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Viewpoint: Overinflation
Too much
self-esteem can
lead to rude awakenings
by John
Perricone |
Reprinted from the Press & Sun
Bulletin Newspaper
February 18, 2009 |
After 26 years in the classroom, I am
convinced that one of the most misconstrued and abused movements in
education spanning the last three decades has been the so-called
"self-esteem" movement.
The assumption fueling this cause was
the belief that high self-esteem would be the great innoculator
protecting us from many of the social maladies plaguing our society.
Sadly, research has demonstrated that untold numbers of inmates
currently incarcerated in our nation's prisons score very high on
"self-esteem" tests. In a recent interview, Eric Menendez
stated that he felt very good about himself. I'm sure his parents would
be so proud of him had he not bludgeoned them to death.
Though I think it's safe to assume that
every impassioned educator would agree that self-esteem is indispensable
to one's psychological development, the question of what self-esteem
actually is and how one develops it is still a mystery that has, in my
humble opinion, sadly translated to an epidemic of under-achievement and
in many cases the delusion of "false confidence."
One only has to glimpse a few episodes
of "American Idol" to see what happens when young people who
are clearly lacking in singing ability are forced to confront the
reality of what they do not possess. To maintain some modicum of
self-respect in the face of their thwarted dreams, they usually choose
one of two options - they dismiss the judges as incompetent imbeciles,
or they leave the stage in tears, crushed by the knowledge that they are
not the singer that they thought they were.
I remember sitting with my sister (who
has a beautiful singing voice) several years ago in a high school
auditorium and we were both gripping our armrests, white-knuckled, as a
young woman gave her senior voice recital. There is no easy way to say
this other than to state that it was excruciatingly painful to endure
these dissonant notes juxtaposed to the knowledge that it was her
lifelong dream to one day sing at the Metropolitan Opera.
The questions that were forced to my
consciousness that night (which I believe have applications to all of us
who love our students and who want more than anything to see them
fulfill their destinies) were, how did she get there? Did teachers
really help her in encouraging her along a path where clearly her
talents did not lie?
(I learned a long time ago that, given
my short stature, I was not going to play for the Knicks and this
allowed me to get on with what my life was going to be about.)
Perhaps most important, where is the
line for educators distinguishing healthy encouragement of a student's
dreams and falsely guiding them toward delusional beliefs that will
ultimately be destructive - all in the interest of ensuring that we do
not damage their delicate psyches and self-esteem?
I couldn't help but think: Where will
this young woman's "self-esteem" be when she encounters the
Simon Colwells of the world and brutal reality hits the fan? Will she be
grateful to her former teachers who nurtured her beliefs about her
abilities? (I remember seeing a third-grader walking down the hallway of
his school and a teacher saying to him as he passed by "Excellent
walking, Billy!" My immediate thought was "What's next,
trophies for breathing?")
Though I have read countless books and
attended a seemingly endless number of workshops on this elusive topic
(much of which I believe were exercises in psychobable), some of the
most poignant work I have read that gives definitive focus and insight
into what self-esteem is and how one might actually go about developing
it is the work of psychologist Nathaniel Brandon.
He suggests that self-esteem has two
essential components:
1. Self-efficacy - the confidence
in the ability to cope with life's challenges. Self-efficacy leads to a
sense of control over one's life.
2. Self-respect - experiencing
oneself as deserving of happiness, achievement, and love. Self-respect
makes possible a sense of community with others.
Brandon is the first to admit that the
strengthening of self- esteem is not a quick or easy process, and that
its attainment is the consequence of following fundamental internal
practices that require ongoing commitment to self-examination. He calls
these practices the Six Pillars of Self-Esteem:
* Living consciously: Paying attention
to information and feedback about needs and goals. Facing facts that may
be uncomfortable or threatening.
Refusing to wander through life in a self-induced fog.
* Self-acceptance: Being willing to
experience whatever we truly think, feel, or do, even if we don't always
like it. Facing our mistakes and learning
from them.
* Self-responsibility: Establishing a
sense of control over our lives by realizing that we are responsible for
our choices and actions at every level - the
achievement of our goals, our happiness, our values.
* Self-assertiveness: The willingness to
express appropriately our thoughts, values, and feelings - to stand up
for ourselves. To speak and act from
our deepest convictions.
* Living purposefully: Setting realistic
goals (given an honest awareness of our strengths and weaknesses) and
working to achieve them, rather than
living at the mercy of chance and outside forces.
Developing self-discipline.
* Integrity: The integration of our
behavior with our ideals, convictions, standards and beliefs - acting in
congruence with what we truly believe is right.
I believe that these principles warrant
thoughtful reflection by all of us in education who believe that it is
our mission to help our students live their lives at the fullest and
deepest expression of their humanity.
I have learned in my career that our
students are often much more resilient than we give them credit for, and
that more than anything, they appreciate our honesty. Young people are
great "crap" detectors, and if we are truly interested in
helping them grow, that is the last thing we should be shoveling.
Below
is an editorial that was printed 2-26-09 in the Press & Sun
Bulletin Newspaper.
Writer on target
John Perricone's essay on the "self-esteem" movement (Feb. 18) is perfect: so clearly reasoned, so convincingly presented, that it should become the basis of a required course for aspiring teachers and a year of in-service training for those now practicing that profession.
It seems to me that this misunderstood and misapplied doctrine has led us to the present moral and economic meltdown, featuring irresponsibility, litigiousness and entitlement attitudes. For example, if I am so good, then I can do as I please. If things go wrong, then someone else must be to blame, and someone (read government) must pay the price for me.
Bravo, John Perricone.
Eileen Keating
Binghamton
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