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Why Starting Every Student With an “A” Could Be a Great Idea

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In 1990, researchers conducted a to find out what people would pay to purchase an ordinary coffee mug. The average offer was about $3. The researchers then randomly selected participants and gave them the same mug for free. When asked how much they would be willing sell the mug for, on average these participants said about $7. Despite the participants receiving the mug for free, they demanded much more for the mug than they were originally willing to pay for it. In other words, simply possessing the mug induced participants to assign it a higher value.

This quandary was later coined the and was explained through the concept of –the idea that individuals feel substantially more pain from losses than pleasure from exact same-sized gains. Therefore it follows that individuals will be more motivated to avoid a loss than to achieve a gain of an equal amount (for an example of the endowment effect, watch this Wendy鈥檚 ).

To better illustrate the power of the endowment effect, consider this: A group of researchers that factory employees performed better when their bonuses were given to them up front, but could be taken away if they didn鈥檛 meet certain criteria, as opposed to if bonuses were framed as rewards contingent upon stipulated goals. The only thing that changed was the way the bonus was framed.

Could this seemingly irrational behavior also be used to boost students鈥 classroom performance?

Using the same concept from the previous example, Steven Levitt (of ) and other researchers conducted an to see if varying incentive frameworks for teachers could improve student performance. The researchers told one group of teachers before a test that they would receive a bonus (a gain) only if their students performed sufficiently on the test. Meanwhile, the researchers offered a different group of teachers the bonus upfront, but told them it could be taken away if their students didn鈥檛 perform sufficiently (a loss). They found that on average, when the incentive was framed as a loss, student鈥檚 math test scores increased by 0.2 to 0.4 standard deviations. That鈥檚 a big gain. For comparison, that increasing teacher quality by one standard deviation is associated with annual student achievement gains of 0.15 to 0.24 standard deviations in math.

These findings point to the possibility that performance can be improved by taking advantage of the existing hard-wiring in humans鈥 brains. Researchers at the (RSA) are trying to make use of this glitch how they grade students.

Instead of having students start off with a base-line of no grade, RSA researchers suggest that educators may be able to boost student performance by starting everyone with an 鈥淎鈥 and then letting the endowment effect do the rest.

The theory is that students will place higher value on an 鈥淎鈥 they are given to start off with than a hypothetical 鈥淎鈥 they may or may not achieve. If the theory holds, researchers expect students who start off with an 鈥淎鈥 to be more motivated to avoid losing their high grade than students who begin the year with, quite literally, nothing to lose grade-wise.

This 鈥淓veryone Starts with an 鈥楢鈥欌 model could have the most profound effects on students who have the most to lose鈥攖hat is, those least accustomed to getting 鈥淎鈥檚鈥. In particular, this incentive framework may induce a student who is normally on the cusp between letter grades (between a 鈥淏鈥 and an 鈥淎鈥 or a 鈥淐鈥 and a 鈥淏鈥 or), to work just a little harder 鈥 enough to get over that hump.

While pedagogical experts should be the ones determining how this grading technique could be incorporated in the classroom, schools could first experiment with a conservative approach. For example, this technique could be used to calculate a portion of a student鈥檚 total grade, such as a student鈥檚 homework grade. This way, teachers and schools could assess any unintended negative consequences of the new grading system on a smaller level before shifting away from the current system. In particular, it would be interesting to see if the endowment effect reduces teachers鈥 likelihood of decreasing a student鈥檚 grade if they start off at an 鈥淎鈥. If that鈥檚 true, then the 鈥淓veryone Starts with an 鈥淎鈥濃 model would just add to existing grade inflation problems.

Either way, this approach shows how a better understanding of the endowment effect could be incorporated in the classroom to help schools rethink approaches to rewards and punishments. Even more encouraging is that this new system could theoretically improve student performance without adding additional costs or radically altering existing systems. This should come as a welcome alternative at a time when it seems that most proposals to change educational frameworks are sweeping and far reaching.

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Owen Phillips

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Why Starting Every Student With an “A” Could Be a Great Idea