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The Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1

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Page 1: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

The Psychology of Achievement

David MeketonDepartment of PsychologyUniversity of Pennsylvania

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Page 2: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

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Page 3: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Cookie Monster Learns to Practice Self‐Control

Page 4: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

What is Self‐Control?

The ability to voluntarily regulate thoughts, emotions, and behavior in the service of a valued goal.

VS.

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Page 5: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2
Page 6: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Questionnaire Measures of Self‐Control

• Brief Self‐Control Scale, Children’s Behavior Questionnaire …

• Inexpensive, quick, and reliable, but…– Response bias– Social desirability bias– Memory recall limitations– Acquiescence bias– Halo effects– And so forth…

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Page 7: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Self‐control: resisting the “hourly temptations”

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Page 8: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

8

8- 1________

72-6-8

Do mathPlay game

or watch movie

Play gameor

watch movie

Do math

Page 9: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Will Power“I consider myself to be of basically average talent…”

“The key to life is on a treadmill…When I say I am going to run three miles, I run five. With that mentality, it is actually difficult to lose.”

– Will Smith

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Page 10: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

High vs. Moderate Challenges

“People seem to have the idea that the way to eminence is one of great self‐denial, from which there are hourly temptations to diverge…This is true enough of the great majority of men, but it is simply not true of the generality of those who have gained great reputations.”

--Galton (1892)

Page 11: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

• Cox (1926) common traits of 300 geniuses– Tendency not to abandon tasks in the face of obstacles.Perseverance, tenacity, doggedness.

– Tendency not to abandon tasks from mere changeability. Not seeking something fresh because of novelty. Not “looking for a change.”

• Willingham (1985)– Follow‐through, “evidence of purposeful, continuous commitment to certain types of activities versus sporadic efforts in diverse areas” was the best predictor of success in college other than SAT and high school rank

Page 12: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Grit ScalePassion for long-term goals

New ideas and new projects sometimes distract me from previous ones. *I become interested in new pursuits every few months. *My interests change from year to year.*I have been obsessed with a certain idea or project for a short time but later lost interest.*I often set a goal but later choose to pursue a different one.*I have difficulty maintaining my focus on projects that take more than a few months to

complete.*Perseverance for long-term goals

I have overcome setbacks to conquer an important challenge.I have achieved a goal that took years of work.I am diligent.Setbacks don’t discourage me.I finish whatever I begin.I am a hard worker.

Page 13: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Skill as a function of deliberate practice

13

Skill

Age (years)Figure adapted with permission from “The scientific study of expert levels of performance” by K.A. Ericsson, p. 90, © 1998

Page 14: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

National Spelling Bee

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Page 15: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Deliberate practice is hard…and not that fun

15

3.5

4.5

5.5

6.5

7.5

DeliberatePractice

Testing Verbal LeisureActivities

Spelling Bee Preparation

Enjoyment

 Effort

Page 16: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

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Page 17: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

West Point Beast Barracks

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Page 18: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Grit predicted summer retention 

• Grit predicted summer retention (94% of the incoming cadets) more robustly than did self‐discipline, Whole Candidate Score (high school rank, SAT, leadership potential rating, physical aptitude)

• Grit predicted drop outs better than all other measured variables combined

• Grit and SAT score were weakly inversely related (r = ‐.05, p < .09)

Page 19: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

0.88

0.9

0.92

0.94

0.96

0.98

1 2 3 4

Sum

mer

Ret

entio

n

Quartile

West Point Summer Retention

Grit

WholeCandidateScore

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Page 20: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Counterfactual thinking

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Page 21: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

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Grit Retention

Counterfactual Comparison

B = ‐.59*B = 1.78*

B = ‐.31*

(B = ‐.05)

Page 22: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Willpower: trying hard not to do something that you really want to do

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Page 23: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Some children tend to act more self‐controlled than others

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Page 24: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Global goal: Academic successTemptation: Angry Birds

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VS

Page 25: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Sloane Study of Youth and Social Development (N = 1228)

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Page 26: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

How important is what you are doing to your future goals?

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1.0000

2.0000

3.0000

4.0000

5.0000

6.0000

7.0000

Page 27: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Are you happy?

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.0000

1.0000

2.0000

3.0000

4.0000

5.0000

6.0000

7.0000

Page 28: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Domain‐specific impulsive behaviors in children

• I forgot something I needed for class• I couldn't find something because my desk, locker, or bedroom was messy

• I did not remember what my teacher told me to do• My mind wandered when I should have been listening

• I lost my temper at home or at school• I interrupted other students while they were talking.• I said something rude• I talked back to my teacher or parent when I was upset

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Page 29: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

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Results:Self-disciplinepredicts final GPA above and beyond Intelligence

Page 30: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Intelligence

Self-Control

Skills/knowledge acquired outside school

Skills/knowledge acquired in school

Homework and classroom conduct

Standardized achievement test

scores

Report card grades

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Page 31: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

The perception of uncertain, threatening circumstances

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Stressful Life Events 

(Fall 2010)

Self‐Control (Fall 2010)

Self‐Control (Summer 2011)

Perceived Stress (Spring 2011)

.25***

‐.05

.79***

‐.07*

‐.04

Page 32: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Strategies for Self‐Control

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Page 33: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Grit means never quit

33http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=doqS35FfcUE

Page 34: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Psychologically distancing oneself from an angry memory

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Replay the event as it unfolds in your imagination through your 

own eyes

Replay the event as it unfolds in your imagination as you observe 

your distant selfVS

Page 35: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

…reduces negative affect

35Kross, E. Duckworth, A.L., Ayduck, O., Tsukayama, E. & Mischel, W. (in press). Emotion.

