Hidden Brain - When Everything Clicks
Episode Date: June 5, 2018There can be a lot of psychological noise involved in teaching. But what if we replaced all that mental chit chat....with a click? This week, we explore an innovative idea about how we learn. It will ...take us from a dolphin exhibit in Hawaii to a top teaching hospital in New York. It's about a method to quiet the noise. The sort of clutter that can turn learning into a minefield of misery.
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Each day teachers all over the world try to explain new ideas to their students.
Sometimes it goes well. The teacher conveys information, the students absorb it.
But many times things get stuck. Students get frustrated and so do their teachers. The transmission of ideas gets bogged down in a morass of failed expectations.
I remember an exchange I had with my own father.
I must have been around ten.
He was trying to teach me a math concept, the order of operations, division before subtraction,
multiplication before addition.
I didn't get it. He thought it ought to be easy. He got frustrated, I felt stupid.
The worst part was that all the psychological turmoil got us nowhere.
At the end of the day, he had failed to teach me something he knew, and I had failed to learn
something I could have mastered. In fact, I might have internalized the wrong lessons
that I was bad at math or that my father thought poorly of me.
What does he think?
Why am I so bad?
Is he mad?
I can't forget that.
Disappointing, can I show him?
Can I make my dad proud?
Today we explore an innovative idea about how we learn.
It'll take us from a dolphin exhibit in Hawaii
to a top teaching hospital in New York. It's about one method to quiet the noise in our
heads, the sort of clutter that can turn learning into a minefield of misery. One evening in the early 1960s, after putting her kids to bed, a young mother sat in her living
room and read a small technical manual on dolphin training.
The ideas in it seemed new and strange.
The woman felt an unexpected thrill.
As she thumbed through the typewritten pages,
she saw for herself a future she had never imagined.
It opened a door for me. I saw a whole new game there. How to control behavior,
how to build behavior, how to teach skills, all of that.
With a little set of clear cut roles that would work with anything.
This is Karen Pryor.
I'm a biologist and I'm also a writer.
Karen is now in her 80s and living in Boston.
But back in the early 60s she was in Hawaii, raising three kids, while her husband poured
his energy into a grand venture.
He was building Sea Life Park, the island's first aquarium and marine
entertainment venue. It was his startup, not Carrons. I wasn't involved in the park at all except
to maybe give a dinner party for potential investors, you know, that kind of thing. There was a lot at
stake. Big dreams and big money had been poured into the project and the timeline for the ground opening was tight.
When the concrete had set in the huge artificial pools, collectors were sent out to capture
wild dolphins.
The next challenge was to train the animals.
The park needed a dolphin trainer, a profession that didn't really exist.
The only trainers that were around in that time,
in the early 60s, were sea lion trainers from the circus.
And they were pretty abusive.
Now, the way we've come to think about marine parks
has changed a lot in the last 50 years.
It's frowned upon to get animals to perform tricks.
It's illegal to capture whales and dolphins from the wild.
But in the 60s, restrictions were looser and social norms were different.
If the park and its methods were of a different time, the lessons Karen was to learn were timeless.
The little manual the park had obtained, written by a graduate student in psychology, promised that anyone could be a dolphin trainer,
as long as the techniques it described
were followed.
Karen's husband hired a team of three people.
In desperation, Karen's husband turned to her.
She was interested in the natural world, as a little girl she learned the Latin name
of every butterfly in her neighborhood.
While studying at Cornell, she'd taken all the courses the school offered in natural history.
And tomology for insects or mythology for birds, paleontology for fossils, geology for rocks.
But marine biology wasn't high on the list.
So I said no, I really couldn't do that. I have three little children. I didn't want to go to work for my husband. He had enough to do, and I think that would
work out very well anyway. But he persuaded me to at least read the manual.
And that manual, the ideas it held, sparked something inside of Karen.
I just had to try it.
What Karen saw in the manual was a theory of behavior that it ignited a great debate in
psychology in the preceding decades.
Its implications were far reaching, especially in the field of education.
Let's take a moment to look at that history.
In the early 20th century, one dominant view of why people behave the way they do came
from Sigmund Freud.
Freud was all about the sort of the deep underlying motivations that
got people to do stuff and how you had to plum the depths of your often inaccessible human
psychological processes to figure people out. This is psychologist Barry Schwartz. Freud had this
view that people were driven by really intense motives, many of them sexual, many
of them having to do with relations with their parents, that were so unacceptable that people
kept them out of conscious awareness.
The unconscious, it was all hidden away in a little black box in the brain.
Around the same time, the Russian physiologist Ivan Pavlov made a remarkable discovery.
