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The concept of self-fulfilling prophecy
The concept of self-fulfilling
prophecy was defined by Wool folk, A. (2013:538) as a groundless expectation
that is confirmed because it has been expected. It is a tendency for our
expectation to foster the behaviour that is consistent with our expectation.
Robert Merton is credited for coining the term and formalizing its structure and consequences. Robert K. Merton, born as Meyer Robert Schkolnick, was an American Sociologist, born on the 4th of July, 1910 in Philadelphia USA. He changed his name to Robert K. Merton which evolved out of a teenage career as an amateur magician. He went to South Philadelphia High School, then Temple University. He taught at universities such as Harvard, Temple, Tulane and many others. He spent most of his career teaching at Columbia University, where he attained the rank of University Professor.
He was named the university’s highest academic rank.
Merton died on the 23rd of Feb. 2003 in New York at the age of 92. He developed
notable concepts such as unintended consequences, the
reference group, etc. but perhaps he is best known for having created the terms
‘Role
Model’ and ‘Self-Fulfilling Prophecy”. Merton (1968) defines it with an
example and said ‘when Maria falsely believes her marriage will fail her fears
of such failure actually cause the marriage to fail.’ The self-fulfilling prophecy is, in the beginning, a false
definition of the situation evoking a new behaviour which makes the original
false conception come true.
Merton’s
concept of the self-fulfilling prophecy stems from the Thomas theorem, which
states that ‘if men define situations as
real, they are real in their consequences’. According to the theorem,
people react not only to the situations they are in, but also and often
primarily, to the way they perceive the situations and to the meaning they
assign to these perceptions. Therefore, the behaviour is determined in part by
their perception and the meaning they ascribe to the situations they are in,
rather than the situations themselves. Once people convince themselves that a
situation really has a certain meaning, regardless of whether it actually does,
they will take real actions in consequence.
Merton
applied the concept to a social phenomenon where he conceives of a bank which
becomes insolvent as a result of a rumour that it was insolvent. The bank was
not insolvent but the rumour of insolvency caused a sudden demand of
withdrawals by too many customers, causing the bank to become insolvent and
declare bankruptcy. Merton concludes that public definitions of a situation
(prophecies or predictions) become an integral part of the situation and thus
affect subsequent developments. The rumoured insolvency of the bank did affect
the actual outcome. The prophecy of collapse led to its own fulfilment.
(Wikipedia)
Self-fulfilling
prophecy is usually considered negative, but it can also be positive. When it
is positive, it is called the Pygmalion effect. An example of the Pygmalion effect is
demonstrated in that classic study conducted by Rosenthal and Jacobson, to
demonstrate the power of expectations to create reality. The teachers were told
falsely that the predictions had been determined by testing done earlier that
year. The teachers’ expectations for those randomly chosen students caused them
to treat them (students) differently, providing better and more feedback,
asking more questions etc. and this resulted in better academic performance,
thus fulfilling the prophecy of academic excellence that was made. So this is
the Pygmalion effect because the self-fulfilling prophecy was positive.
When
we experience a self-fulfilling prophecy, we are experiencing a cognitive error. Cognitive error is when our mind
convinces us of something that is not actually true. We assume that something
will happen, and when it does, we assume we were right, but we do not attribute
the result to our behaviour which is what actually caused that something to
happen.
The term expectations refer
to strong beliefs that something will happen or will be the case. Sustaining expectation effect is the maintaining of a student’s
performance at a certain level as teachers do not recognise improvements.
Applications of self-fulfilling prophecy
Self-fulfilling prophecy has been
applied in many disciplines outside the classroom, for example in sports, in
literature, in the European fairy tales and many more.
The Law of Attraction, the newest thought, is another
typical example of self-fulfilling prophecy. It is the name given to the belief
that ‘like attracts like’ and that by focusing on positive or negative
thoughts, one can bring about positive or negative results. According to this
law the beliefs in mind affect someone’s intentions which make the expected
results happen.
Narrowing the concept to the
classroom,
two types of expectation effects can be observed.
·
The
first one is where the teacher’s beliefs about the students’ abilities have no
basis but the students’ behaviour comes to match the initially inaccurate
expectation such as in the study conducted by Rosenthal and Jacobson.
·
The
second kind of expectation effect occurs when the teachers are fairly accurate
in their initial reading of students’ abilities and respond to students
appropriately, for example the teacher can observe the behaviour of a student
at the beginning of the school term and through that observation the teacher
can form correct expectations which might come to fruition by the end of the
term.
However, the problem comes when the ‘sustaining expectation effect’ falls
into place, where students show some improvement but the teachers do not change
their expectations to take account of the improvement. This, as already
mentioned, is the sustaining expectations effects. Some students are more
likely than others to be recipients of sustaining expectations. For example withdrawn
children provide little information about themselves, so teachers may sustain
their expectations about these children for lack of new in information
Sources of teachers’ Expectations
Teachers form expectations from
various sources. These sources may include
· intelligence test scores. If these
test scores are not interpreted correctly, the teachers may form wrong
expectations.
· Gender is another source of
teacher expectation. The teacher may assume more problems for boys and higher
academic achievement for girls.
·
Notes
from previous teachers, medical or psychological reports in students’ files can
also be sources of teacher expectation.
· Prior knowledge about family
members of the student can also be a source of teacher expectation.
· Appearance is another source of
expectation. The teacher may have higher expectations for attractive students
and low expectations for unattractive ones.
·
Previous
achievements of the student can also be a source.
· Socioeconomic status is another
source. Research has shown that self-fulfilling prophecy tends to be stronger
for students from low socioeconomic status.
