Y11W03WR Confidence and competence on different roads
Examine a specific domain where you have either over-estimated or under-estimated your own ability, and trace what produced the mis-estimation.
1Retrieval check
Q1.What did Dunning and Kruger’s 1999 research find?
- APeople with high skill always rate themselves accurately
- BPeople with low skill often rate their ability far above average; genuine experts tend to underestimate themselves
- CIntelligence predicts confidence
- DArrogance is the main driver of mis-estimation
Q2.What is the article’s caveat about the popular version of the Dunning-Kruger effect?
- AThe study has been retracted
- BThe popular version often overstates the research — not everyone unskilled is confident, and not everyone confident is unskilled
- CThe effect applies only to academic domains
- DThe research has been entirely debunked
Show answer key
Q1 → B. People with low skill often rate their ability far above average; genuine experts tend to underestimate themselves.The mechanism: the skill of performing and the skill of judging performance draw on the same underlying competence, so weak performers can’t see their own weakness.
Q2 → B. The popular version often overstates the research — not everyone unskilled is confident, and not everyone confident is unskilled.The popular story is cleaner than the research; the effect is real, but real life is messier than a single pattern.
2Prompt deconstruction
- Command verb
- EXAMINE — diagnose one specific case, don’t argue a general claim
- You pick
- ONE domain (a subject, skill, or activity) with concrete evidence of mis-estimation
- Goal
- trace where your self-assessment came from and what information you weighted correctly or missed
- Must reference
- Dunning and Kruger’s research AND the article’s caveat that the popular version overstates it
3Pick nudge
Which case will best show the gap between confidence and real competence?
4Planner — for each of your picks
5Sentence stems
- I noticed that ___ when ___.
- The specific moment it stood out was ___.
- Before paying attention, I had been assuming ___.
- [Researcher’s] finding that ___ captures what I saw, because ___.
- The pattern across my cases is ___.
- What this tells me about [wider topic] is ___.
6Exemplar paragraph (not about this article)
(1) I had been confident I was a strong essay writer in English, mostly because teachers in Years 8 and 9 had said so. (2) In Year 10 my first analytical essay came back at a C+, with a comment that my claims were unsupported. (3) I had been weighting early praise heavily and discounting the specific feedback I had been receiving all year — ‘develop your evidence’ — because it didn’t fit the general picture. (4) Dunning and Kruger’s point fits: the skill I used to judge my writing was the same skill I was weak in. (5) Fresh, specific feedback mattered more than accumulated vague praise.
What this paragraph does, move by move
- Names the domain and the confidence.
- States the concrete evidence of mis-estimation.
- Traces where the self-assessment came from.
- Identifies what information was weighted wrongly.
- Links the specific case to the research pattern.
- Choosing a selection results in a full page refresh.
- Opens in a new window.