EPISODE 72: THE PYGMALION EFFECT
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概要
In 1968, psychologists Robert Rosenthal and Lenore Jacobson conducted an experiment that changed how we understand human potential. They told teachers that certain students had been identified as "intellectual bloomers" who would show dramatic improvement. In reality, these students were chosen randomly. By year's end, the "bloomers" had significantly outperformed their peers.
This is the Pygmalion Effect: people tend to perform at the level others expect of them. This episode explores how you are both the teacher and the student in your own life—and how your self-expectations shape your results.
Key Topics: Pygmalion Effect, self-fulfilling prophecy, expectations, Rosenthal and Jacobson, Goethe, self-belief, leadership, potential, performance psychology
Today's Practice: Identify one area where you've been holding low expectations for yourself. Ask: what would I attempt if I genuinely believed I could succeed? Write down that higher expectation. Read it daily. Notice how your behavior shifts.
Master the mind. Your life will follow.]]>