In an experiment that became famous, he showed that with the right triggers, an animal could
be trained to display involuntary behaviors.
He called it classical conditioning.
Pavlov was studying what he called reflexes, and in fact he called them psychic reflexes.
So dogs salivate when you put food in their mouths and they're built to do that.
But if you sound a tone and then give them food, they start salivating to the tone.
The experiment has become so famous that documentaries have been made about it.
Before passing meat through the hatch, he introduced a stimulus that was totally unrelated to feeding.
A ticking metronome.
Into this mix, Schema American.
B.F. Schinner, like Ivan Pavlov, was interested in how animals learn, but he wanted to explore
conscious behavior. He eventually came up with a theory that built on Pavlov and did
away entirely with Freud. Skinner said, you don't need to understand the unconscious mind
to figure out what makes an animal tick or to get it to learn something.
You don't need all this depth, you don't need to, quote, understand what's going on inside,
it's enough just to look at how behavior and environment interact. And Skinner had this view that it was really all about rewards and punishments, that if
you got them right, you could pretty much get organisms to do whatever you wanted them
to do.
For BF Skinner and other behaviorists, human behavior was only about what you could see
and measure, and changing behavior was all about finding the right incentives.
Good consequences follow and you'll do it again, bad consequences follow and you'll stop
doing it.
B.F. Skinner's theories became wildly popular.
He presented his ideas to pack lecture halls and to film crews.
He'd display a box he'd invented and describe how he used it with birds.
We're going to use hungry pigeons and we're going to give them food.
He put a pigeon into his box.
And the food is presented with a little machine which lifts a tray of food within reach of the pigeon.
Pigeon can get access to it through an opening in the space.
And when the tray falls away,
that pigeon can no longer eat.
The pigeon quickly learns to come where the machine engages.
It's a simple example, but it can easily be made more complex.
Maybe the pigeon must pack at a button to engage the machine
or turn in a circle.
With food as a reward, it can be taught a lot.
And we're going to try another pigeon now,
and I will try to pick out some particular pattern of behavior
and make it a more frequent part of the repertoire of the bird.
The behaviorist had another box to demonstrate negative reinforcement.
He'd put a rat into the box with an electric current that caused it pain,
but the box also had a lever that could switch off the current. The rat quickly learned to go straight to
the lever and turn off the electricity when it was placed inside the box.
BF Skinner's point was that you can get animals to do things they wouldn't normally do if
you set up the incentives and disincentives correctly.
These ideas just happened to be front and center
in Karen Pryor's little manual.
It was a primer on what BF Skinner called
Operant Conditioning.
What he meant by that was that the learner is the operator.
The learner is going to deliberately consciously
do a behavior that will pay off for the learner.
The pigeon in Skinner's box tried different things.
When it found the tray, it got the food.
The pigeon, in effect, was teaching itself.
It was exploring the box and figuring out what worked.
Karen was enamored with this idea, but one thing she didn't care for was all the punishment
built into her manual.
Like, if the dolphins didn't behave correctly, they would starve them for 24 hours.
That's a very bad idea for these animals.
They get all their water from their food and they can die of dehydration pretty quickly.
So do you know there were a lot of things in there that I just jumped right away.
Karen scrapped the punishments but emphasized another idea from the manual.
The suggestion that she combined food rewards with an audible signal.
She chose a whistle.
In some ways, this was building on Pavlov.
Just as Pavlov had found that dogs would salivate at the sound of a metronome,
the manual suggested that sounds could be used to precisely mark when an animal did something the
trainer wanted. The whistle is the signal that at this very instant you're doing absolutely the
right thing. So you're going to get a prize, but the identification for the learner of exactly
what you do, what you're when you have got it right, that acoustic sound, that acoustic message, whatever form
that comes in, that is actually a thrill.
Barry Schwat says the signal is like a placeholder.
The animal feels good to hear the clicker because the clicker is associated with food.
And now you can use the clicker, which is much less disruptive than the food, to produce
this long chain of behavior that produces
usanas from the people who are watching.
Karen got to work.
She bought a hanging scale so she could keep track of how much food each animal needed to
fill up.
She made a training schedule and she envisioned a show that dolphins could perform. You know, to make a show of any kind, you need a beginning in a middle and a high point
and a happy ending.
And so Karen wrote a show about old Hawaii.
It had girls and grass curds and canoes and of course lots of dolphins.
And then we began training.
She started with basic stuff.
Simple behaviors such as stick your nose out of the water.
And then built on those skills.
Stick your nose higher, higher, higher until you're standing on your tail.
And then Karen got even fancier.
