What is The Pygmalion Effect? How Is It Common In Our Life?

The Pygmalion Effect is a phenomenon whereby high expectations lead to outstanding performance. It can be understand how our beliefs about another person’s abilities influence our actions toward the other. The effort has an impact on others’ beliefs about themselves. The confidence in themselves causes other actions toward us, reinforcing our beliefs about that person.

It is a positive self-fulfilling foretelling in which the targeted individual of projections internalizes and conforms to the optimistic labels they receive. This implies that optimistic expectations on a leader’s part could boost teams’ performance.

Picture: Tech in Teach

History of the Pygmalion effect

The one who discovered the Pygmalion effect was Robert Rosenthal in his pioneering study in 1964. Rosenthal and his colleague, Lenore Jacobson, use the Greek myth of Pygmalion in ‘Metamorphoses’ by Ovid to explain the concept in their book, ‘Pygmalion in the Classroom.’

The story begins when Pygmalion, a sculptor from Cyprus, falls in love with an ivory statue of a woman made by him. Fascinated by the statue’s beauty, he begged God to give him a wife like the statue he created. Then, God granted Pygmalion’s request, and the statue came to life.

Picture: Aisling Groves-McKeown

Next, George Bernard Shaw’s play, Pygmalion, also conveys the point. In the play, Liza explains: “the difference between a flower girl and a woman is not in the way she behaves, but in the way she is treated.” She insists, “I will always be a flower girl to Professor Higgins because he treats me as a flower girl, always will; but I know I will be a woman to you because you think of me as a woman, always will.”

Picture: The Captive Reader

How does it work?

The performance of the Pygmalion effect is similar to a self-fulfilling prophecy. It can be understood through the four stages of the cycle pattern:

1. What people think of us shapes how they treat us
2. Their treatment of us affects how we think about ourselves
3. Their beliefs then impact the way we interact with others
4. Our interactions with others shape their thinking towards us, back to basics.

The main idea of the Pygmalion effect is how other people’s expectations of us shape our behaviour significantly.

In conclusion, high expectations make our performance excellent, while low expectations make our performance terrible.

Sources: Sprouts @YouTube, simplysociology.com

Adib Mohd

Recent Posts

160 Makan Spots, 40 Iconic Dishes, One Map redBus Is Feeding Our Travel Obsession

If you’ve ever planned a road trip just to try nasi dagang in Terengganu or… Read More

2 days ago

A Malaysian Coin Was Spotted at the CIA, Spy Move or Travel Flex?

Did a Malaysian coin just show up at the CIA’s Nathan Hale statue in the… Read More

2 days ago

Tourism Malaysia Backs Upcoming Film “Worth The Wait” RomCom Released in Malaysia

Tourism Malaysia is proud to announce its official support for the highly anticipated feature film… Read More

3 days ago

UMW Toyota Drives Customer Connections Through Performance, Community And Real Value

UMW Toyota Motor (UMWT) closed June 2025 with strong sales, recording 7,773 units for the… Read More

3 days ago

Pavilion Bukit Jalil Brings Japan To Malaysia With Matsuri Festival: Konnichiwa, Japan. Together, Here.

Pavilion Bukit Jalil will be launching its highly anticipated MATSURI Festival – Konnichiwa, Japan. Together,… Read More

3 days ago

Four Teams Crowned Champions At The Successful Fifth Edition Of The LALIGA Youth Tournament Malaysia

Four Teams Crowned Champions At The Successful Fifth Edition Of The LALIGA Youth Tournament Malaysia… Read More

3 days ago

This website uses cookies.