At the least, it’s progress. Instead of joining other psychologists in search of the key to mental health or even the meaning of life,
Angela Duckworth has sought out the secret to success. In a sense, later
qualified, she called it “grit.”
At a time when the psycho world is prescribing warm baths of
empathy, sympathy, sentimentality and compassion we are encouraged to see
someone presenting a more manly virtue. Better yet, she shows that you do not have to be
a man to understand how the world really works.
In our feminized culture Duckworth is not alone in trying to
revive the old moral virtues. She is not alone in seeing that character
matters. But, she, along with stalwarts like the Tiger Mom, counts among the
few.
Perhaps it’s a symptom of our secularized time, but it seems
no longer to be possible to present a call to virtue without wrapping it in the
mantle of science. If grit can be measured, we can test for it. We can run
experiments about it. And we can get promotions and tenure and research grants.
So, we understand why Duckworth needed to find a new way to
market an old idea. Reviewing Duckworth’s book in Slate, Daniel Engber asks the
right questions. In the subtitle of his review he (or his editor) says:
A new
book says you need passion and perseverance to achieve your goals in work and
life. Is this a bold new idea or an old one dressed up to be the latest
self-help sensation?
And he adds:
Grit
the measure and Grit the book are clearly
triumphs of rebranding. It’s not as easy to discern whether Duckworth has
produced something more than that—a set of new and substantive ideas to match
her innovative presentation. To put this another way: Is she the Alice Waters
of psychology, the leader of a revolution, or is she the field’s Rick
Mast, more a pioneer of pretty packaging?
Duckworth has the same problem that many other psychologists
confront. She, like them, is not a moral philosopher. She is not trained in
delineating concepts, thus, her “grit” feels imprecise.
Is grit another word for perseverance and persistence? Does it
resemble conscientiousness? Duckworth says that it has to do with passion, but
the connection is far from clear. Are you more likely to persist and persevere
at work you are passionate about? Or are you more likely to be passionate at
a task you are good at?
After all, persistence is not quite the same thing as perseverance.
Any serious work ethic, of which the world has known many, prescribes both
qualities.
Stick-to-itiveness is surely a good thing, up to a point. You
build character when you are struggling against obstacles. But, obviously, this
only pertains if you are doing the right thing. And science does not really
tell us how to differentiate right from wrong.
Other psychologists have touted the importance of
conscientiousness, but it is not the same as perseverance. Conscientiousness implies
an attention to detail, but it also contains a moral dimension: being
conscientious implies doing the right thing.
You can certainly persist and be passionate about doing the
wrong thing. People who refuse to accept the verdict of reality, the verdict
that tells them that they have no talent for playing the violin, might well
persist passionately in their violin playing. Eliminating the moral dimension
in favor of more scientific measurement makes the concept that much more
difficult to apply.
Also, as Engber points out, good character requires a number
of different virtues:
To
excel across the board, teens must have the social skills to forge
relationships with both their teachers and their peers, and their focus must be
balanced across many different kinds of challenges.
To excel one needs also to respect authority, whether the
authority of parents or that of teachers. One also needs to develop good manners,
good conduct and good behavior… qualities that are essential to getting along
with others. And Engber also points to the research that has shown the value of
self-control and self-discipline.
And then there is the importance of raw, natural talent. In
studying student success, researchers have found that IQ matters more than
grit, perseverance, persistence and the rest. If you do not have the talent,
you cannot grow it. You would do better to try to discover where your talent
lies.
Duckworth is aware of these aspects of the problem. But she
takes it a step further. Engber summarizes:
But
that’s only half of Duckworth’s argument. It’s one thing to argue that grit
matters more than talent or—more accurately—that your personality helps
determine your success. Duckworth goes much further, asserting that you can change your personality and
learn to “grow your grit.”
Here Engber gets slightly confused. Good character is not a
personality trait. Your personality might make you cheerful or taciturn; but
neither quality makes for good or bad character. The latter concerns how you
conduct yourself, not the persona you put on to entertain the masses.