Page 36: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

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Page 37: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Goal setting and planning• Goal setting

– What specific goal do I want to achieve?– What good thing will happen if I achieve this goal?– What obstacles stand in the way of my reaching this goal?

• Planning where, when, and how you will get around or avoid the obstacles– “If it is a Tuesday at 6pm, then I will go to my bedroom desk and do my math homework.”

37Oettingen, Gollwitzer, Duckworth, et al.

Page 38: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Longitudinal study of fifth graders in Harlem

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75

76

77

78

79

80

81

82

MCII Control

GPA

41

41.5

42

42.5

43

43.5

44

MCII Control

Attend

ance

3.1

3.2

3.3

3.4

3.5

3.6

3.7

3.8

MCII Control

Cond

uct 

Page 39: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

From strategies to habits

“Our virtues are habits as much as our vices…our nervous systems have grown to the way in which they have been exercised, just as a sheet of paper or a coat, once creased or folded, tends to fall forever afterward into the same identical folds...”

– William James (1899)

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Page 40: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

One orzero

Two Three Four Five or more

Today’s study wish:

Best outcome:

Obstacle:

If-then plan:If , then

Think about yesterday. How many times did you use W.O.O.P. yesterday?

Obstacle(where and when)

Action (to overcome obstacle)

MCII: Goal Setting and Planning

Page 41: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Temperament and personality questionnaires measure behavior

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Page 42: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Brief Self‐Control Scale• I have a hard time breaking bad habits• I often act without thinking through all the alternatives

• I say inappropriate things• Pleasure and fun sometimes keep me from getting work done

• I have trouble concentrating • I am lazy

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Page 43: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

What processes determine self‐controlled behavior?

• Capacities (things you can do)– Executive function, metacognitive strategies, scripts

• Information (what you perceive or believe)– Schema, implicit beliefs, cognitive biases

• Motivation (what you want…and want to want)– Subjective benefits and perceived costs of pursuing temptation vs. global goal

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Page 44: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Example capacity: Executive function

• Single executive function tasks correlate with parent or teacher ratings of self‐control, r = .14

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Page 45: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Motivation

• What I want – Sloth– Anger– Gluttony– Greed (impulse buying)– Lust

• What I want to want

– Work– Interpersonal harmony– Health– Future savings

– Fidelity

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Page 46: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Between-individual variance

Within-individual variance

Between-individual variance

Within-individual variance

Unpacking domain‐specificity in self‐control

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Impu

lsiv

e Be

havi

or

Page 47: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

-0.52

1.21

2.93

4.65

6.37

L

-1.16 -0.16 0.84 1.84

T

BSCS_A: lowerBSCS_A: mid 50%BSCS_A: upper

Low self-controlMid self-controlHigh self-control

Impu

lsiv

e B

ehav

ior

Temptation

Self-control by Temptation Interaction

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Page 48: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

1.75

2.90

4.05

5.20

6.35

L

-2.16 -1.16 -0.16 0.84 1.84

R

BSCS_A: lowerBSCS_A: mid 50%BSCS_A: upper

Perceived harm

Impu

lsiv

e B

ehav

ior

Low self-controlMid self-controlHigh self-control

Self-control by Perceived Harm Interaction

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Page 49: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Temptation is in the eye of the beholder

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Page 50: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Domain‐specific impulsive behaviors in children

• I forgot something I needed for class• I couldn't find something because my desk, locker, or bedroom was messy

• I did not remember what my teacher told me to do• My mind wandered when I should have been listening

• I lost my temper at home or at school• I interrupted other students while they were talking.• I said something rude• I talked back to my teacher or parent when I was upset

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Page 51: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

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Productivity = Skill x Effort

Skill = Talent x Effort

Productivity = (Talent x Effort) x Effort

Productivity = Talent x Effort2

Page 52: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

CBQ Effortful Control

• When drawing or coloring in a book, shows strong concentration

• Prepares for trips and outings by planning things s/he will need

• When building or putting something together, becomes very involved in what s/he is doing, and works for long periods

• Is good at following instructions• Approaches places s/he has been told are dangerous slowly and cautiously

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Page 53: The Psychology Achievementapsbridgeprogram.org/conferences/summer14/meketon.pdfThe Psychology of Achievement David Meketon Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania 1. 2

Eysenck Junior Impulsiveness Questionnaire

• Do you save regularly? (r)• Do you think that planning takes the fun out of things?

• Do you get very annoyed if someone keeps you waiting?

• Do you often do things on the spur of the moment?

• Do you sometimes get so restless that you cannot sit in a chair long?

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