The Misuse of the Napoleon Complex
The Journal of Common Sense in Education has a new submission ready for peer-review: rightly or wrongly, appearance is a factor. I can’t be too bothered when I read about wasted time and resources dedicated to questions that could be answered properly by anyone who has a) left their home in the last 20 years and/or b) has firing neurons. Why?
Because I’m pleased that third-rate researchers are putting time into trivial subjects instead of mucking up research that actually matters. It’s the lesser of two evils.
EdWeek hops on the bandwagon:
Researchers Julia Smith of Oakland University in Rochester, Mich., and Nancy Niehmi of Nazareth College of Rochester, N.Y., analyzed test results and other data for nearly 9,000 boys across the country who started kindergarten in 1998. They found that kindergarten teachers systematically perceived boys who were shorter than average—or even just shorter than the other boys in their class—to be less skilled in reading, mathematics, and general knowledge than their test results indicated.
Well done.
Then BoardBuzz, the blog of the National School Boards Association, sees EdWeek’s float pass by in that daily parade of irrelevant education research and says, “Hey guys, wait up!”:
No wonder Napoleon had a complex
File this tidbit from Education Week under Huh? It turns out, according to a report in the Journal of Educational Research, “Kindergarten teachers typically underestimate the intellectual abilities of boys who are shorter than their classmates.” As if being really short wasn’t bad enough.
All kidding aside, the report …
[summary quote]
Try telling that to such diminutive dynamos as Danny DeVito (5′), Prince (5’2″), Paul Simon (5’2″), and Willie Shoemaker (4’11″).
Yes, I understand that they’re trying to be funny. And yes, I also understand that jokes in education coverage out of necessity tend not to be gut-busters.
But I’d like to make a few points about the inappropriate/inaccurate reference to Napoleon:
- Napoleon was, as far as we can tell, a man of above-average height compared to Frenchmen of his era. About 3 minutes into any responsible History 101 course, you’ll hear something about the fallacy of evaluating people/events in history by today’s standards - committing that fallacy perpetuates dumb myths like this one.
- Napoleon was ~5’2″. Short, yes? Depends on whose inches you’re referencing. The French inch at this time corresponded to 2.71cm while the British Imperial inch was 2.54cm. Though history suggests that Napoleon, at the time of his death, would’ve been measured with a British stick [after all, the British were holding him when he died] we can’t be sure. And I, personally, can’t be sure, either - I wasn’t there. But is it possible that someone just referenced a previous measurement without realizing a .17cm difference in units that would amount to a 4″ discrepancy? Far stranger things have happened.
- Le petit caporal, Napoleon’s nickname, is an affectionate term that denotes brotherhood. It shouldn’t be translated into English as meaning “little” as “Le Petit Prince” does.
- Napoleon was often accompanied by his elite guard, all of whom were 6′ or taller. Even a man of above-average height would look pretty small when surrounded by relative giants.
- Napoleon ultimately lost and years of European warfare made a comfy bed in which a negative Napoleon myth could rest. Though I find the “history is written by the victors” attitudes professed by Comrade Zinn and others to be inappropriate and agenda-driven, it isn’t hard to justify some of the creation and perpetuation of the Napoleon height myth in this way.
Wikipedia, that darling of the progressive educator, compiles some references for these points. Numbers 1, 3 and 4 are solid; numbers 2 and 5 are speculative.
The most intriguing irony with BoardBuzz’s point is that if there is a valid, well-understood Napoleon complex - and I think there probably is, it’s just got the wrong name and need not be confined only to height - that results from one’s perception of inadequacy by others, then logically we can conclude that we’re aware that others might treat a shorter person differently. If they didn’t or it wasn’t a possibility, there wouldn’t be a Napoleon complex reference that fit the headline requirements of this article. And, if that’s the case, this groundbreaking research tells us something we already know [or should know] that has a strong enough foundation to make for a cruddy, barely-humorous title reference.
Keep in mind, researchers and their benefactors - as you fritter and waste time telling us what we already know, there are quite a few kids out there who still can’t read.