·
Race
and Ethnicity, and the actual behaviour of the student can make the teacher
form expectations.
· Teachers can form expectations basing on the student’s after-school activities. They tend to hold high expectations for students who participate in extracurricular activities than for those that do nothing after school. Some teachers hold expectations at the class level.
Effects of teachers’ expectations on learners’ performance
Even though teacher expectations
can affect student achievement, the effects are modest on average and tend to
go away over the years. The low-expectation students can
actually reject those expectations and convince the teachers that their
expectations are wrong by producing quality work or behaving differently.
It has been observed that the effects
of expectations depend on the age of the students. The younger students are
more susceptible while the older students are susceptible to the sustaining
expectations.
It also depends on how differently
the teacher treats the high and low-expectation students. Basing on the
expectations, some teachers may use different instructional strategies and also
have different relationships with students.
Self-fulfilling prophecy as already mentioned is a process by which one's
expectations about another person eventually lead the other person to behave
in ways that confirm these expectations.
There are four steps to
self-fulfilling prophecy.
· The first step; the perceiver has
expectations about how the target will behave.
· Second step; the perceiver then
behaves in a way that is likely to elicit the expected target behaviour.
· The third step; the target indeed
behaves in a way that confirms the perceiver’s expectations.
·
And
finally the fourth step, the perceiver sees the predicted behaviour.
The following is an example to
illustrate the above. A teacher who thinks that a student in his class is
gifted may ask the student more challenging questions and praise the student
than the other students in the class. This may result in the student achieving
better grades than the other students in the class.
Similarly your professor expects
you to do well and she spends extra time with you preparing for the exam, so
you get an ‘A’.
Another example outside the
classroom; a coach expects his freshmen to be uncoordinated and unskilled, so
he does not play them often and when he does they are ‘rusty’ and do not
perform well, thus fulfilling his expectations of ‘uncoordinated and unskilled’.
Some teachers show their
expectations as they are teaching. For example they would divide the students
into ability groups and assign work to both groups. To the low achieving group,
group ‘B’, the teacher passes remarks like, ‘group B will have difficulties
with this task’. With such remarks the teacher is actually telling group B that
they are incapable and expects them not to do well.
While for group A, the high
expectation students, some activities may become inappropriate and boring
especially when they are ready for more challenging work but the teacher will
not give them an opportunity to try it because she or he thinks they cannot
handle it. In both cases, the teacher makes her or his expectations clear, thus
the low expectations and the sustaining expectations respectively.
Teacher-student interactions
affect the students greatly. Students who are expected to achieve tend to be
asked more and harder questions. They are given more chances and a longer time
to respond. They are interrupted less often than students who are expected to
do poorly.
Some expectations are positive
while others are negative. Negative teacher expectation can be very detrimental
to the students. So to avoid the negative effects of teacher expectations,
Woolfolk (2013:540) indicate that the teachers could apply the following
measures;
·
Use
information about students from tests, cumulative folders, and other teachers
very carefully. For examples they must avoid reading folders early in the year,
be critical and objective about the reports they hear from other teachers and
be flexible in their expectations for a student’s label or else the judgment
might be wrong.
·
The
teachers must be flexible in their use of grouping strategies. Review of students’
work must be done often and experiment with new groupings, using different
groups for different subjects and using mixed-ability groups for different
subjects.
·
It
is also important that the teachers provide both challenge and support. High
expectations must come with academic and emotional support for students’
struggles because holding high standards without providing a warm environment
is merely harsh. A warm environment without high standards lacks 'backbone'.
·
Teachers
must be especially careful about how they respond to low-achieving students
during class discussion. For example give prompts, cues and enough time to
answer. Give ample praise for good answers. Call on them as often as high
achievers.
·
They
must be cautious with the material they use materials ensure that it shows a
wide range of ethnic groups.
·
They
should ensure that their teaching does not reflect racial, ethnic or sexual
stereotypes or prejudice. For example use a checking system to be sure they
call on and include all students. Monitor the content of the tasks they assign.
Do boys get the hard math problems to work at the board? Do they avoid having
students with limited English give oral presentation?
·
The
teachers must be fair in evaluation and disciplinary procedures. For example
make sure equal offenses receive equal punishment and also try to grade student
work without knowing the identity of the student.
·
Communicate
to all students that you believe they can learn and mean it. For example return
papers that do not meet standards with specific suggestions for improvements.
If students do not have the answers immediately, wait, probe and then help them
think through an answer.
·
Involve
all students in learning tasks and in privileges. For example use some system
to make sure you give each student practice in reading, speaking and answering
questions. Keep track of who gets to do what job. Are some students always on
the list, whereas others seldom make it?
·
Teachers
must monitor their nonverbal behaviour. For example do you lean away or stand
farther away from some students? Do some students get smiles when they approach
their desk, whereas others get only frowns? Does the tone of voice vary with
different students?
The above measures could help
teachers avoid the negative effects of teacher expectations and treat all the
students fairly. Differences in treatment towards low-expectation students may
make the students behave accordingly, fulfilling the teachers' predictions or
staying at an expected level of achievement.
We can think of self-fulfilling
prophecy as a circular pattern in the sense that our actions towards others
will impact their beliefs about us, which dictates or causes their actions
towards us, which then reinforces our beliefs about ourselves. This in turn
influences our actions towards others, which brings us back to the beginning of
the cycle. This pattern can be negative but it can also be positive.
Merton concluded that the only way
to break the cycle of self-fulfilling prophecy is by redefining the
propositions on which its false assumptions are originally based.
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