Good character requires more than grit. Surely, the Tiger
Mom wanted her children to learn the virtue of perseverance, but she also
forbade them the indulgence of many activities that American children routinely
enjoy. Culture matters here, and American culture emphasizes
self-actualization, emotional serenity and mental health… more than it seeks to
produce children with good character.
As for academic success, Engber offers some suggestions of
his own:
It may
even be the case that a child’s personality is no more (or less) amenable to
change than his basic cognitive skills. That is to say, we might do just as
well (or poorly) at helping kids to thrive if we tried to help them grow their
genius, not their grit.
Surely, this is a good idea, but a child also needs to
discover where his genius lies. It might lie in language skills; it might lie
in math; it might lie in basketball. No one should assume that children are
equally proficient at everything.
Engber recommends that if we want children to improve their
grades, we should not be teaching them an abstract virtue, which is poorly
defined in the best of cases, but to focus on study skills:
Even
better, we could focus on more specific skills that have a clear relationship
to student grades. Why not try to foster better
study habits in our kids or teach them tricks for improving their
attendance? Those aren’t big book tour–ready concepts, but they’ve been shown
to have effects. If Duckworth’s book can tell us
anything at all, it’s that we shouldn’t lose our focus every time we come
across a new idea in shiny packaging. It might be better if we persevered and
stuck to things that work.
True enough, but there is nothing about grit that precludes
teaching children to acquire good study skills.
Then Engber offers a caveat. Upon discovering (by taking a psycho test) that he lacks the
required amount of grittiness, he questions its value. And yet, his essay, if I
may say so, shows a conscientious concern for thoroughness. He may not have a lot of grit but Engber has done his homework.
Apparently, he believes that grit feels too much like a
manly virtue. After all, Duckworth had discovered the virtue of grit while observing
incoming cadets at West Point.
Engber is less convinced:
The NFL
sells itself on manly virtues: fighting through adversity, getting knocked down
and getting up again, leading with the head, playing through your injuries,
giving up your body for the game. That sounds a lot like grit—but is it good?
Yes, it is good. It is good if you want to compete in the
NFL or on the battlefield. In any competitive endeavor you will only succeed by
being purposeful. As it happens, by the time anyone is playing in the NFL or is
attending West Point, his ability and his talent has already been fully recognized.
Strangely enough Engber seems to believe that his individual
case and condition should provide an argument against grit. He does not see that
grit involves cooperation, working with others, getting along with others, and
competing against others. It does not value anecdotal evidence and individual
cases. And it does not fall into the trap of so much modern therapy and allow
people to believe that they need to develop their unique individuality…
regardless of how well or poorly they do in competition.
I've heard the term use in sports, and in part what I think it means is putting yourself out there, going beyond your comfort zone, and being willing to fail over and over until you find what failing is trying to teach you.
ReplyDeleteTrue grit isn't about being the best - The best athletes can rest on their laurels, the best at anything can get sloppy, if his only motivation is to win.
And that brings me to Trump who boasts "We will have so much winning if I get elected that you may get bored with the winning."
Does that sound like someone who has true grit? Bullies don't need true grit because they know how to cheat, how to break all the rules that everyone else has to follow, because he's too good for the rules, and why tie your hands behind your back just to play fair? Winners don't play fair. Winning is what's important, being the best is what's important, having no accountability to anyone who your actions harm is winning. And you don't need true grid for that.
And in contrast, we can consider that Hillary Clinton has true grit. Consider her answer to a young man in Iowa who said “I’ve heard quite a few people my age that think you’re dishonest”
And what did Hillary do with this assertion? She said:
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I've been around a long time. People have thrown all kinds of things at me, and you know, I can't keep up with it. I just keep going forward. They fall by the wayside, they come up with these outlandish things, they make these charges... I just keep going forward because there's nothing to it. They throw all these stuff at me, and I'm still standing.
...