But maybe I’m wrong and there really aren’t more pressing issues out there. And at the least, we’ve got a lesson on why it’s important that educators get a little more substance to go along with their teaching methods and school leadership courses.
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I don’t see why you consider this to be useless research.
First of all, teachers shouldn’t discriminate on the basis of height, don’t you think? Because height has nothing to do about academic ability.
You may call such discrimination a “fact of life” but it remains true that this is a learned behavior and one that perpetuates inequities in the school system.
It’s also the sort of behaviour that may change over time. So while we knew that teachers discriminated against height 20 years ago, it may be that they no longer do so. You can’t tell unless you check to find out.
Lots of things like this change. A study in 1950 might have found that most teachers are racists. You wouldn’t call a similar study conducted 20 years later useless because “it’s something we learned 20 years ago”.
Indeed, the idea that we can say of any demographic that “we learned it 20 years ago” betrays an almost abnormally underdeveloped understanding of humans and society. Do you think that if we’ve studied attitudes once that we’ve established it for all time? Weird! Odd!
We need to survey for attitudes and behaviours on an ongoing basis, because these change, and because inappropriate attitudes and behaviours, especially on the part of teachers, can cause great and unnecessary harm.
Stephen,
The study wasn’t about whether we should discriminate on the basis of height. It was about if we do, which is a very different thing and is not to be confused with a value judgment.
We already know that it happens - from past research, anecdotal observations, scientific conclusions re: Napoleon complex and similar phenomena, and even instances as frivolous as following Doug Flutie’s football career from Boston College to the NFL to the CFL and back to the NFL.
Your point about re-checking the status of discrimination is valid; even so, I’d put “height discrimination” about 384th on the list of important issues in education.
There is not a compelling case that the status of height discrimination or the factors contributing to it have changed dramatically between 1987 and now. A compelling case may warrant a re-examination of the situation; that’s the basis for most race-based research, the situational foundation of which is constantly in flux. This is not the case with height discrimination with 5 year olds.
I agree that we need to monitor attitudes and behaviors often - it’s the responsible way to improve our practice. But we do need to prioritize our efforts and, to put it simply, make sure that they matter. Research for the sake of research - or at the expense of more important research - isn’t the best way to go about it.
I could have gone all year without reading about that nonsense.
Thanks for calling it out, Matthew. I think I picked it up from an ASCD Smartbrief. Gah.
> I’d put “height discrimination†about 384th on the list of important issues in education.
Fine.
We’ve got plenty of researchers, enough that we can get down to things that are 384th on your list.
Which is a good thing, because for other people, such things rank a lot higher.
> There is not a compelling case that the status of height discrimination or the factors contributing to it have changed dramatically between 1987 and now
Well, interestingly, the only way to create such a case would be to research it.
That’s the thing about research - you do it to determine *whether* there is a compelling case. You don’t do it only *if* there is a compelling case.
Finally…
Both you and a commenter spend time talking about how you hate to ‘fritter and waste’ time on such ‘nonsense’. Then why are you writing about it?
Why not focus on the things that are important to you? If we have researchers working on *those*, then what do you care if other people are working on other things?
Nobody expects to have the entire force and weight of the government or the national research infrastructure lined up behind *your* priorities. At the very best, the most you can claim is some part of that.
It’s like police work. If your house is burgled, they’ll send some officers to investigate. But they won’t send the entire force - and it would be pretty trivial to complain that some police out there somewhere are investigating crimes that you consider to be unimportant.
So unless you can show that the height-researchers are directly diverting resources away from much more important things, then you don’t have a case.
And if you don’t have a case, then you’re just being nasty for no good reason, to make political points or something, I don’t know.
Stephen,
I don’t adhere to the relativism that you seem to - that is not an insult, just an honest way of comparing our views. Though some victim of height discrimination might rank the issue above 384th, that doesn’t mean that the rest of us should bow to their interests.