She had a machine build that made whistle sounds underwater,
so she could cue the dolphins to do tricks as a group.
Karen admits she went through a lot of fish.
Six months later, the park opened to the public.
If there are flies everywhere,
so there is cool, clear, blue water.
Here it's a 300,000 gallon tank,
a Pacific marine land called Sea Life Park
on the island of Oahu.
Karen's dolphins were ready. On command, they would spin, flip and slap their tails.
They are marvelous to watch.
Now, here they are in slow motion.
Suddenly, a lovely Hawaiian beauty appears and the parkuses celebrate with a hula.
Carrons techniques quickly spread throughout the marine mammal training community and then
to all kinds of other animal training from dogs.
If you have a treat and you hold it over your dog's head, most likely as you lift the treat
up, the dog's butt will go down.
And the moment you're going to click is when you see the muscles of the back legs moving into the sit.
To horses.
So I'm going to reach up here, give her a little tap on top of her rump.
And when she steps that leg in, I'm going to give her the marker signal, and then I'll give her a reward.
To hear to four untrainable animals like cats, even chickens.
In this video I'll be showing you my chicken inner harness and doing a little quicker training.
Chickens, dogs, cats, horses, whales, ferrets.
They've all been successfully trained using a clicker.
Sometimes these animals, like Karen's dolphins and later the dog she walked with,
can master skills that are breathtaking in their precision and complexity.
We've seen how the ideas of Ivan Pavlov, modified by BF Skinner and adapted by Karen
Pryor, could be successfully used to train animals.
There's an obvious next question.
If clickers work so well in training cats and dogs, can they play a role in helping humans
learn?
In the 1960s, Karen Pryor discovered that positive reinforcement, combined with a whistle,
was a powerful tool for training dolphins.
Her work established the foundation of what we know today as clicker training.
It's used with animals of all kinds, but remains most popular with dogs.
Hi, I'm Marty and this is my dog Meg, and we're going to show you some of the things we can do today.
Martin Levy is a big fan of clickers.
He uses them to train his dogs to perform complex tricks.
Martin has a website with videos showing off the skills he started's dogs, summer
sols and serpentines and flying leaps.
Martin got hooked on the sport some years ago.
He quickly realized he didn't just have to train his dog.
He had to train himself. When he was starting out he struggled with one
move. He just couldn't master it.
I was trying to learn to throw a forehand wrist flip. When I would throw the disc, the
disc would turn over. So I saw it help. I had coaches waving at me, telling me to change the position of
my hand, screaming at me while I was throwing, and the disc still failed. It still rolled over.
The thing that I knew was that the position of my hand was critical. My thumb had to be lower than
my pinky in order for this to work. But Martin just couldn't seem to get his hand into the right
position. So I got a dance mirror, and I put in my basement and I grabbed a fisherman's net and I put it in
front of the mirror so I could throw at it. And what became immediately evident was my thumb was
higher than my pinky. Okay, now what I could do was to walk over to the mirror and I could put my
thumb in a position where it was below my pinky. While in doing that I could feel what my forearm felt like I could feel the
stress in my forearm I could feel how my wrist felt and now I could throw at the
mirror and make sure that my thumb was under the pinky. It was a huge learning
moment for Martin. The mirror was doing something very important. It was providing
him with instantaneous feedback.
So here I'm teaching a skill.
I'm teaching it to myself.
And by mirroring that, I could feel what it felt like
and now execute.
In one important way, Martin was like B.F. Skinner's pigeon.
He was standing in front of the mirror, trying different hand positions.
Through trial and error, he was teaching himself how to throw the frisbee,
just like the pigeon, taught itself how the box worked.
Martin wanted to take what he'd learned into his work as a frisbee coach.
He just needed something a little more portable than a dance mirror and a fisherman's net.
Martin was familiar with Karen Price's work with dolphins and dogs and he began to wonder whether a
clicker might accomplish the same thing as a mirror. Provide instantaneous
feedback. What if I could coach like that? I could tell someone I want you to
rotate your hand until and I'm gonna go. yes, I can mark that.
And now that feedback, you have that immediate feedback
without all the noise, without all the talking,
a simple good.
So one of the things I'm really fascinated by
is sort of what the mirror does.
Because in some ways, yes, you can see what you're doing.
But there's also something else that's very important,
which is the mirror is not telling you you're dumb idiot how many times have I told you
put the thumb below the pinky it's not subjective it's a very objective
finding and that's what marking is it is oh you finally did it no it's not that
it's just yes that's it you've got it. No, it's not that. It's just, yes. That's it. You've got it.
