Week of : 9/9/13-9/13/13
Theme: SELF CONTROL
Date Announcements Greeting Sharing Activity
Tuesday
a.m.
|
This morning we will hear
the speeches of our Student Government contenders.
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
Tuesday
p.m.
|
To the Gym!
|
Group Bingo
|
Who are We?
Activity
|
|
Wed
|
Grade Level Meetings 7/8
Marine Lab 6
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
Thursday
|
How well do you practice
self control?
(Write your name on the
meter)
|
Cumulative List
Greeting Football Style
|
Marshmallow Video
(on Blog)
|
|
Friday
|
Football Greeting
|
Counting Game
|
Tuesday – a.m. Student
Government Speeches
Tuesday -- p.m.
See
last week’s Bulletin J
Announcements:
Greeting:
Share/Activity:
Wednesday Grade Level
Meetings / 6th grade to Marine Lab!
Thursday
Announcements: “How STRONG is your self-control?” – Advisors: draw a horizontal line on your white
board:
___________________________________________________________________________________________
0 5 10
NO self control Medium
Self Control Strong
Self-Control
Ask students to rate their self-control as they come in to the room by
marking the line and putting their name.
Greeting: Cumulative List Greeting – The Cumulative Greeting we’ve done before
(wherein each person greets everyone who has preceded her) but with the twist
that a list is added. In this case, each
person says his/her favorite NFL Team or “none” if a football non-fan. As the greeting accumulates, each new greeter
repeats what those before her have answered.
Leader asks first but answers last, after greeting has made its way
around the circle. [Because focus & listening are forms of self-control!!]
Activity: Show Marshmallow Video : http://scdsmsadvisory.blogspot.com/search/label/Marshmallow%20Test
Friday
Announcements:
Greeting: Football Greeting – There are four types of “scores” in football:
touchdown = 6 points. field goal = 3; safety = 2; extra point = 1. Students stand in a circle and select someone
to begin. If he chooses a touchdown, he
greets the sixth person to his right; the greeted person and the greeter both
sit down. The next person to the right
chooses a play (touchdown, safety, field goal or extra point) and play
continues until everyone has been greeted.
Share:
Activity: Counting Game – This is a simple counting game where as a group,
students try to count to the highest number possible without anyone speaking at
the same time. If two or more students
say a number at the same time, then the group must begin again. Advisors don’t give any more instructions
than that. Typically, the same students
who like to dominate in class, like to call out more than their fair share of
numbers (good discussion for self-control for those who like to be the
“boss”). It is also interesting to see
who struggles to take the risk to say a number at all (sometimes it takes a lot
of self-control to go out on a limb, if it’s against your nature to take
risks). Also interesting to see who
expresses frustration, who resorts to put-downs, who offers encouragement or
gets the group to develop a system that increases success!
Exerpted from The New
Yorker: www.newyorker.com/reporting/2009/05/18/090518fa_fact_lehrer
In the late nineteen-sixties,
Carolyn Weisz, a four-year-old with long brown hair, was invited into a “game
room” at the Bing Nursery School, on the campus of Stanford University. The
room was little more than a large closet, containing a desk and a chair.
Carolyn was asked to sit down in the chair and pick a treat from a tray of
marshmallows, cookies, and pretzel sticks. Carolyn chose the marshmallow.
Although she’s now forty-four, Carolyn still has a weakness for those
air-puffed balls of corn syrup and gelatine. “I know I shouldn’t like them,”
she says. “But they’re just so delicious!” A researcher then made Carolyn an
offer: she could either eat one marshmallow right away or, if she was willing
to wait while he stepped out for a few minutes, she could have two marshmallows
when he returned. He said that if she rang a bell on the desk while he was away
he would come running back, and she could eat one marshmallow but would forfeit
the second. Then he left the room.
Although Carolyn has no direct
memory of the experiment, and the scientists would not release any information
about the subjects, she strongly suspects that she was able to delay
gratification. “I’ve always been really good at waiting,” Carolyn told me. “If
you give me a challenge or a task, then I’m going to find a way to do it, even if
it means not eating my favorite food.” Her mother, Karen Sortino, is still more
certain: “Even as a young kid, Carolyn was very patient. I’m sure she would
have waited.” But her brother Craig, who also took part in the experiment,
displayed less fortitude. Craig, a year older than Carolyn, still remembers the
torment of trying to wait. “At a certain point, it must have occurred to me
that I was all by myself,” he recalls. “And so I just started taking all the
candy.” According to Craig, he was also tested with little plastic toys—he
could have a second one if he held out—and he broke into the desk, where he
figured there would be additional toys. “I took everything I could,” he says.
“I cleaned them out. After that, I noticed the teachers encouraged me to not go
into the experiment room anymore.”
