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Surprise rewards for good attendance had a surprising consequence

A working paper by Carly Robinson and colleagues, published by the Harvard Kennedy School, reports on an experiment to measure the impact of attendance rewards on students.

The trial included 15,629 sixth through twelfth grade students from 14 school districts in California. All the students had previously had perfect attendance in at least one month in the fall. The students were randomly allocated to one of three groups:

The researchers collected data on the students’ attendance in the following month (February). They found that:

The researchers suggest that the retrospective awards may have sent unintended signals to the students, telling them that they were performing better than the descriptive social norm of their peers, and exceeding the institutional expectations for the awarded behavior.

 

Source (Open Access): Robinson, C.D., Gallus, J., Lee, M.G. & Rogers, T. (2018). The demotivating effect (and unintended Message) of retrospective Awards – HKS faculty research working paper series RWP18-020. Retrieved from https://research.hks.harvard.edu/publications/getFile.aspx?Id=1681

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