Praising children with phrases such as ‘well done darling’ may damage
their confidence, a leading psychologist has warned. Stephen Grosz claims that
comments such as ‘you’re so clever’ or ‘you’re such an artist’ could also
hinder their future performance at school. He says that such ‘empty praise’
causes children to be unhappy as they feel they cannot live up to the false
expectations. Instead he advises parents and teachers to bestow compliments
less frequently and use phrases that congratulate children for ‘trying really
hard’.
More harm than good: Praising your children can damage their confidence according to a leading psychoanalyst
Mr Grosz – who has practised as a psychoanalyst, a type of psychologist,
for 25 years – said: ‘Empty praise is as bad as thoughtless criticism – it
expresses indifference to the child’s feelings and thoughts. ‘Admiring our
children may temporarily lift our sense of self-esteem but it isn’t doing much
for a child’s sense of self.’ He also cites research showing that children who
were heavily praised were likely to perform worse at school. Psychologists from
Columbia University asked 128 pupils aged ten and 11 to solve a number of maths
problems Afterwards, some were told: ‘You did really well – you’re so clever.’ But
the researchers told the other group, ‘You did really well – you must have
tried really hard. Both groups of children were then given more difficult
questions and those who had been told they were clever did not do as well as
the others.
In fact, the researchers found they even tried to lie about their
results when asked about the experiment. Mr Grosz has written a book about
human behaviour, The Examined Life, which includes a chapter entitled How
Praise Can Cause Loss Of Confidence. He says that when collecting his daughter
from a nursery near their home in North London, he heard an assistant tell her:
‘You’ve drawn the most beautiful tree. Well done.’ Later, after she had done
another drawing, the same assistant said: ‘Wow, you really are an artist.’
In his book, Mr Grosz writes: ‘My heart sank. 'How could I explain to the nursery assistant
that I would prefer it if she didn’t praise my daughter?’ He added: ‘If you go
to the local nursery you’ll hear this kind of stuff sometimes mixed in with
teaching: ‘‘Oh, your drawing looks so like a Miro, darling’’ [the Spanish
painter and sculptor]. ‘And so you get this mix of praise and teaching. I find
it, to be blunt, aggressive. 'Because
it’s saying: I don’t want to engage with you as a person; I want to just
praise you.’ Mr Grosz believes that many adults were heavily criticised when
they were young and are now anxious to show they are different. But instead of
overpraising children, he said parents should try to build their confidence
gently. ‘Just listen to what your child wants to tell you, about what they’re
interested in and what they’re passionate about,’ he added.
Source: Daily Mail UK
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