He decided to try it out in the introduction to freestyle frisbee class that he leads
where he teaches people to throw frisbee's correctly.
And one of the biggest breakdowns of that class is that I have very energized dogs
who are getting very frustrated because people keep throwing them into the ground. So Martin pulled out his clicker. It sounds like this.
Now, some I think it's demeaning to treat people like dogs, but this was a receptive audience.
They're old dog trainers, and they were all familiar with clickers.
So to pull it clicker out and to say, I'm going to mark this precisely with this thing that you've used all the time in another setting. I'm going to use it for you.
He was basically acting like the mirror that he'd used to train himself.
I would watch very closely and as soon as they hit the spot, boom, click.
Their hand was in the correct position, click. So now I could use that to train them.
And it worked. Well, it turned out to be a wonderful way to do it.
There was an important way Martin's Frisbee students were different than B.F. Skinner's pigeons.
The birds were exploring the box because they wanted to get the reward of food.
With Martin's students, it was very different.
None of them needed to be motivated to learn to throw the Frisbee.
They had that motivation already.
The clicker wasn't being used to manipulate them into doing something they didn't want to do.
It was helping them. Learn a skill they already wanted to learn.
Martin discovered that the feedback he provided with the clicker
seemed more effective than any verbal praise or criticism he could give.
He realized
that when he stayed silent and only marked a student's correct hand position with a click,
they seemed to be more room for learning. The old way he'd done it, saying, great job
or no, that's wrong. That language not only didn't help, it may actually have gotten
in the way. That's because praise and criticism tend to make students pay attention to praise and criticism.
It makes them focus on their teacher, just like I had done with my dad.
Without these emotional cross-currents, the students could concentrate on the tasks they were learning.
When they succeeded, when the frisbee flew straight and true, their pleasure came not from their teacher's feedback,
but from the simple joy of mastering the skill.
Martin realized that if it worked with frisbee enthusiasts, it might also work elsewhere.
So he decided to test it out at his day job.
On a rainy Tuesday morning, I head to the Bronx Montefur Medical Center, a large teaching
hospital in New York.
Up on the orthopedics floor, I find a waiting room dense with people.
The scene feels familiar.
I harried receptionist, some snoozing patients, and a TV playing a home remodeling show.
Martin Levy walks up to greet me and my producer.
Hi, this are you?
Come on, let's get you company.
In his day job, Martin is an orthopedic surgeon here at Montefur.
He's been fixing broken athletes for more than 40 years.
And to your cruciate ligament reconstructions,
meniscal surgery, whether it be repair or resection.
He leads me down the hallway to a little workshop,
like something Santa might have.
We're walking into the skills laboratory.
It's crammed with orange, home depot buckets, saws, drills, wood, rope.
Here we have two types of drills, one a smaller one, and one in the other.
Martin tells me orthopedic surgery is built on pretty basic carpentry.
One of his jobs is to teach incoming residents these skills.
So we need to teach them to tie a variety of knots.
They need to be able to drill a hole.
They need to be able to put a screw in.
They need to be able to use devices known as reemers
where they cut holes or they gouge large sockets.
For Martin, the bar is high.
He needs to teach skills.
He also needs his students to perform those skills in an environment where there's huge pressure and many distractions.
When they go into an operating room, surgeons need to have that technique down to muscle memory.
Martin uses the analogy of a baseball play.
The suicide squeeze in baseball is one of my favorite plays. It starts with a man at third base trying to score.
The batter at this point attempts to bump the ball,
put it in play while the runner at third base is running home.
When you look at the field, there's all of these activities going on.
The third base minute is crashing, the first basement is crashing.
The picture is trying to throw the ball at the batter,
so we can't bump the ball effectively.
And on top of it, there's a runner that's running right at the bunter.
So when we're wanted for us to execute a bunter effectively,
in a highly charged environment, with all of this going on,
we need to practice bunting.
Martin wants his students to know how to use their tools in the same way a great baseball player
knows how to bun.
So he designed a lab where students could practice to perfection.
The goal of the skill lab is to take tools and to teach each individual tool
until it can be used fluently. The baseball bat. Any pitch can be bonded into the field,
the drill. In any position, with any drill bit, on any material, with any shape,
a drill hole can be made.
Martin had some challenges in designing his lab.
Cost was one.
Practicing on medical grade materials like cadavers and plastic bones just didn't make sense.
They're expensive.
And cadavers, they're limited supply.
Instead, he came up with cheap substitutes like PVC pipe, twine, and 2x4.
Martin even came up with some interesting replacements for the human body.
One of my favorite models is the cast on an eggplant.