We both know that all research isn’t created equal and that citing the research ‘Long Tail’ is an explanation for why certain research occurs, not a justification for why it must.
I judge research by its value. Imagine that we’re debating two researchers: one works on cancer treatments, the other develops a new alternative to Viagra. I pity the person who has to defend both researchers as having equally-valued places in our society because, on both my list of priorities and the world’s as a whole, cancer ranks higher than what Dennis Miller called “boner pills.” Touting equivalence makes friends, but being honest about one’s work makes progress. I’m most concerned with the latter.
I disagree that research determines whether there is a compelling case for investigation. We don’t conduct a full-scale research project that systematically tracks 9,000 children over a period of time to determine if there are grounds for examining the issue.
The reason I write about these projects is because they’re an irresponsible two-step around the issue of opportunity cost. If one chooses to direct their Ph.D. toward a trivial subject, they have to admit that they’re doing it at the expense of more important issues - that is responsible scholarship. Too many times we equate research or remark that ‘all knowledge is valuable’ - indeed it is, but that doesn’t mean our time and resources couldn’t be better spent. We need scholarship on art, psychology, history, biology and the rest, but in no way will I suggest that the average women’s studies dissertation carries more value than the investigation of a cheaper cure for malaria. Academics don’t point this out often enough - such judgment causes professional rifts that most want to avoid - but I have no problem with being candid about it.
Your example with the police/burglary doesn’t fit. The reason we don’t throw every single available resource concurrently at a problem is because that is seldom the most efficient way to go about solving it. A team of specialized investigators working on that burglary is better than a force of 100,000. I don’t need to show why these researchers are directly diverting resources; the proof is already in the opportunity cost. Making a list of what they’re not working on would be useless.
I won’t address your last sentence for now.
> I judge research by its value.
No, you judge research by what *you* value. Big difference.
Discrimination doesn’t bother you. You think it’s something short people just have to live with. So research in to it is trivial.
You represent your values as absolutes:
> in no way will I suggest that the average women’s studies dissertation carries more value than the investigation of a cheaper cure for malaria.
Leaving aside the basic dishonesty of comparing “the average” something with the “cure” of something…
It may be that understanding the systematic discrimination against half the population may produce many more returns for society that the savings obtained by treating malaria more cheaply.
It may even be that the cheaper cure to malaria is made possible by a woman who is earning a PhD as a result of a program that was created as a consequence of the dissertation author’s work.
We don’t live in a world of simple causes and effects where everything is predictable. We live in a complex world where a wide range of factors go into producing results.
The idea that you have some sort of privileged position from which to judge which studies will produce good results (even if ‘good results’ = ‘things you want’, which is itself questionable) is unsustainable.
Stephen,
First, I have to apologize. For some reason Akismet snagged your comment. I have no idea why, since you have commented before, didn’t have tons of links, etc. Hopefully that’s just a glitch.
You’ve misrepresented me quite badly. At no point did I say that discrimination didn’t bother me or that I “think it’s something short people just have to live with.” There are many real problems in education and elsewhere - I don’t question that. I do question the priorities we sometimes have in addressing those problems.
Comparing an average soft-discipline social science dissertation to one that delivers a solution to a specific, pressing need was done purposely. It was not dishonest; the point is that those two aren’t an apples-to-apples comparison.
I hope that you don’t sincerely believe that understanding systematic discrimination based on height is likely to produce more returns - or be a more valuable moral goal - than curing a disease that kills over 1 million per year, most of whom are infants, children and pregnant women.
I can’t justify the value of research or, really, any actions based on a ‘butterfly effect’ of possible results. I agree that many times research has unintended but quite positive outcomes/influences - this has happened many, many times - but they result from high-need research, too. We can’t compare the unknowns of height discrimination research to the unknowns of something like HIV/AIDS research. If you would like to tell the world that you think height discrimination research is more important than research related to cancer, HIV/AIDS, malaria, literacy and 100 other problems, you’re welcome to do that. It’s not a view that I share and I’ve explained why.
