The role of cognitive biases in the classroom Michael Mills

i once had a student that i believed had

everything going for her

she was smart dressed in stylish clothes

hung out with the popular kids

i truly valued this student she was a

talented debater and won many debate

tournaments for our school

but i secretly resented her i believed

at the time

all her successes and accomplishments

were because of her economic privilege

as a child who grew up in poverty my

beliefs were limited in thinking

that such people shouldn’t really get

credit for their accomplishments because

they already had

everything going for them and at one

point in this class this student

delivered an individual debate

performance that changed my life forever

in her closing arguments she spoke of

managing ongoing struggles

she spoke of how she had lost family

members at an early age to breast cancer

and how she had to consider herself as a

high school senior

whether she would need to get a

preemptive double mastectomy to protect

her own life

is it fair to say that we’ve all made a

hasty judgment about a student at least

once in our career

so the questions become how can we then

gain rapport with a child who sees the

world through a lens we’ve never seen

through

how do we promote a classroom that

values diversity and innovation without

honoring views that are inconsistent

with our own

or considering innovations that we think

are impossible to implement

as educators i would imagine we all like

to think we are reflective

kind and empathetic toward our students

the truth is

we all have certain barriers hardwired

in our brains that keep us from fully

empathizing with others

and connecting with them in an authentic

way

and please don’t think i’m here to

chastise anyone i i just want to use a

little brain science to highlight how we

can

as individuals be more intentionally

reflective in a way

in which we usually just stop short and

this is

essential to promoting a learning

community built on

empathy and mutual understanding which i

believe and research supports

is necessary before attempting to

transform the classroom using mobile

technology

or any other innovation although our

brains are complex and powerful

and we’re capable of amazing acts of

altruism

we’re all prone to certain innate biases

that undermine

our ability to empathize and show

compassion to others

i want to talk about some of these

biases and then offer how we can best

overcome them

and that way we can better connect with

others and emulate to our students what

it means to be

patient and understanding let’s all

agree that there are times when we get

frustrated or upset with others for

failing to live up to our expectations

or standards

this is because our brains are wired in

such a way that we often fail to

consider

circumstances that may cause a person to

act in a particular way

especially if it’s a way that’s

disagreeable to us or

something that we don’t understand so

take for instance the curse of knowledge

this is an actual phenomenon in which

educated people

end up forgetting more from our

education than others have even learned

we fail to scaffold our teaching because

we assume others have a background to

understand

so when we seemingly attempt to

encourage students through a difficult

concept by saying

oh you can do this this is easy we’re

actually highlighting this lack of

awareness

of where the student or colleague is in

the process of learning

what’s easy for us it’s the outcome of

years of practice and studying we have

to remember that

this curse our cognitive bias stands in

the way of our ability

to connect with others if we don’t adopt

a beginner’s mindset ourselves

what what kind of language does a novice

learner need to understand the concept

what are the sensitivities and

frustrations a novice learner might have

and what are the insights a novice might

actually bring to a problem

and while these questions highlight the

benefits of having a beginner’s mindset

there’s actually another significant

reason why we should step back from our

perceived authority

and our expertise about 20 years ago

researchers articulated that cognitive

bias that is all too familiar

we often consider ourselves more

knowledgeable about a topic than we

really are

this is referred to as the

dunning-kruger effect and while our

students

often suffer from this it’s really us

and our overestimation of what we think

we know

that can lead to lack of willingness to

consider information we don’t understand

that includes information that may come

from our students some of whom have

experiences and insights that are well

beyond their years

not recognizing this is referred to as

fundamental attribution error

an inclination that causes us to

immediately attribute others actions to

who they are as people

and not because of their environment but

we often don’t do the same for ourselves

when someone does something we don’t

like we we tend to assign blame to some

aspect of that person

not some factor beyond their control but

when we do something similar

we often make excuses and sometimes

rationalize our behavior

so how can we expect these students to

innovate if

they can’t expect us to be flexible and

understanding

at its core your brain wants to believe

that you’re always on the right track

the problem is that’s not always the

case and because of this

your brain is preventing you from

authentically connecting

with others the problem is that we we

have a limited or narrow view of most

topics simply because of where we live

who we hang out with what our caregivers

and community have passed on to us

and who we choose to listen to and in

an ever-shrinking world in which they’re

more and more in contact with those who

are different from us

it’s critical that we tame our instinct

to believe only what makes us

comfortable

this error in judgment is insidious

because it

acts as an impediment to our ability to

truly connect with others

to consider the perspectives of others

when those perspectives conflict with

our own

long-held beliefs and i’m telling you

these relationships with our students

matter and even after many years they

never forget how you make them feel

and how you make them feel is directly

related to how motivated they will

be to learn and to innovate

we have what it takes to put into check

the parts of our brain that may dampen

our ability to show empathy and

compassion

especially to those students who may not

have that in their lives

we owe that to our students because

being a teacher means more than share in

our mind

it means sharing our heart as well thank

you

我曾经有一个学生,我相信她的

一切都适合她

她穿着时髦的衣服很

聪明,和受欢迎的孩子一起玩

我真的很重视这个学生 她是一位

才华横溢的辩论者,并为我们学校赢得了许多辩论

比赛,

但我暗中怨恨她我

当时

我相信她所有的成功和成就

都是因为她

作为一个在贫困中长大的孩子的经济特权

在这堂课的某个时刻,这位学生进行

了一场个人辩论

表演,

在她的最后辩论中永远改变了我的生活。

她谈到了如何管理持续的斗争她谈到了她如何

在很小的时候就因乳腺癌失去了家人

,以及她如何不得不考虑 作为

一名高中生,

她是否需要

先行双乳切除术来保护

自己的生命?

