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Explore the influence of belief, socialization, and criticism in projects and everyday life. Discover how rationalization affects learning, performance, and societal norms. Challenge biases and deflect criticism to foster growth and adaptability.
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Class discussion Benito Arruñada
Applications to projects? • Ideas & beliefs • Career • Expectations • Women & men • Contracting financial services • Reforming public services • Reputation of business • Online universities • Institutional reform
Which sport is tougher? • Psychologically? • In which is more painful to lose? • Chess, why? • Because there are not referees • What’s the moral?
Are smarter, better-educated individuals better at avoiding the traps of unreasonable beliefs? • The power of rationalization • Individual examples: perhaps the most prominent, on our own performance: examples? E.g., next slide? • The power of socialization • Social examples: collective killings (Nazi Germany) and suicides (from Numantia to Jonestwon) • How do we react when friends who stop believing / start thinking differently? • Big risk: we all suffer it… in different areas • How to cure or prevent? I.e., how to grow up from beliefs into ideas? • Diverse socialization: How homogenous are our groups? • Dilute stereotypes by knowing different persons, groups
Example • How to calibrate accusations that a teacher • “constantly despites students”? (E.g., “crosses the line of critique into scorn, jibe, sarcasm”) • Hypotheses—how to test, verify? • Teacher does despise students • Students in denial rationalize their own failures • What are the effects of soft versus clear criticism? Do we prefer to be told we do well even we do not? Have we? • ***** Application to course projects *****
Deflecting hard questions • Proposal: • “Identify the particular challenges of men and women in pursuing their professional careers” • Project: • Emphasis on how the environment must or can be changed • Triple deflection: • Only women • Changed to make our lives easier • Avoid hard personal questions • Risk: work hard self-justifyng
Deflecting hard questions • Proposal: • “think strategically about professional career development”, “identify challenges from the environment, assets and possible deficits in emotional intelligence or technical competencies” • Project: • “How firms must adapt to young grads’ emotions” • Example: “Puppies’ rebellion” (ES) http://ow.ly/kXRdH —any changes since 2007?
Trained to deflect criticism? • The “best educated generation” ever: • myth or reality? • Averages and statistical distributions • Quantity and quality: intangibles • Education = aptitude + “attitude” • Aptitude: knowledge, general abilities, etc. • “Attitude”—crucially: ability to productively accept criticism
How do we react to criticism? • Defensively: taking it as personal attack • Rationalization: producing excuses • Why do brilliant people often under-perform? Use their higher mental power to produce better excuses • Advice: • No excuses: your default should be “the critique is right, in some way”, and you must discover that way • Take critiques as signals of failure, not as solutions: • e.g., in correcting texts, teachers shouldn’t provide alternatives but just mark mistakes. When seen that the alternative is worse, students tempted to think there was no problem • Distance yourself from your work you do not like it
Do some beliefs provide an excuse for failure? • Discrimination? • By sex, race, etc. • The best educated generation ever? • Socialism? • Any other?