Study shows Grit not all it’s cracked up to be
These videos are hysterical. It is amusing to watch an animal who can’t help himself chase the shiny object. It is less amusing when it is human beings who are chasing something shiny that is not real.
In 2013, to much fanfare, the US The U.S Department of Education’s Office of Educational Technology (OET) posted a report for public comment: Promoting Grit, Tenacity, and Perseverance: Critical Factors for Success in the 21st Century. Here was this shiny moving target telling us we needed to teach and measure other, more important, things in our kids than just academics. We needed to be teaching them important “life skills” like self-control, curiosity, conscientiousness, grit and self-confidence. OET stepped in to take a look at how technology can help develop the skills of grit, tenacity, and perseverance. By giving kids tasks that were difficult, maybe even beyond their current capability, we could build up their ability to deal with frustration and failure and move into long term success. Or so the report said.
This fad was immediately so fervently embraced that teachers struggling to implement common core ELA standards were being coached to use “frustration level texts,” with students to get them to work through difficult readings. David Coleman, the lead author of the Common Core State Standards, and Timothy Shanahan, a contributing author and decorated literacy expert, “both maintained that students need to work in frustration level texts.”
Is it coincidence that this meme began appearing at about the time this philosophy was being pushed in school?
Now comes a new study by researchers at King’s College London that says “‘grit’, defined as perseverance and passion for long-term goals, adds little to the prediction of school success.”
How little, you ask?
This new study, which used a sample of 4,500 16-year-old twins*, found that aspects of personality predict around six per cent of the differences between GCSE results and, after controlling for these characteristics, grit alone only predicted 0.5 per cent of the differences between General Certificate of Secondary Education results.
Those who were following the USDED OET recommendations have gone out and purchased technology to help promote something that only predicts half a percent of K-12 education results.
Previous studies, like those cited in the OET report, suggested that grit may be cultivated and improved, whereas other factors that affect academic achievement, such as socioeconomic status and intelligence, were less malleable. This led to the concerted efforts to add or enhance grit training programs in schools. Unfortunately, as we quickly move the flashy light of science to another part of the floor, we find that DNA explains about a third of a person’s grit level and it is not nearly as malleable as first thought.Study shows Grit not all it’s cracked up to be – Missouri Education Watchdog: