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The Trouble with Gold Stars, Incentive Plans, A's, Praise,
and Other Bribes
Kirk A. Astroth
Extension Specialist
4-H Youth Development
Montana State University
Bozeman, Montana
Internet address: acxka@trex.oscs.montana.edu
Punished by Rewards: The Trouble with Gold Stars, Incentive Plans, A's,
Praise, and Other Bribes. Alfie Kohn. Boston: Houghton-Mifflin. 1993.
398 pp. $22.95 hardcover.
Alfie Kohn, nationally known educator and author, came close to flunking
Introduction to Psychology. As a student, he sat through lectures but
also trained caged rats during the lab to press a little bar. In return
for this act, Kohn rewarded them with little Rice Krispies. For a class
project, he turned in a lab report written from the rat's point of view:
how to train college students in breakfast-feeding behavior. Not
surprisingly, Kohn readily admits that he did not take well to
behaviorism from the very first. Now, he addresses behaviorism head-on.
In this his latest book, Kohn recites the wealth of research which has
shown that rewards as well as punishments don't work in the long run.
"Rewards, like punishments, are very effective at producing short-term
compliance." Yet, the research shows that rewards do not work to
promote long-term behavior change or to enhance one's level of
performance. In fact, rewards decrease personal motivation and result
in poorer performance. Moreover, "research shows that when we are
working for a reward, we do exactly what is necessary to get it and no
more." In addition, the very need to keep offering rewards to generate
the same kind of behavior should be a clue about their long-term
effects: "the more rewards are used, the more they seem to be needed."
The problem, Kohn writes, is that behaviorism has become so widely
accepted that we no longer question it. Moreover, it has become so
deeply rooted that it feels like common sense to us. The basic problem
of behaviorism is "the idea that the best way to get something done is
to provide a reward to people when they act the way we want them to."
The heart of behaviorism is: "Do this and you'll get this." Yet the
wisdom of this approach, Kohn argues, has rarely been held up for
inspection.
As one of the foremost proponents of behaviorism, B.F. Skinner did most
of his work--ironically enough, Kohn points out--with rats and pigeons,
yet he wrote most of his books about people. Skinner's ideas about
rewards and punishments have taken over our notions about such widely
ranging topics as how to raise children, reward employees, and motivate
students. While behaviorism may work for the family pet, we ought to
question whether this kind of philosophy is appropriate for guiding our
interactions with people in all walks of life.
According to Kohn, the complete failure of rewards to influence long
term behavior and values is evident in the home, in the classroom, and
even in the workplace. This book, in fact, is not just great reading
for those of us involved in youth development, but it should also be
required reading for administrators and staff development specialists.
In a nudge at the business world, Chapter 7 starts off with an
"Executive Summary" (the only chapter with one) before it debunks merit
pay, pay-for-performance schemes, and other monetary incentive and bonus
plans commonly used in corporate America. Eventually, Kohn offers
fourteen reasons why incentive and merit pay systems fail to produce the
desired results. What are some of the reasons such systems fail?
First, they're entirely unnecessary because good employees are already
doing a good job. Moreover, Kohn writes, pay doesn't match performance
ratings, pay isn't a motivator, rewards discourage risk-taking,
incentive systems tend to reward short-term performance that may be at
odds with the long-term interests of the organization and, in general,
rewards punish. "The point is money isn't the point." Many people who
advocate such pay incentives just don't get it.
Kohn's messages in this latest work speak volumes to those in education.
The book is a classic reference which could revolutionize the 4-H
incentives and recognition program as well as revamp most Extension
performance appraisal systems. Particularly entertaining is the
inclusion in the appendix of a transcript of a conversation Kohn
recorded in 1983 with B.F. Skinner. Firm believers in behaviorism will
even be shocked by Skinner's definition of love, which strikes one as
cold and devoid of emotion or purpose.
In reality, some will probably dismiss Kohn's book as another diatribe
against competition. However, Kohn willingly concedes that the problem
is not rewards, but how they are used. When used to control or
manipulate people's behavior, rewards are bad. As he points out,
"controlling people through the use of rewards is contrary to the
principles of democracy." And if we aim to help people develop the
skills necessary to live in a democratic society, rewards (and their
counterpart punishments) undermine this long-term goal.
This article is online at
http://www.joe.org/joe/1994august/tt3.html.
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