Thanksgiving Reading Book Review
Freak Out!
After failing to finish the below book, I tried out another nonfiction, Levitt and Dubner's Freakonomics. I basically didn't put it down until I was done. Highly recommended. In Freakonomics, we get a random selection of various research discoveries Steven Levitt has made. These range from abortion being the real reason crime went down in the 90's (that would have been when those unwanted children came of juvenile age- the trend also happened in other countries and states that legalized at different times), why your real estate agent may try to sell your house to early (the little extra money they make keeping it on the market is outweighed by just moving on to a new house), and how the number of books you have in your house will effect your child's intelligence more than how often you read to them.
What I really like about his approach is how he looks at the full range of incentives, and isn't pigeon-holed by a behavioresque punishment/reward mantra. For instance, I was very pleased to see that high stakes testing in schools may or may not increase intelligence, but they certainly increased cheating in Chicago schools. On the same point, my favorite finding was based on research done at day care. They had been having issues with parents picking up their kids late, so they tried an experiment where they added a fine to their monthly charge if they came in after the prescribed time. So what do you think happened? Yes, exactly, the late pick-ups doubled. Why? Perhaps because even though there was an economic incentive to be punctual, they had removed the social incentive. A major reason to be on-time was to not be rude. You don't feel bad though if you know they were compensated for your tardiness.
So, yes, great read. And not very long either! Just over 200 pages. Would make a very good x-mas gift for the resident nerd in your family.
What I really like about his approach is how he looks at the full range of incentives, and isn't pigeon-holed by a behavioresque punishment/reward mantra. For instance, I was very pleased to see that high stakes testing in schools may or may not increase intelligence, but they certainly increased cheating in Chicago schools. On the same point, my favorite finding was based on research done at day care. They had been having issues with parents picking up their kids late, so they tried an experiment where they added a fine to their monthly charge if they came in after the prescribed time. So what do you think happened? Yes, exactly, the late pick-ups doubled. Why? Perhaps because even though there was an economic incentive to be punctual, they had removed the social incentive. A major reason to be on-time was to not be rude. You don't feel bad though if you know they were compensated for your tardiness.
So, yes, great read. And not very long either! Just over 200 pages. Would make a very good x-mas gift for the resident nerd in your family.