Lobak dan Kayu
Based on Wikipedia, carrot and stick is an idiom refers to policy of offering a combination of reward and punishment to decrease students' behavioural problems.
Okay, rewards in educational context may consist of praise, stickers, giving presents and so on while punishment may be corporal punishment, being scolded or sent out of the class and so forth. But the problem here is the idiom, 'carrot and stick'. Alfie Kohn argues that the behaviourists (people who support reward and punishment) are treating people like pets.
So, is there any connection between human treating human and human treating pets? Is it true?
Okay, rewards in educational context may consist of praise, stickers, giving presents and so on while punishment may be corporal punishment, being scolded or sent out of the class and so forth. But the problem here is the idiom, 'carrot and stick'. Alfie Kohn argues that the behaviourists (people who support reward and punishment) are treating people like pets.
...we talk casually about the use of "carrots and sticks" and there is food for thought here, too. Before these words came to be used as generic representations of bribes and threats, what actually stood between carrot and the stick was, of course, a jackass. (Kohn, 1993, p.25).
So, is there any connection between human treating human and human treating pets? Is it true?
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