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Money for Nothing
New York City has decided to offer cash rewards to
some students based on their attendance records and exam performance.
Diligent, high-achieving seventh graders will be able to earn up to $500
in a year. The plan is the brainchild of Roland G. Fryer, an economist
who has been appointed as “chief equality officer” of the city’s
Department of Education.
The assumption that underlies the project is simple:
people respond to incentives. If you want people to do something, you
have to make it worth their while. This assumption drives virtually all
of economic theory.
Sure, there are already many rewards in learning:
gaining understanding (of yourself and others), having mysterious or
unfamiliar aspects of the world opened up to you, demonstrating mastery,
satisfying curiosity, inhabiting imaginary worlds created by others, and
so on. Learning is also the route to more prosaic rewards, like getting
into good colleges and getting good jobs. But these rewards are not
doing the job. If they were, children would be doing better in school.
The logic of the plan reveals a second assumption that
economists make: the more motives the better. Give people two reasons to
do something, the thinking goes, and they will be more likely to do it,
and they’ll do it better, than if they have only one. Providing some
cash won’t disturb the other rewards of learning, rewards that are
intrinsic to the process itself. They will only provide a little boost.
Mr. Fryer’s reward scheme is intended to add incentives to the ones that
already exist.
Unfortunately, these assumptions that economists make
about human motivation, though intuitive and straightforward, are false.
In particular, the idea that adding motives always helps is false. There
are circumstances in which adding an incentive competes with other
motives and diminishes their impact. Psychologists have known this for
more than 30 years.
In one experiment, nursery school children were given
the opportunity to draw with special markers. After playing, some of the
children were given “good player” awards and others were not. Some time
later, the markers were reintroduced to the classroom. The researchers
kept track of which children used the markers, and they collected the
pictures that had been drawn. The youngsters given awards were less
likely to draw at all, and drew worse pictures, than those who were not
given the awards.
Why did this happen? Children draw because drawing is
fun and because it leads to a result: a picture. The rewards of drawing
are intrinsic to the activity itself. The “good player” award gives
children another reason to draw: to earn a reward. And it matters —
children want recognition. But the recognition undermines the fun, so
that later, in the absence of a chance to earn an award, the children
aren’t interested in drawing.
Similar results have been obtained with adults. When
you pay them for doing things they like, they come to like these
activities less and will no longer participate in them without a
financial incentive. The intrinsic satisfaction of the activities gets
“crowded out” by the extrinsic payoff.
An especially striking example of this was reported in
a study of Swiss citizens about a decade ago. Switzerland was holding a
referendum about where to put nuclear waste dumps. Researchers went
door-to-door in two Swiss cantons and asked people if they would accept
a dump in their communities. Though people thought such dumps might be
dangerous and might decrease property values, 50 percent of those who
were asked said they would accept one. People felt responsibility as
Swiss citizens. The dumps had to go somewhere, after all.
But when people were asked if they would accept a
nuclear waste dump if they were paid a substantial sum each year (equal
to about six weeks’ pay for the average worker), a remarkable thing
happened. Now, with two reasons to say yes, only about 25 percent of
respondents agreed. The offer of cash undermined the motive to be a good
citizen.
It is as if, when asked the question, people asked
themselves whether they should respond based on considerations of
self-interest or considerations of public responsibility. Half of the
people in the uncompensated condition of the study thought they should
focus on their responsibilities. But the offer of money, in effect, told
people that they should consider only their self-interest. And as it
turned out, through the lens of self-interest, even six weeks’ pay
wasn’t enough.
Obviously, the intrinsic rewards of learning aren’t
working in New York’s schools, at least not for a lot of children. It
may be that the current state of achievement is low enough that
desperate measures are called for, and it’s worth trying anything. And
we don’t know whether in this case, motives will complement or compete.
But it is plausible that when students get paid to go
to class and show up for tests, they will be even less interested in the
work than they would be if no incentives were present. If that happens,
the incentive system will make the learning problem worse in the long
run, even if it improves achievement in the short run — unless we’re
prepared to follow these children through life, giving them a pat on the
head, or an M&M or a check every time they learn something new.
Perhaps worse, the plan will distract us from
investigating a more pertinent set of questions: why don’t children get
intrinsic satisfaction from learning in school, and how can this failing
of education be fixed? Virtually all kindergartners are eager to learn.
But by fourth grade, many students need to be bribed. What makes our
schools so dystopian that they produce this powerful transformation,
almost overnight?
Barry Schwartz
2 July 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/02/opinion/02schwartz.html?_r=1&th&emc=th&oref=slogin
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