Victorian Values For the 21st Century. By Margaret Wente.
Victorian values for the 21st century. By Margaret Wente. The Globe and Mail, October 5, 2013.
Wente:
The new economy will be won by those who
can exercise discipline, conscientiousness and diligence
My
dental hygienist is one of the most important people in my life. She keeps my
teeth from falling out. She's highly skilled, diligent and conscientious, and
when she tells me I need to floss more, she does it in the nicest way. Like the
vast majority of dental hygienists, she’s a woman.
“Are
there any men who do this?” I asked. She laughed. She said she’d never met one.
Being a
dental hygienist is a pretty good career, especially as boomers enter their
periodontal years. But the aptitudes you need to do the work are far more
common among women than men: attention to detail, good people skills,
super-cleanliness, ability to work in teams, calm and steady temperament. Men
who go into the field are often the only males in their classes.
The
21st century will have a lot more work like dental hygiene, and a lot less work
where it’s okay to skip the morning shower, have a few beers at lunch and screw
off in the fall to go duck hunting. That’s an important reason why female
employment has been on the rise and men’s participation in the work force has
plunged to record lows.
We hear
a lot of noise about creativity, innovation and entrepreneurship. These are
supposedly the defining traits that will separate the winners from the losers
in the new hyper-competitive meritocracy. But for most of us, the real keys to
success are far more old-fashioned – Victorian, even. They are self-regulation,
conscientiousness and diligence. More than ever, perhaps, 21st-century success
will require 19th-century values.
As for
education, it won’t do much good for people who aren’t motivated or disciplined
enough to acquire it. These people are mainly men. We all know that low-skilled
men will be our world’s biggest losers, but it’s often not lack of skills that
holds them back. It’s lack of the aptitudes and attitudes required for success.
These are the men who can’t stay in school, can’t apply themselves, can’t take
direction or defer rewards, can’t be reliable and can’t function well in teams.
“Young male hotheads who just can’t follow orders are pretty well doomed,”
economist Tyler Cowen says in Average is Over, a sharp and sobering book on who will get ahead, and why.
Self-regulation
matters more today in every field – even journalism. In the distant mists of
time, when newspapers were still set in hot type and women were relegated to
the women’s section, newsmen smoked like chimneys, cursed like sailors and got
hammered at the Press Club every night. Their social skills would never make
the cut today. In modern newsrooms, no one ever drinks or smokes or yells.
Young reporters are required to have advanced degrees, take direction well and
work in teams. Their idea of substance abuse is eating doughnuts in the office.
Today,
it’s work habits – not credentials or connections – that separate one
liberal-arts BA from another. The one who works her butt off and saves her
money is still destined for the upper middle-class. The Grand Theft Auto addict is destined for his parents’ basement.
The
trouble is that cultivating 19th-century habits in the 21st century isn’t easy.
In Victorian times, self-regulation was reinforced by many kinds of external
pressure, including social norms, religion, family and Queen. The consequences
of lapsing from the straight and narrow – social disgrace, even ruin – could be
severe. Today, you’re far more reliant on yourself to stay the course, and
nobody else much cares if you don’t.
On top
of that, we face temptations our ancestors could never have imagined – many of
them engineered to zero in on our pleasure centres with scientific precision.
As Daniel Akst argues in his highly readable book, Temptation: Finding Self-Control in an Age of Excess, modern life
requires an unnatural degree of self-control. Our ancestors were too busy just
surviving to succumb to bad habits. But in an age of super-affluence, it’s a
constant struggle to keep our appetites in check. “It’s not that we have less
willpower than we used to,” he writes, “but rather that modern life immerses us
daily in a set of temptations far more evolved than we are.”
Self-discipline
and high IQ often go together. But they are not the same. As Mr. Akst reports,
self-discipline is a far better predictor of university grades than either IQ
or SAT scores. Two University of Pennsylvania research psychologists, Martin
Seligman and Angela Duckworth, have argued that a major reason for student
underachievement is not inadequate schools or boring textbooks, but “failure to
exercise self-discipline . . . we believe that many of America’s children have
trouble making choices that require them to sacrifice short-term pleasure for
long-term gain.”
The
million-dollar question is to what extent these qualities can be instilled in
kids – especially poor ones, who lack the family support and other advantages
available to children from better-off families. That’s the new holy grail in
education. It’s also the foundation of the KIPP charter school movement, which
emphasizes character, high expectations and discipline. And it’s the reason
that Ms. Duckworth won a MacArthur “Genius” award. The money will be used to
fund her research into practical ways of strengthening self-regulation among
children.
“The
more a society progesses, the bigger a problem self-control turns out to be,”
Mr. Cowen says. In the new hyper-meritocracy, people with temperate habits and
Victorian values will do better than ever – and people who can't resist
temptation will do even worse.
Which
reminds me: I’ve got to go home and floss my teeth.