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Impostor Syndrome COSWL/COSIAC Workshop 2017 LSA Summer Institute

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Presentation on theme: "Impostor Syndrome COSWL/COSIAC Workshop 2017 LSA Summer Institute"— Presentation transcript:

1 Impostor Syndrome COSWL/COSIAC Workshop 2017 LSA Summer Institute
Penny Eckert, Stanford University Monica Macaulay, Univ. of WI-Madison Impostor Syndrome

2 “The trouble with the world is that the stupid are cocksure and the intelligent are full of doubt.” (Bertrand Russell)

3 “Somehow the admissions committee made an error
“Somehow the admissions committee made an error.” “I’m an Oberlin mistake.” Pauline Clance and Suzanne Imes. Speculated but did not claim that women were more affected than men. Clance, P.R.; Imes, S.A. (1978). The impostor phenomenon in high achieving women: dynamics and therapeutic intervention. Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice. 15 (3): 241–247.

4 A definition “Impostor syndrome can be defined as a collection of feelings of inadequacy that persist even in face of information that indicates that the opposite is true. It is experienced internally as chronic self-doubt, and feelings of intellectual fraudulence.”

5 Symptoms attributing success to luck discounting success
feeling like a fake dreading that people will find out you aren’t as knowledgeable or talented or as they think you are or as you should be. It can block engagement and creativity. If it gets out of hand it can be paralyzing.

6 “It can be hard to tell when you’ve got it: those others might have a syndrome, your reasoning goes, but I’m genuinely out of my depth. It’s a classic case of “comparing your insides with other people’s outsides”: you have access only to your own self-doubt, so you mistakenly conclude it’s more justified than anyone else’s.”

7 Who gets it? High-achievers Different professions, e.g. teachers
people in academia actors athletes . . .

8 “Impostor syndrome ... is presumably even more common than surveys suggest: after all, it’s not the kind of thing to which people like to admit” “When psychologists first began to study the impostor phenomenon, they suspected it was something experienced primarily by women. That has proven not to be the case. In fact, it is one of the few psychological issues initially thought to affect primarily women that later was determined to relate to both genders.”

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15 http://www. marieclaire. co

16 http://www. marieclaire. co

17 Closer to home “Catherine Cardelús, an assistant professor in biology …, first noticed the phenomenon as a graduate student … ‘I was thinking, ‘I’m not cut out for this. I really can’t do this’ -- even though there was ample evidence to the contrary,’ she remembers. And the negative, self-sabotaging thoughts didn’t stop, they continued through her postdoc and into her full-time positions. ‘I’m a high achiever and I’m successful, but I’ve had those moments of waiting for someone to tap me on the shoulder and tell me I don’t belong,’ she says. ‘Or to tell me I was really lucky to get that paper in that journal.’ Cardelús has discussed the issue at international science conferences. ‘It’s pervasive,” she says. “Absolutely pervasive.’”

18 Anderson, L. V. 2016. Feeling like an imposter is not a syndrome
Anderson, L.V Feeling like an imposter is not a syndrome. Slate April 12.  “If I could do it all over again, I would call it the impostor experience, because it’s not a syndrome or a complex or a mental illness, it’s something almost everyone experiences.” Pauline Clance The actress Maisie Williams recently garnered headlines for saying, “We should stop calling feminists ‘feminists’ and just start calling people who aren’t feminist ‘sexist.’ ” Similarly, maybe we should stop calling people who experience impostor syndrome “people who experience impostor syndrome” and start calling people who don’t experience impostor syndrome “overconfident weirdos.”

19 Is it all bad? Can you put it to good use?

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22 Okay, so what can you do? Think of confidence as a skill you need to develop. Start by recognizing that you aren’t the only “impostor” in the room.

23 Deal with it as a social issue
Confidence isn’t just an individual thing, but a social thing. You and others feel like frauds in relation to people, situations, institutions. Our profession may be the ultimate breeding ground for this syndrome. Confidence isn’t a global thing, but a situated thing. When are you more likely to feel confident/unconfident?

24 Do some ethnography. Maybe you can even get others to do this with you. Notice how interactions go in your classrooms and gatherings. Find patterns Try to see other people from different perspectives. Learn to recognize other people’s insecurities.

25 Figure out what your triggers are.
Take stock of the situations in which you feel the most insecure. The times when you’ve felt stupid, what was it that made you feel stupid? Was it a particular person? Was it a particular topic or activity? Was it something that happened? Was it some small failure? ...

26 And more individually Try to catch yourself when you have impostor-type thoughts. Change the narrative to focus on what you did to earn what you have. Develop an account of what you know. Develop an account of what you’ve done or accomplished (and minimize the difference between the two) Today, this week ...

27 Other websites

28 1. Come off it. Usually I feel like a fraud when I think I'm more important than I am. 2. Accept that you have had some role in your successes. 3. Focus on providing value. I feel like a fraud when I'm concerned about myself. 4. Keep a file of people saying nice things about you. 5. Stop comparing yourself to that person. 6. Expose yourself totally. 7. Treat the thing as a business or experiment. 8. Remember: being wrong doesn't make you a fake. 9. "Nobody Belongs Here More Than You." 10. Realize that when you hold back, you're robbing the world. 11. Say what you can. 12. Realize that nobody knows what they're doing. 14. Authenticity is a hoax. 15. See credentials for what they are. 16. Find one person to whom you can say, "I feel like a fraud.” 17. Realize that faking things actually does work.


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