money is
|
|
an effective and even necessary way to motivate people. They also
|
|
challenge the behaviorist assumption that any activity is more likely
|
|
to occur if it is rewarded. Amabile says her research "definitely
|
|
refutes the notion that creativity can be operantly conditioned."
|
|
|
|
But Kenneth McGraw, associate professor of psychology at the
|
|
University of Mississippi, cautions that this does not mean
|
|
behaviorism itself has been invalidated. "The basic principles of
|
|
reinforcement and rewards certainly work, but in a restricted context"
|
|
- restricted, that is, to tasks that are not especially interesting.
|
|
|
|
Researchers offer several explanations for their surprising findings
|
|
about rewards and performance.
|
|
|
|
First, rewards encourage people to focus narrowly on a task, to do it
|
|
as quickly as possible and to take few risks. "If they feel that
|
|
'this is something I have to get through to get the prize,' they're
|
|
going to be less creative," Amabile said.
|
|
|
|
Second, people come to see themselves as being controlled by the
|
|
reward. They feel less autonomous, and this may interfere with
|
|
performance. "To the extent one's experience of being
|
|
self-determined is limited," said Richard Ryan, associate psychology
|
|
professor at the University of Rochester, "one's creativity will be
|
|
reduced as well."
|
|
|
|
Finally, extrinsic rewards can erode intrinsic interest. People who
|
|
see themselves as working for money, approval or competitive success
|
|
find their tasks less pleasurable, and therefore do not do them as
|
|
well.
|
|
|
|
The last explanation reflects 15 years of work by Ryan's mentor at the
|
|
University of Rochester, Edward Deci. In 1971, Deci showed that
|
|
"money may work to buy off one's intrinsic motivation for an activity"
|
|
on a long-term basis. Ten years later, Deci and his colleagues
|
|
demonstrated that trying to best others has the same effect. Students
|
|
who competed to solve a puzzle quickly were less likely than those who
|
|
were not competing to keep working at it once the experiment was over.
|
|
|
|
Control plays role
|
|
|
|
There is general agreement, however, that not all rewards have the
|
|
same effect. Offering a flat fee for participating in an experiment -
|
|
similar to an hourly wage in the workplace - usually does not reduce
|
|
intrinsic motivation. It is only when the rewards are based on
|
|
performing a given task or doing a good job at it - analogous to
|
|
piece-rate payment and bonuses, respectively - that the problem
|
|
develops.
|
|
|
|
The key, then, lies in how a reward is experienced. If we come to
|
|
view ourselves as working to get something, we will no longer find
|
|
that activity worth doing in its own right.
|
|
|
|
There is an old joke that nicely illustrates the principle. An
|
|
elderly man, harassed by the taunts of neighborhood children, finally
|
|
devises a scheme. He offered to pay each child a dollar if they would
|
|
all return Tuesday and yell their insults again. They did so eagerly
|
|
and received the money, but he told them he could only pay 25 cents on
|
|
Wednesday. When they returned, insulted him again and collected their
|
|
quarters, he informed them that Thursday's rate would be just a penny.
|
|
"Forget it," they said - and never taunted him again.
|
|
|
|
Means to and end
|
|
|
|
In a 1982 study, Stanford psychologist Mark L. Lepper showed that any
|
|
task, no matter how enjoyable it once seemed, would be devalued if it
|
|
were presented as a means rather than an end. He told a group of
|
|
preschoolers they could not engage in one activity they liked until
|
|
they first took part in another. Although they had enjoyed both
|
|
activities equally, the children came to dislike the task that was a
|
|
prerequisite for the other.
|
|
|
|
It should not be surprising that when verbal feedback is experienced
|
|
as controlling, the effect on motivation can be similar to that of
|
|
payment. In a study of corporate employees, Ryan found that those who
|
|
were told, "Good, you're doing as you /should/" were "significantly
|
|
less intrinsically motivated than those who received feedback
|
|
informationally."
|
|
|
|
There's a difference, Ryan says, between saying, "I'm giving you this
|
|
reward because I recognize the value of your work" and "You're getting
|
|
this reward because you've lived up to my standards."
|
|
|
|
A different but related set of problems exists in the case of
|
|
creativity. Artists must make a living, of course, but Amabile
|
|
emphasizes that "the negative impact on creativity of working for
|
|
rewards can be minimized" by playing down the significance of these
|
|
rewards and trying not to use them in a controlling way. Creative
|
|
work, the research suggests, cannot be forced, but only allowed to
|
|
happen.
|
|
|
|
/Alfie Kohn, a Cambridge, MA writer, is the author of "No Contest: The
|
|
Case Against Competition," recently published by Houghton Mifflin Co.,
|
|
Boston, MA. ISBN 0-395-39387-6. /
|