They put an actual cast like you'd have on a broken arm on an eggplant
and then they ask residents to saw off the cast without cutting
the eggplant.
And eggplant is very similar to fragile skin.
So the cast on there gives the resident the opportunity to really test their skill without
hurting anybody but if the eggplant is leaking then you need to keep practicing.
So picture the lab, it's quiet, full of inexpensive materials, and there's no pressure.
Students can practice for as long as they need.
And of course, Martin has another cheap and simple teaching tool.
The clicker.
So, good morning, Zach.
So, what we're going to do today is...
On this day, Martin's with one of his students, Zachary Sharfman.
I'm a PGY1, which means post-grad year one.
That's your first year after you've graduated from medical school.
Zag is here to practice one particular knot.
One that Martin says is crucial in orthopedic surgery.
A slider knot is useful in shoulder surgery because it allows us to be able to fix soft tissue to bone.
If you can imagine there's an anchor at the end of this and then what we'd be able to do is be able to push soft tissue down to the bone and
tie it. First Martin shows Zach how to tie the knot. Alright first this is what it
looks like. He demonstrates on a length of row. Okay and that's a completed knot.
So let's go build that. Each time Zack performs a step correctly, Martin acknowledges it with a click.
The first step of this is to place one-third of the rope directly over two-thirds of the
rope.
The tag point is over.
We're going to do it five times and each time that you hit the tag point, I'm going to
mark it with the marker.
And if you would say it as you're doing it one- over two thirds. One third over two thirds. And if you do it again please.
After five successful clicks they begin the next step and then the next until they
reach the final step.
Third over two thirds over and through the faking pinch. The backside grab, dress the knot.
Thank you.
Throughout the lesson, there's a complete absence of emotional language.
No, great job, or well done, or no, wrong.
What are you doing?
There's none of that.
The only feedback is the sound of the clicker.
The only reward for the student is the mastery of the skill,
not the approval of the teacher.
This is why I use the clicker.
It is baggage free.
It is emotional free.
Zach Sharfman has worked with Martin on a variety of knots.
He says when he's got one down perfectly,
his fingers just know what to do.
I think a nice way to put it is,
if you put your fingers ready to snap and I challenge
you to do that and get them ready, it's hard to not snap.
And what I think we're really developing here is a way to say the ropes in your hand,
it's loaded, you're ready to snap, it just comes naturally.
Martin Levy's Clicker Training Techn techniques make him an outlier in medicine,
but click-or-training is becoming a fixture in a variety of fields. It's being used to help people
become better dancers, fishermen, and golfers. So you get to the top of your backswing,
hit the click, and then once you hit hit the click, you're doing an obviously go with your dance
wing sequence. You want to hit that click again at the impact sign when you hit the ball.
Martin uses a variety of teaching tools. The clicker is just one of them. But the
lesson it imparts is crucial. We start with a clicker to teach people how to be
language free and to mark very precisely.
We transition them over a very short period of time to other methodologies.
For instance, you can't hear a clicker when a saw is on.
So we use flashlights.
We transition to using a very benign good.
It is just a mark.
You have hit the target precisely. One of the interesting
stories to tell you is that you have two learners. The first learner is
exceptional and they get through exactly what you're teaching in a very
short period of time and you say, good, great job. The next learner has difficulty
and you work with them for three or four
or ten minutes and you're sitting there and they finally get in. You go, wait a go, that's
terrific. And the first learner is sitting there going, what? I don't get this. He struggled.
He gets all the accolades and I, I got a good. Well, if everybody gets good, then we don't have the baggage that that brings.
What was, you must have heard reactions from some people, some residents, some parents of residents
sort of saying, this is ridiculous. How can you teach our kids the way you're teaching dogs?
I haven't had anybody taken back. Everybody has worked with us. I think the the only comment I've ever
heard is my girlfriend trains her dog this way and I said yes and I bet you it was really
effective and he said yeah it was great. We tell them before we start. This is operant
learning, here's the concepts behind it and hang in there, It's going to work.
There's a radical idea at the heart of click or training. It suggests that teaching can be effective without the use of criticism,
but also without the use of praise.
Now, you might think that this makes teachers unimportant.
You'd be completely wrong.
The teacher is anything but a bystander.
That's because it's the teacher who designs the world in which the student learns.
To put this another way, the challenge in teaching pigeons doesn't actually lie in teaching pigeons.
The challenge lies in building a box in which the pigeons can learn.
How to design learning so it becomes natural, commonplace, even predictable?
Stay with us.
Everyone can think of learning moments when things broke down.
One reason for this is that experts often make poor teachers.
