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Punished
by Rewards
- Alfie
Kohn
The Trouble with Gold Stars, Incentive
Plans, A's, Praise, and Other Bribes
1999
edition features a new Afterword by the
author
From the book flap:
Our
basic strategy for raising children,
teaching students, and managing workers
can be summarized in six words: Do this
and you'll get that. We dangle goodies (from
candy bars to sales commissions) in
front of people in much the same way
that we train the family pet. In this
groundbreaking book, Alfie Kohn shows
that while manipulating people with
incentives seems to work in the short
run, it is a strategy that ultimately
fails and even does lasting harm. Our
workplaces and classrooms will continue
to decline, he argues, until we begin to
question our reliance on a theory of
motivation derived from laboratory
animals.
Drawing from hundreds of studies, Kohn
demonstrates that people actually do
inferior work when they are enticed with
money, grades, or other incentives.
Programs that use rewards to change
people's behavior are similarly
ineffective over the long run. Promising
goodies to children for good behavior
can never produce anything more than
temporary obedience. In fact, the more
we use artificial inducements to
motivate people, the more they lose
interest in what we're bribing them to
do. Rewards turn play into work, and
work into drudgery.
Step by step, Kohn marshals research and
logic to prove that pay-for-performance
plans cannot work; the more an
organization relies on incentives, the
worse things get. Parents and teachers
who care about helping students to learn,
meanwhile, should be doing everything
possible to help them forget that grades
exist. Even praise can become a verbal
bribe that gets kids hooked on our
approval.
Rewards and punishments are just two
sides of the same coin -- and the coin
doesn't buy very much. What is needed,
Kohn explains, is an alternative to both
ways of controlling people.
The final chapters offer a practical set
of strategies for parents, teachers, and
managers that move beyond the use of
carrots or sticks. Seasoned with humor
and familiar examples, Punished by
Rewards presents an argument that is
unsettling to hear but impossible to
dismiss.
Klik
hier voor het artikel "For the best
results, forget the bonus" van Alfie
Kohn. |