Futurity

Giving advice doesn’t just help the person who gets it

Getting guidance from others can help motivate us to do better, but giving advice could be great for the giver, too.
One teen in a green sweater holds up her hands while talking to a student in yellow, while they sit in a classroom in front of a computer

Giving advice may actually benefit the advice-giver, according to new research.

Intuition says that people who struggle with something, such as earning solid grades or losing weight, will benefit from receiving advice. But findings in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences suggest that the opposite is also true.

In an intervention with nearly 2,000 high schoolers, researchers discovered that advice-giving actually helps the students doing the counseling.

“Motivation is not calculus. If you told students who don’t know calculus, ‘Teach this to somebody else,’ that would be ludicrous,” says Lauren Eskreis-Winkler, a postdoctoral research at the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania. “Motivation is a little different. Often, people know what they need to do to achieve a goal. They’re just not doing it. The battle is getting people to enact what they already know.”

The work could have implications for the way teachers, coaches, and even parents approach motivation.

Here, Eskreis-Winkler explains why the findings excite her and where she sees potential for future study:

The post Giving advice doesn’t just help the person who gets it appeared first on Futurity.

More from Futurity

Futurity3 min read
Prehistoric ‘Saber-tooth Salmon’ Gets A New Name
A prehistoric fish known as the saber-tooth salmon is getting a new name. But it hasn’t lost any of its fearsome appeal. New research reveals something new about the piscine anatomy of the giant salmon Oncorhynchus rastrosus. It had a pair of spiked
Futurity3 min read
Team Pins Down Huge Cost Of Mental Illness In The US
A new analysis of the economic toll of mental illness considers a host of adverse economic outcomes not considered in earlier estimates. Mental illness costs the US economy $282 billion annually, which is equivalent to the average economic recession,
Futurity2 min readDiet & Nutrition
Study Challenges Benefits Of Intermittent Fasting
When it comes to weight loss, how many calories you consume might be more important than when you consume them, researchers report. The findings challenge the popularity of intermittent fasting. For the study, published in the journal Annals of Inter

Related Books & Audiobooks