Module
3
Psychology’s Key Issues and Controversies
25
The question of the degree to which psychologists
can identify universal prin-
ciples that apply to all people has taken on new signifi cance in light of the tremen-
dous demographic changes now occurring in the United States and around the
world. As we discuss next, these changes raise new and critical issues for the disci-
pline of psychology in the 21st century.
A mother
in Burr Ridge, Illinois, helps her son with his math
assignment. After he complains that he is “terrible at math,”
she tries to cheer him up by saying, “Don’t feel bad; some
people
are born to do well in math, and others have a lot of
trouble with it. It’s just the way things are.” At the same time,
on the other side of the world in Taipei, Taiwan, a mother is
helping her daughter with her math homework. When the
daughter complains that she’s
no good at math, the mother tells her to keep at it,
because everyone has pretty much the same ability in math, and it is hard work that
guarantees success.
These two apparently simple parent-child exchanges reveal a deep difference in
perspectives on the world. People in Europe and North America are far more likely to
attribute
success to unchanging causes, such as intelligence, than are people in Asia,
who are more likely to attribute school performance to temporary, situational factors,
such as the amount of expended effort.
These different perspectives may help explain the fact
that Asian students often
outperform U.S. students in international comparisons of student achievement. Asian
students are taught that hard work and increased effort lead to academic success, and
so they may be more willing to put in more effort to achieve success. In contrast, North
American students tend to believe that their ability is fi xed at birth and largely
determines
their success, and so they may be less willing to work hard (Chen &
Stevenson, 1995; Pearce & Lin, 2007).
Our knowledge that people in different cultures can have very different views of the
world underlines the importance of moving beyond North America and studying
other cultural groups in order to identify universal principles of behavior. Furthermore,
broad cultural differences are not the only ones taken into account by psychologists in
their attempts to identify general principles of behavior. Subcultural, ethnic, racial, and
Members of diff erent cultures attribute academic success to diff erent factors. How might
diff ering cultural perspectives aff ect the performance of Asian students and American students?
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