Four-year-old Steve Jobs probably would not have eaten it. Neither would have toddler Bill Gates, or the little Elon Musk. Don the kid probably grabbed it the second he could and stuffed it in his mouth as fast as possible. Stanford psychologist Walter Mischel and his team designed what probably is the fastest and cheapest way to determine a kid's future success in life. Put the kid in a room, give it a marshmallow, and tell it that it can eat it now or wait 15 minutes and get a second marshmallow. Children who were able to delay gratification and wait for the reward turned out to be much more balanced, resilient, and successful teenagers and adults. Mischel's marshmallow test proved to be a very reliable predictor of future success and has been replicated several times with children from different backgrounds and nationalities.
And you? Would you have waited?
And you? Would you have waited?
- Mischel, W., Shoda, Y., Rodriguez, M. L., 1989. Delay of gratification in children. Science, 244 (4907): 933-938.
A great Ted talk on this experiment (about 5 min long)
An article from the New Yorker about Walter Mischel, written by his former graduate student
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