Once you've mastered a skill, it becomes difficult to remember what it felt like to not know the skill.
Once you know how to write a bike, you might say to a newbie, just push off, start pedaling.
It takes an enormous act of effort, of empathy, to go back and remember how it felt when something seemed confusing or impossible.
This is sometimes called the curse of expertise.
Experts forget how difficult it can be to learn
something because they've already mastered it.
I was coaching basketball for little kids.
Again, orthopedic resident Zach Scharffman. This time, he's playing the role of teacher
rather than student.
And I stepped up to a free throw line. I dribbled the ball, I spun it the way that I'm used to spinning it.
I put my feet in the right position, I squared my hips and shoulders to the basket, I tucked
my elbow in, I shot the ball, my hand arced and finished in the right position, I handed
it to the kid and I said, go ahead do the same thing.
Zach, as you can probably tell, is a very good basketball player.
So good that he forgets how many little skills he's internalized in order to make the shot.
The kid he was teaching didn't get it.
And his feet are lined up wrong.
And his shoulders are lined up wrong.
And his elbows out to the side.
And the ball's sitting not square on his shooting hand, but it's sitting in between his two
hands.
I look at him and I go,
what are you doing?
It's not at all what I did.
And it was completely unreasonable as a teacher
for me to expect him to be able to shoot the ball that way.
And I think what mattered was then slowing down
and going step by step and saying,
okay, this is where your feet are.
Now every time you get to this line, your feet start here. Don't think about catching the ball, don't grab the ball, don't worry about
shooting. Start with your feet here. In other words, to be effective, Zach had to tease apart a
complex procedure. He had to break his technique down into teachable parts. This is what Martin
Levy calls task analysis, and it lies at the very heart of what you have to do to make clicker training work.
It requires the teacher to possess not just expertise but the patience to deconstruct what they know into bite-sized pieces, to break down skills into their components and sub-components, and to keep doing this until every single student can master them.
Arton says one of the great masters of task analysis was the Royals and White Sox baseball
coach, Charlie Lau.
Even the great hitters and professional baseball need help.
Welcome to the art of hitting 300 with Charlie Lau.
What he did is he took a number of the greatest baseball players, greatest hitters
of all time, and he looked at their swings and what he was able to find with their common
points, there were commonalities in these swings.
And when you took all the commonalities out, you could build this cookie cutter where
you could take someone who wasn't a natural and you could say, follow these steps and
at least we'll get you close. This is what Martin Levy wants to do. Build a series of systematic steps to teach the skills he wants his students to learn.
Martin needs to do it right. Medical residents, he says, seem to take criticism, especially hard.
These are professionals who are highly motivated, who've done well in school, who want to be successful. So, when they're not performing up to expectation, it is unpleasant.
They're not happy about it, and it's my job to get them past it.
One way Martin gets students past it is to communicate that the responsibility for learning is really on him, the teacher.
The student has to show up, be motivated. But if a student doesn't get something,
that means Martin has done something wrong. The skill he's trying to teach has not been broken down sufficiently.
The steps have not been rehearsed systematically. The fault lies not with the student, but with a teacher. So let's say we're tying a knot and there's six steps to tying the knot.
And in the fourth step the knot is breaking down.
We're just, it's not happening.
Well, it's on the teacher at that point to say, okay, it may mean that we take a part
that we always have done as one step and now it turns into two steps or three.
But now the learner is successful.
This is not the way learning unfolds in many parts of the world.
Students are often blamed for their failure to learn.
Sorry, sister.
Now get yourself into the corner and put on the dumps his hat.
Martin Levy has come to understand that the teacher's student relationship is complicated.
One person has power, one does not. One person has expectations, one does not. One person
cannot betrays. The other is hungry for any decision. This relationship can be destroyed
in a single, unthinking moment. Martin remembers a time this happened, not with a
resident, but with his dog Penny. We were working on a series of jumps, referred to as a
serpentine. It's three jumps that are parallel to each other, and we kept knocking the
middle bar down, and at the time I just picked up the bar, tapped the ground and went damn, and my dog ran off into a tunnel and hid.
It took Martin an hour and lots of treats to get her to come back out.
Now medical residents who see a teacher get frustrated don't run into a tunnel and hide.
They don't usually reveal feelings of humiliation or shame, but they
are listening and internalizing those reactions. The voices of teachers, and this is something Freud
might have said, become part of the way students talk to themselves. I think the take-home message from
that, for me, was how fragile learning moments can be,
where everybody's trying hard,
the dog was trying hard to be successful,
I was trying hard to be successful,
but just a simple action of damn.
