I personally find this line of research fascinating and in need of more international research. A new paper by Tim Kautz, Jim Heckman, and coauthors:
This paper reviews the recent literature on measuring and boosting cognitive and noncognitive skills. The literature establishes that achievement tests do not adequately capture character skills/personality traits, goals, motivations, and preferences that are valued in the labor market, in school, and in many other domains. Their predictive power rivals that of cognitive skills.
Reliable measures of character have been developed. All measures of character and cognition are measures of performance on some task. In order to reliably estimate skills from tasks, it is necessary to standardize for incentives, effort, and other skills when measuring any particular skill. Character is a skill, not a trait.
At any age, character skills are stable across different tasks, but skills can change over the life cycle. Character is shaped by families, schools, and social environments. Skill development is a dynamic process, in which the early years lay the foundation for successful investment in later years. High-quality early childhood and elementary school programs improve character skills in a lasting and cost-effective way. Many of them beneficially affect later-life outcomes without improving cognition.
There are fewer long-term evaluations of adolescent interventions, but workplace-based programs that teach character skills are promising. The common feature of successful interventions across all stages of the life cycle through adulthood is that they promote attachment and provide a secure base for exploration and learning for the child. Successful interventions emulate the mentoring environments offered by successful families.
21 Responses
Calvin, thank your dad MT @cblatts: Can we reduce crime & poverty through character-building? http://t.co/hnNQP28Eni http://t.co/WJbypxnZZ3
RT @cblatts: The economic and social returns to building character http://t.co/FGAVX9Wixb
“The economic and social returns to building character” http://t.co/eyeEgNd1m9
RT @cblatts: Can we reduce crime and poverty through character-building interventions? http://t.co/jJcepL07eK
RT @cblatts: Can we reduce crime and poverty through character-building interventions? http://t.co/jJcepL07eK
The economic and social returns to building character http://t.co/r79sbqvnUy
RT @MannCenterSU: Interesting research on character development. Thanks for the link @profthornton! http://t.co/t3YXz4UlEC
The economic and social returns to building character: I personally find this line of research fascinating and… http://t.co/2e1gNvh2hJ
Via @cblatts, more evidence that investing in #children yields big dividends. We’ve known that a while. Time to act.
http://t.co/yfLvzsDOX7
@cblatts read it, don’t get it. What am I looking at? Doesn’t seem much diff from less icky sounding interventions
The economic and social returns to building character: http://t.co/iUWzvICutw
RT @cblatts: Can we reduce crime and poverty through character-building interventions? http://t.co/jJcepL07eK
RT @cblatts: Can we reduce crime and poverty through character-building interventions? http://t.co/jJcepL07eK
RT @cblatts: Can we reduce crime and poverty through character-building interventions? http://t.co/jJcepL07eK
RT @cblatts: Can we reduce crime and poverty through character-building interventions? http://t.co/jJcepL07eK
Can we reduce crime and poverty through character-building interventions? http://t.co/jJcepL07eK
RT @cblatts: The economic and social returns to building character http://t.co/FGAVX9Wixb
Interesting research on character development. Thanks for the link @profthornton! http://t.co/t3YXz4UlEC
@MannCenterSU @ccameroncollinsThe economic and social returns to building character http://t.co/72NWrzcyfa
RT @cblatts: The economic and social returns to building character http://t.co/FGAVX9Wixb
RT @cblatts: The economic and social returns to building character http://t.co/FGAVX9Wixb