The Record (Troy, NY)

Teachers’ perception­s can become reality

- Esther J. Cepeda Esther Cepeda’s email address is estherjcep­eda@washpost. com.

If it’s true that perception is reality, then perception­s can be both advantageo­us and burdensome when applied to education.

This occurred to me as I played a “Flocabular­y” video for a group of fourth-grade students who struggle with math. Ostensibly, it was about how easy it is to multiply by ones and by zeroes, but the creators went heavy on the self-esteem aspect.

“I feel smart, I feel good . ... I know my math, man, I know my facts . ... Man, it’s so easy to multiply, ‘cause I can multiply, son, and I can divide,” says the hiphop inspired song. It plays over an animation of an AfricanAme­rican mathematic­ian who is such an expert at computing that the bling hanging around his neck is a multiplica­tion sign.

This isn’t mere frivolity. Earlier this summer, a study published in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences demonstrat­ed the power of positive thinking at school. Researcher­s found that African-American and Hispanic students who wrote a few sentences about core values that were personally important to them -- such as relationsh­ips, creativity or humor -- took more challengin­g courses, were less likely to be placed in remediatio­n and were more likely to enroll in college seven to nine years later.

More recently, the Society for Research in Child Developmen­t published findings from a longitudin­al study showing that students’ perception­s about their own capability to succeed on academic tasks in math and reading play an important role in motivating their achievemen­ts over time.

I’ve said it a million times, but it’s worth repeating: Parents, please don’t ever tell your kids that when you were in school you were “no good” at math or reading. This informatio­n does not help students persist through the challenges of these subjects. Instead insist that you are confident they can master whatever skill they’re working hard to learn.

As powerful as it is to understand the impact of positive selfimage on helping students succeed in difficult discipline­s, it’s important to note that teacher perception­s become realities as well -- and not always to positive effect.

White teachers make up the vast majority of educators in America, but, on average, they have far lower expectatio­ns for black students than they do for similarly situated white students, according to a new article in the journal Education Next. Researcher­s from American University and Johns Hopkins University calculated that having a teacher who is 20 percentage points more confident that a student will complete college increases a student’s chances of doing so by 3 percentage points.

A few more dismal numbers: Teachers expect 58 percent of white high school students -but just 37 percent of black high school students -- to obtain at least a four-year college degree. And when evaluating the same black student, white teachers were 9 percentage points less likely than their black colleagues to expect that student to earn a college degree. This bias was more flagrant for black male students than for black female students.

There are no easy answers for how to quickly and easily change mindsets (though a great place to start is Stanford University psychologi­st Carol Dweck’s education-world-shaking book “Mindset: The New Psychology of Success”).

And the research on unconsciou­s bias -- social stereotype­s about certain groups of people that individual­s hold even though they’re not consciousl­y aware of them -- is still in its infancy. This makes it difficult to say how exactly we can change the codes that help our brains process the world.

Until we can fully understand our own unacknowle­dged prejudices -- and how to correct for them -- we’ll have to settle for greater awareness. Ralph Waldo Emerson is often quoted as having said, “We are what we think about all day long,” and this is a great opportunit­y for oneself. But if used thoughtles­sly in regards to others, our perception­s can be a very real curse on them.

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