坦率地说,在我们的职业生涯中,我们

都至少对一个学生做出过一次草率的判断,

所以问题变成了我们如何

才能与一个通过我们从未见过的镜头看世界的孩子建立融洽的关系

我们如何 提倡一个

重视多样性和创新的课堂,而不

尊重与我们自己不一致的观点

或考虑我们认为

作为教育工作者不可能实施的创新 我想我们都

喜欢认为

我们对学生有反思和

同情心 所有人的大脑中都有某些硬连线的障碍,这些障碍

使我们无法充分

同情他人

并以真实的方式与他们联系

,请不要以为我来这里是为了

惩罚任何人我只是想用

一点脑科学来强调我们如何

作为个人,是否可以

以一种我们通常会停下来的方式更有意识地反思,

对于促进

建立在

同理心和 m 基础上的学习社区至关重要 在尝试使用移动技术或任何其他创新来改变课堂之前,我

认为和研究支持的共同理解

是必要的,

尽管我们的

大脑复杂而强大,

并且我们能够做出惊人的利他行为,

但我们都容易产生某些先天的

偏见 破坏

我们

对他人的同情

和同情的能力

让我们都同意,有时我们会

因未能达到我们的期望或标准而对他人感到沮丧或沮丧,

这是因为我们的大脑以

这样一种方式连接,以至于我们经常无法

考虑可能导致一个人

采取行动的情况 以一种特定的方式,

特别是如果它是一种

让我们不愉快的方式或

我们不理解的东西,

例如 知识的诅咒

这是一个实际的现象,

受过教育的人

最终忘记了我们的

教育,甚至比其他人学到的还要

多 困难的

概念 说

哦,你可以做到 这很容易 我们

实际上是在强调

学生或同事在

学习的过程中缺乏意识

什么对我们来说容易 这是

多年实践和学习的结果,我们

必须记住 如果

我们自己不采用初学者的心态,我们的认知偏见

会阻碍我们

与他人联系的能力

新手学习者需要什么样的语言

来理解这个概念

新手学习者的敏感性和挫折感是什么

新手可能有什么见解,

实际上可能会给问题带来什么见解

,而这些问题突出了

好处 拥有初学者的心态

实际上还有另一个重要

原因,我们应该放弃我们

所认为的权威

和我们的专业知识 大约 20 年前,

研究人员明确表示

,过于熟悉的认知偏见,

我们通常认为自己

对某个主题的了解比我们

真正的知识还要多

这被称为

邓宁克鲁格效应,虽然我们的

学生

经常遭受这种影响,但实际上是我们自己

以及我们对我们认为自己知道的东西的高估

可能导致缺乏

考虑我们不

理解的信息的意愿,其中包括可能的信息

来自我们的学生,他们中的一些人的

经验和见解远远

超出了他们的年龄,

没有认识到这一点被称为

基本归因错误,

这种倾向导致我们

立即将他人的行为归因于

他们作为人的身份,

而不是因为他们的环境,而是

当有人做我们想做的事情时,我们通常不会为自己做同样的事情

不像我们,我们倾向于将责任归咎于

那个人的某些方面,而

不是他们无法控制的因素,但是

当我们做类似的事情时,

我们经常找借口,有时会

合理化我们的行为,

所以我们怎么能期望这些学生能够

创新呢

? 不要指望我们灵活并

从根本上理解你的大脑想要

相信你总是在正确的轨道

上问题并非总是

如此,因此

你的大脑正在阻止你

与他人真正地联系问题是 我们

对大多数话题的看法有限或狭隘,这

仅仅是因为我们住在哪里

,我们和谁一起出去玩,我们的照顾者

和社区传给我们的东西

,以及我们选择听谁的声音,以及在

一个不断缩小的世界中,他们 “我们

越来越多地与与

我们不同的人接触

,我们必须驯服我们的本能

,相信只有让我们

感到舒服的东西,

这种判断错误是阴险的,

因为它

起到了 当这些观点与我们自己长期持有的信念相冲突时,这会阻碍我们

真正与他人建立联系

以考虑他人的观点

,我告诉你,

与我们的学生的这些关系很

重要,即使多年后他们

也不会忘记你是如何 让他们感受到

以及你如何让他们感受到

他们学习和创新的

积极

性直接相关

生活中可能没有这些的学生,

我们欠我们的学生,因为

作为一名老师不仅意味着分享

我们的思想,

还意味着分享我们的心,谢谢