So, you got to keep going, you can't give up, you can never get knocked off course. That's my hope for you and for all the young people who are getting involved this first time. Don't get discouraged. It's hard. If it were easy, hey, there wouldn't be any contest. But it's not easy. There are very different visions, different values, different forces at work, and you have to have somebody who is a proven, proven fighter. Somebody who has taken them on, and won, and kept going and will do that as President. That's why I hope, you'll reconsider.
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That's not a bad attempt at true grit and it would be laughable to imagine Trump give an answer like that.
Of course Stuart reminds us, true grit doesn't matter if you don't have good character, and refusing to leave your husband over affairs is dishonest, because she's not like Tammy Wynette, be the little woman who who stands her man. She has unladylike ambition to make a difference despite mistakes and the bad decisions of others. We can hate her for that strength to move forward, for not being shamed into submission.
The inconvenient think about public figures is that we can start with people we don't like for whatever reason, and cherry pick reasons to confirm our biases, and we can start with people we want to like, and cherry pick reasons for that too. And then we can all use our confirmation bias, and continue only seeing what confirms what we want to be true, while objectively we're just fooling ourselves in both cases. What humility might say is "We really are not in a good position to judge public figure's character, however much pundits say otherwise."
My grandmother had a quote "Right and wrong is in the conscience, not in the public eye."
So the only person we can really judge honestly is ourselves, and that's the person we're most loathe to look at objectively, because we might not like what we see.
But I do imagine a person with true grit knows failure may be where they are least expect it, and a false-self image can lead to disaster.
So they'd better learn how to step back from ego and say "What do I look like from the outside?" or "How would I judge myself as someone else?" And if they don't like the answer, they can do something about it. They'll still fail, but they'll be ready with honest reasons.
Thank you for the refreshing temperance of character in all this. Character is something you build. It's you versus you. It's constructive, and it takes a lifetime.
ReplyDeletep.s. I see David Brooks wroate about Duckworth's new book today also:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/10/opinion/putting-grit-in-its-place.html
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Angela Duckworth of the University of Pennsylvania is the researcher most associated with the study and popularization of grit. And yet what I like about her new book, “Grit,” is the way she is pulling us away from the narrow, joyless intonations of that word, and pointing us beyond the way many schools are now teaching it.
...And yet Duckworth notes that moral purpose also contributes to grit. People who are motivated more by altruism than personal pleasure score higher on grit scales. She also notes that having a hopeful temperament contributes to perseverance.
Most important, she notes that the quality of our longing matters. Gritty people are resilient and hard working, sure. But they also, she writes, know in a very, very deep way what it is they want.
... I don’t know about you, but I’m really bad at being self-disciplined about things I don’t care about. For me, and I suspect for many, hard work and resilience can only happen when there is a strong desire. Grit is thus downstream from longing. People need a powerful why if they are going to be able to endure any how.
Duckworth herself has a very clear telos. As she defines it, “Use psychological science to help kids thrive.” Throughout her book, you can feel her passion for her field and see how gritty she has been in pursuing her end.
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His article starts about the Grade-point-average as an external motivator, and that can create a limited initiative when the external pressures are lifted. His article ends with a suggestion that finding worthy passions contain a greater calling and it could sound good, but I understand why we resist.
We go testing-crazy in schools because we're spending tens of billiions of dollars every year on education, and the stakes seem too high if we don't have immediate feedback of what success looks like. And GPA, however useless for life, it might be a useful starting point for success, a floor which keeps the attention, even by fear of failing.
What's wrong with GPA isn't its existence, but its reduction - its suggestion of what perfection looks like, and that straight A's are worth sacrificing everything else to achieve.
It was probably my approach in college to set limits on study hours, and if I didn't feel like studying the task at hand, I'd read ahead, or put more effort in classes I liked better, and sacrificed my 4.0 GPA for a love of learning, and a faith I can learn things along the way when I need them, as long as I have some idea what exists, and where to look for answers.
Oh. Great. David Brooks. Moving.
ReplyDelete