And the dog interpreted that as her failure
and was not able to perform after that for a couple of days.
Martin says the clicker can help you take frustration out of the equation.
And this is a very good method of freeing people up, opening them up, allowing them to accept
new information without all of the debris that comes along with it.
I'm quiet, you're quiet.
We're just learning a skill.
But I think what I'm hearing you say is that
there's all of this psychological relationship
between teacher and student,
which in some ways is crowding the actual engagement
with the material itself.
What is my teacher?
Think of me, does my teacher like me,
does my teacher hate me, does my teacher approve of me,
does my teacher disapprove of me,
am I doing it right? Am I doing it better with my friend, am
I faster than my friend, am I can I show the teacher, am I actually a really good student,
can I show the teacher, am the best student that the teacher has ever had, I have all the
stuff going on in my head. And what that's getting in the way off is pull the string. So one
third of it is over the other two thirds. You've said it precisely. I'd like to bring you into my lecture and just say that because
that is the entire story. How can we eliminate all the noise?
In the skills lab, Martin breaks down many of the procedures himself. Tying knots, sawing,
drilling. But one of the most important things he does is not with students but with his senior colleagues.
Sometimes even the best surgeons can't explain how they do what they do,
like building an acetabum, the socket for a hip joint.
How do you do it?
I'm no idea, I just do it.
Greatest hitters in the world.
How do you do it?
See the ball hit the ball.
That doesn't help me a lot.
It doesn't really me a lot. It
doesn't really get me very far, especially if I'm not unnatural. So what we do is we ask
that skilled surgeon to sit down and build his astound. Now I'm going to watch you. Do it
again. Do it again. Okay, here's what I saw. And I'm going to start to write down. You
positioned your feet here. You bent your knees. you held the drill like this, your elbow was in this
position, your hands were in this position. And let's let me demonstrate what I saw.
So now I demonstrate what I saw. And he says, yes, that's it. Or no, we need to correct
this. My hand is actually like this. Okay. And then we can build it. And now we can turn it into a structured algorithm where I can give it back to someone and I can
say, here are your targets. Put your feet like this. Put your knees like this. We're
going to mark each one of those things. We're going to just do it until you're comfortable
at each one of those steps. And now we've built someone who can reproduce what that person
did.
There's a profoundly democratic idea at the heart of this approach.
It's understandable for teachers to gravitate to students who are natural,
for whom learning is almost effortless.
Clicker training is really for the rest of us.
As Martin says, you don't have to be a natural to get really, really good at something.
For us, we want surgeons to be very talented, but everyone isn't going to be a wizard.
We just want you to be really, really good, and we can get you there. If we take our time and we
build these skills, we very much believe we can get you there. One of the reasons Martin might be
the perfect evangelist
for clicker training is that he understands how easy it is
to get lost while learning something.
I don't think anything whether it was an athletic endeavor
or it was surgery ever came very easy.
I was not one of those kids that did it on the first try.
This sounds a lot like me.
When it comes to manual skills, I'm all thumbs.
So I challenged Martin to teach me the same knot he taught Zach, his orthopedic resident.
And I have to tell you, I'm not good with my hands.
I have, I'm pretty sure I'm going to screw up.
Someone tells me to do something, I have a voice in the back of my head that says, you're
probably going to make a mistake.
Can you take on the challenge of trying to teach me something?
Yes, we can teach you.
And so we begin.
The instructions are the same that Martin used with Zach
up to a point.
One third over two thirds.
The tag point is over.
One third of a two thirds.
One third of a two thirds. A couple of times, Martin stops to show me 1.30 with 2.30. 1.30 with 2.30.
A couple of times Martin stops to show me how to do something.
My hands are too far apart, I've put the rope under, not over.
There's neither approval nor disapproval on Martin's face and in his voice.
I stop paying attention to him.
It's just a rope, my hands, and the clicker.
One third of a two thirds.
One third of a two thirds.
I feel a quietness in my head. It allows me to concentrate.
One third of a two thirds.
Last one.
One third of a two thirds.
Of course, from time to time, my anxiety about tying the knot properly
resurfaces. Now this is going to be the hard step and I'm going to screw up here. No,
not. One-third over two-thirds. Wrap over and through. Wrap to a fakey pinch. Flatten
the knot. The tag point is flatten the knot. One-third of a-one-third of a-two-thirds wrap over and through.
Wrap to a fakey pinch flatten the knot.
Something happened just now. I noticed it as I was working on the knot.
The instructions that Martin gave me differed from those he gave Zach.
Here, take a listen to what he told Zach.