I’m a bit disappointed by the way in which you ended your last two comments. I don’t claim to have a privileged position from which I judge research, education or anything else. That’s why I write lengthy entries on this site and open them up for discussion. If I felt that my word was or should be the last word on a topic, I wouldn’t bother to have - let alone address - comments.
The important thing is to stick to the merit [or lack of merit] of the arguments. You’ve taken issue with some of my points and responded - that is valid and welcome, and my willingness to respond in full when you raise those points should attest to that. That is a very different method than attacking my qualifications for commenting on the subject or dismissing the comments with a baseless accusation that there are political motives to what I write. I won’t stand for or engage in ad hominem attacks here.
I’m not unskilled or unfamiliar with politics and PR. I can assure you that if I aspired to stardom, wanted to be an internet presence or anything else, I would’ve chosen a cooler, easier and more enjoyable sector than education.
I perform research in an electro-physiology lab and have a bone to pick with such seemingly unimportant research. Surely, knowing that short boys are underestimated in the classroom is worth knowing, but at what expense?
Recently I attended a research conference where 100-150 projects were presented, all of which were sponsored by a specific grant. The projects varied greatly and encompassed everything from Education to Biochemistry. Our particular project is showing great promise in the field of epilepsy and even neurogenesis. Imagine my disappointment when I wandered by a poster depicting 4 months of research devoted to the nutritional value of grapes! We’re not talking about the physiological effects of antioxidants, or even definite animal case studies, but rather just whether the fruit was a healthy addition to one’s daily diet based on examining the chemical makeup of the grape. The answer? Yes. It is. Fascinating, now let’s all get back to work, shall we?
What I really want to drive at is not that the study of grapes is useless. It isn’t, and I think it’s great that I can fearlessly eat grapes for the rest of my life. Unfortunately, that study used valuable state research funding that could have, quite frankly, been better used on my own project. I’ll take that statement a step further. It could have been better used on the project NEXT to mine. It doesn’t matter which side.
I wish research funding was unlimited, but we all know it isn’t, and it is important to keep this in mind when tackling a research project. A lot of the time, and this is especially true where I live, the panels in charge of granting funds to labs/researchers have very little in-depth knowledge of the topic that is being pursued. It is an issue of making research dollars high-impact and worthwhile from as many angles as possible, and a large amount of that responsibility is on the shoulders of researchers, not just the suits shelling out money. All knowledge is eventually useful, but we should focus on what can at least be incorporated into a current plan, or anticipated series of research projects.
I’m not familiar with the specific sources of funding for this “Napoleon” research, but whether the dollars are private or public barely matters when considering the amazingly small value of the end product.
/rant
Matthew,
The reason I took the tone I did is because of what I felt was unwarranted nastiness in the original post. Like this, for example:
“I’m pleased that third-rate researchers are putting time into trivial subjects instead of mucking up research that actually matters. It’s the lesser of two evils.”
Given that you have actually named the researchers in question, your attack on them as “third rate” and on their work as “trivial” suggested to me an intent not to, as you say in a comment, to “to stick to the merit [or lack of merit] of the arguments.”
If your intent was a serious evaluation of their arguments, then I apologize for assuming that it was motivated by other concerns. It felt to me that your intent was to discredit the source and the topic, and if you return to your original post, you may see why I may be forgiven for leaping to this conclusion. Again, if that was not your intent, I apologize.
Treating the issue substantively, I am still not convinced by your evaluation of the usefulness of the research in question. It appears to me that the evaluation criteria are not well formed.
Let me be specific. You write that a study of height discrimination is obviously less important than “curing a disease that kills over 1 million per year.” By this, I take it that your criterion for evaluating research work is the number of lives saved by that work.
Now maybe you see what you said differently. You took me to task, after all, for asserting that discrimination doesn’t bother you. Yet you also said that research into it is “trivial”. The conclusion I draw is pretty natural, and when taken in conjunction with your other comments, deductive. I do not misrepresent you if I assign to you the consequences of your statement. And in a similar manner, your statement directly implies that you consider ‘the number of lives saved’ to be the criterion by which we judge research.
