Adults have a tendency to praise children who perform poorly in order to motivate them.
However, Dr. Eddie Brummelman's recent research suggests that this may be harmful.
The reason is that praise for average or even terrible performance on a regular basis can lead to inflated self-esteem.
This might drive children with low self-esteem to forego critical learning opportunities.
If children with poor self-esteem don't realize the absence of results, inflated praise may cause them to miss critical repercussions of their actions and limit their learning experience.
Therefore, a possible consequence of this practice is inflated self-esteem, which might drive children with low self-esteem to forego critical learning opportunities.
Learn more here: brainly.com/question/11425021.