Footage of these experiments,
which were conducted over several years, is poignant, as the kids struggle to
delay gratification for just a little bit longer. Some cover their eyes with
their hands or turn around so that they can’t see the tray. Others start
kicking the desk, or tug on their pigtails, or stroke the marshmallow as if it
were a tiny stuffed animal. One child, a boy with neatly parted hair, looks
carefully around the room to make sure that nobody can see him. Then he picks
up an Oreo, delicately twists it apart, and licks off the white cream filling
before returning the cookie to the tray, a satisfied look on his face.
Most of the children were like
Craig. They struggled to resist the treat and held out for an average of less
than three minutes. “A few kids ate the marshmallow right away,” Walter
Mischel, the Stanford professor of psychology in charge of the experiment,
remembers. “They didn’t even bother ringing the bell. Other kids would stare
directly at the marshmallow and then ring the bell thirty seconds later.” About
thirty per cent of the children, however, were like Carolyn. They successfully
delayed gratification until the researcher returned, some fifteen minutes
later. These kids wrestled with temptation but found a way to resist.
The initial goal of the
experiment was to identify the mental processes that allowed some people to
delay gratification while others simply surrendered. After publishing a few
papers on the Bing studies in the early seventies, Mischel moved on to other
areas of personality research. “There are only so many things you can do with
kids trying not to eat marshmallows.”
But occasionally Mischel would
ask his three daughters, all of whom attended the Bing, about their friends
from nursery school. “It was really just idle dinnertime conversation,” he
says. “I’d ask them, ‘How’s Jane? How’s Eric? How are they doing in school?’ ”
Mischel began to notice a link between the children’s academic performance as
teen-agers and their ability to wait for the second marshmallow. He asked his
daughters to assess their friends academically on a scale of zero to five.
Comparing these ratings with the original data set, he saw a correlation.
“That’s when I realized I had to do this seriously,” he says. Starting in 1981,
Mischel sent out a questionnaire to all the reachable parents, teachers, and
academic advisers of the six hundred and fifty-three subjects who had
participated in the marshmallow task, who were by then in high school. He asked
about every trait he could think of, from their capacity to plan and think
ahead to their ability to “cope well with problems” and get along with their
peers. He also requested their S.A.T. scores.
Once Mischel began analyzing the
results, he noticed that low delayers, the children who rang the bell quickly,
seemed more likely to have behavioral problems, both in school and at home.
They got lower S.A.T. scores. They struggled in stressful situations, often had
trouble paying attention, and found it difficult to maintain friendships. The
child who could wait fifteen minutes had an S.A.T. score that was, on average,
two hundred and ten points higher than that of the kid who could wait only
thirty seconds.
Carolyn Weisz is a textbook
example of a high delayer. She attended Stanford as an undergraduate, and got
her Ph.D. in social psychology at Princeton. She’s now an associate psychology
professor at the University of Puget Sound. Craig, meanwhile, moved to Los
Angeles and has spent his career doing “all kinds of things” in the
entertainment industry, mostly in production. He’s currently helping to write
and produce a film. “Sure, I wish I had been a more patient person,” Craig
says. “Looking back, there are definitely moments when it would have helped me
make better career choices and stuff.”
At the time, psychologists
assumed that children’s ability to wait depended on how badly they wanted the
marshmallow. But it soon became obvious that every child craved the extra
treat. What, then, determined self-control? Mischel’s conclusion, based on
hundreds of hours of observation, was that the crucial skill was the “strategic
allocation of attention.” Instead of getting obsessed with the marshmallow—the
“hot stimulus”—the patient children distracted themselves by covering their
eyes, pretending to play hide-and-seek underneath the desk, or singing songs
from “Sesame Street.” Their desire wasn’t defeated—it was merely forgotten. “If
you’re thinking about the marshmallow and how delicious it is, then you’re
going to eat it,” Mischel says. “The key is to avoid thinking about it in the
first place.”
According to Mischel, this view
of will power also helps explain why the marshmallow task is such a powerfully
predictive test. “If you can deal with hot emotions, then you can study for the
S.A.T. instead of watching television,” Mischel says. “And you can save more
money for retirement. It’s not just about marshmallows.”
Mischel’s main worry is that,
even if his lesson plan proves to be effective, it might still be overwhelmed by
variables the scientists can’t control, such as the home environment. He knows
that it’s not enough just to teach kids mental tricks—the real challenge is
turning those tricks into habits, and that requires years of diligent practice.
“This is where your parents are important,” Mischel says. “Have they
established rituals that force you to delay on a daily basis? Do they encourage
you to wait? And do they make waiting worthwhile?” According to Mischel, even
the most mundane routines of childhood—such as not snacking before dinner, or
saving up your allowance, or holding out until Christmas morning—are really sly
exercises in cognitive training: we’re teaching ourselves how to think so that
we can outsmart our desires. But Mischel isn’t satisfied with such an informal
approach. “We should give marshmallows to every kindergartner,” he says. “We
should say, ‘You see this marshmallow? You don’t have to eat it. You can wait.
Here’s how.’ ” ♦
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