If so - and I’m sure you will agree with me that there is significant room for questioning that criterion - then it seems to me that your support for the one sort of research over the other simply doesn’t follow.
The example you chose is ‘finding a cheaper cure for malaria’. Now it may be that lives are saved by lowering the cost of treatment, but unless the savings are dramatic, then that number will be nowhere the million lives being lost to the disease.
But more to the point, when we ask, “what is killing those people,” a more complex answer emerges. Because it is not *simply* that they are dying from malaria. Malaria can be cured with prescription drugs. Therefore, if the people dying had access to the drugs, they would be cured. What is killing them, arguably, is not malaria. It is their lack of access to prescription drugs.
Indeed, if we look at the top causes of death worldwide, it becomes clear what a role income plays, so much so that the list needs to be divided between high, middle and low income countries. http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs310/en/index.html
That is why we see malaria at 4.4 percent of deaths in low income countries, and not a factor at all in middle or higher income countries.
Without even looking at the reasons why people die of malaria specifically, it becomes evident that most of the causes of death are what might be called ‘lifestyle’ causes, not diseases. At 4.4 percent for only one group of nations, malaria is in fact a pretty minor cause of death. It is greatly overshadowed by things like heart failure, lung infection and obstruction, cancer and stroke.
These are medical conditions but they have to a large degree social causes - things like diet and nutrition, exercise, smoking and pollution, stress and deprivation. These things in turn are almost totally related to issues of poverty and injustice.
From where I sit, the single-minded focus on ‘disease’ is nothing more than a distraction from the real problems facing people in society. That is not to say that I think research into the cause, treatment and cure of disease is trivial. It is not; it is important, and we should do it.
But it is not so important that it dwarfs all else, and it is certainly nowhere nearly as important as research into justice, equity, and poverty. One major area of this research is research into discrimination. And one well-known type of discrimination is that based on height.
Now I am not saying that some paper on a height-discrimination study will cure poverty on earth. But neither will malaria be cured by the typical the typical paper on that disease. Each type of research project plays the same role: it contributes to our understanding of a wider field. Sometimes there are major breakthroughs that save a lot of lives - but these breakthroughs are rare - and they don’t exist only in medicine.
And that returns me to the reason why I took the tone I did. Because none of what I have just outlined is surprising or even controversial. Most people know this, and when they look on it and reflect, they see that it is true. That’s why society as a whole supports research into many disciplines, most of which have nothing to do with medicine.
There’s a whole class of research, that might be called ‘poverty studies’ or ‘equity studies’ or ‘social justice research’ or the like, that examines this sort of question. It is work that is important. And yet it is work that is often dismissed as “trivial” not because it is genuinely trivial, but because if often has political implications, that would impact the power and privilege of the wealthy.
Thus, trivializing research that isn’t part of the ‘hard sciences’ becomes part and course of a wider political strategy, one that is intended to perpetuate wealth and privilege, even if this does result in continued poverty, suffering and death.
Now if this wasn’t your intent when you labled one such study “trivial”, I apologize. And I will say only that, even if this wasn’t your intent, this is the effect.
I think I’ll stop addressing this here and let us both get on to other issues. I will be happy to read your response and let it be. You should, after all, have the last word on your own blog.
Stephen,
I’d like to be very clear - I discussed only the researcher’s work. That is sticking to the merits of the argument.
Though I appreciate your willingness to let me have the last word, I expressed what I wanted to in the articles and comments. There’s just no need for more, it’s all there.
The whole Napoleon complex issue is bunk. As a short guy, I don’t pick fights, but will fight if attacked. I’m not a control freak, but do get upset if I’m not respected in an area where I deserve respect. The problem is with people who equate someones importance with their size. I won’t be thought less of and won’t be pushed around, but if I assert myself, then I have a Napoleon complex. Sure, it does exist, but it should apply to individuals who are considered “normal” height who think less of someone smaller than them, not the other way around.
Well Done! I Like it!