One-third over two-thirds wrap over over and through, wrap to a fakie pinch, behind, over, and through to a backside grab.
Let me demonstrate.
What Zach did not have to do, and I did, was this step.
Flatten the knot. The tag point is flatten the knot.
I asked Martin why he'd added the step for me. There was a lot of information coming in
that you were telling me before we even started.
I'm what you told me was, I'm really nervous
about doing this.
I don't want to look like an idiot.
I'm not really sure I can do this.
Okay, that's data for me.
And I've got to make it comfortable.
We've got to slow it down. We've got to slow it down.
We've got to make sure that you're seeing each step. If a step isn't working, I'm not going to
necessarily let you work through it as long as someone else. I'm going to take over and give you
information right away so you don't get frustrated and start to fall into that rabbit hole that you had
where, uh-oh, I'm failing again. No, you're not. You're
right here. It's working. It's everything's good."
And he was right. It was good. I finished the knot. It was empowering. Maybe that's the
real key to this kind of training. It helps clear out some of the clutter in our minds.
The negative chatter that psychologists Barry Schwartz says people experience all the time.
We self-sabotage because of the way in which we talk to ourselves as we're going through
our day.
You know, I'm not any good at this.
I'll never be successful.
I should sit quietly.
I shouldn't volunteer to take on new challenges because I'm not any good.
And eventually they're going to discover that I'm already getting more responsibility than I deserve.
You keep talking to yourself in that way. It's very self-defeating.
To be sure, there are limits to this kind of teaching and learning.
Barry Schwartz points out that there are times when great things come from the emotional interactions
between teachers and students. What good teachers do, aside from communicating information,
is they do establish relations with students
that inspire the students to go beyond the specific lesson
that's being taught that day or in that class.
I became a psychologist because I was inspired by the teachers I had,
especially the teacher who taught me
my first psychology course when I was an 18-year-old
who had no idea what psychology was.
My entire life course was largely influenced
by the inspiration provided by that teacher. It's true that a clicker cannot inspire or play the role of a mentor. It's a good
tool for a certain kind of learning, but that doesn't mean it's the right tool for all
kinds of learning. And yet the clicker, when it is the right tool, can fix one of the most
detrimental parts of the teacher's student relationship. When students start to care more about getting praise and avoiding criticism,
then learning.
If the student wants the feedback more than the actual skill,
well then you start to see these things go wrong.
You know, you have students who do whatever they think it takes to get the approval of their teacher,
whether or not it contributes to their mastery of the material.
They're not there to get good at math, they're there to get smiles from the teacher.
And if the teacher is less than perfectly calibrated, it's going to turn out that the things that get smiles from the teacher and the things that actually produce understanding of math are not the same things.
One of the reasons clickers might work is that they tap into a very human desire, the
desire to explore.
What the clicker does is say, go ahead, try and do this task, and if you succeed, I'll
let you know.
If you don't succeed, well, no big deal. Try again.
This approach to learning is a little like playing a video game.
You start off knowing almost nothing about what works. You're in an alien, unfamiliar world.
At first you don't know which door opens to the dragon, which to the gold, but if you get it wrong,
you simply restart the game.
In time, you get better.
Clicker training like a video game is all about discovery.
When you succeed, that click tells you, okay, move on to the next step, to the next level.
Not all learning can be gamified, and not all learning can be broken down into a series
of steps.
But the clicker reminds us that sometimes the best way to help people learn is to get out of the way, and
let them discover the gold behind the door.
This week's show was produced by Jenny Schmidt and Thomas Liu. It was edited by Tara Boyle. Our team includes Paath Shah, Reyna Cohen, Laura Quarelle,
Kat Chuknecht and Lushikwaba.
Our unsung heroes this week are the members of NPR's
training team.
They recently put together a three-day training paloza.
Members of our team took part in sessions
on everything from interviewing techniques to design thinking.
A big thank you to the training team for organizing an event that allowed us to learn new things
and to think about the work we're already doing in new ways.
One last thing before we go.
We're working on an episode about something that many people think about, but rarely discuss with others.
Revenge.
Have you ever been wronged in a way that made you seek revenge
against the wrong door?
Maybe a partner who cheated on you,
or friend who betrayed your trust,
a mentor or financial advisor who led you astray.
If you tried to avenge yourself
and would be interested in sharing your story
in an upcoming episode,
please record your story on your phone and email it to us at HiddenBrain at NPR.org.
Include your full name and phone number and use the subject line Revenge.
Again, that's HiddenBrain at NPR.org.
I'm Shankar Vedantam and this is NPR.
hidden brain at npr.org. I'm Shankar Vedantam and this is NPR.