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Saturday, April 12, 2008

U = E x V / I x D

Steel developed the equation U = E x V / I x D, where U is the desire to complete the task; E, the expectation of success; V, the value of completion; I, the immediacy of task; and D, the personal sensitivity to delay, as a way of mathematically mapping a given individual's procrastination response. So, for example, my desire to finish this article is influenced by my relative confidence in writing it well and the prospect of a paycheck as well as a looming deadline and my inherent desire to go home at the end of the day. "You're more likely to put something off if you're a very impulsive individual," Steel says. But, "if you only work at the last minute, time on task tells."

Of course, this does not explain why humans would procrastinate in the first place, but it is certainly not a new problem. The Greek poet Hesiod, writing in 800 B.C., averred "a man who puts off work is always at handgrips with ruin" and the divine incarnation Krishna singled out procrastinators for special scorn in the Bhagavad Gita. Nor does it explain why procrastination seems to be on the rise--afflicting as many as 95 percent of students and at least 15 percent of adults, according to two recent surveys.

Why Do Today What You Can Put Off Until Tomorrow
by David Biello
Scientific American
January 15, 2007

Hah!

I can tell you exactly why procrastination is on the rise.

projects

Projects are long-duration behavior. Everyone procrastinates long-duration behavior, even chickens. Maybe especially chickens; who knows? Turn K-12 into 13 years of project-based, collaborative learning, et voilĂ ! Epidemic levels of procrastination! This generation will emerge from high school suffering the customary math phobia, and on top of that they'll have writer's block and chronic problems with procrastination and time-management.

Once they're all settled into lifelong therapy and/or AA, we'll need a whole new slew of child-centered reforms to fix the schools.


Procrastination Central

3 comments:

  1. This generation will emerge from high school suffering the customary math phobia, but on top of that they'll have writer's block and chronic problems with procrastination and time-management.

    Stop...I can't see through the tears of laughter. It's not funny, I know, but the alternative is to pull my hair out and run out of the house in a mad rage.

    That's really where we're headed, isn't it?

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  2. I create projects FOR A LIVING!!!

    IT IS HELL!!!!

    I'll have to try to rustle up some of the links to teacher-blogs where the teacher talks about how much fun projects are for students.

    They're everywhere.

    This is a universal belief, it seems --- projects are FUN.

    Ask a WRITER!

    Go ahead, ask him!

    Go right up to him and say: IS A YEAR-LONG PROGRESS (TWO WHEN YOU ADD IN THE MISSED DEADLINE) FUN?

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  3. Seriously, though, we are going to create a generation of kids who LOATHE writing.

    LOATHE IT.

    (Though ..... I wonder how texting will affect this?? I read the other day, someone saying that the 90s were an era of image & now we're in a verbal era because of texting. Maybe technology will save us after all.)

    ReplyDelete