Critiquing others – furthering good ideas?
Friday, July 9th, 2010Just read an interesting article called In favor of tough criticism .
It’s a bit of a long read but well worth it. It’s especially timely as I am discussing testing dashboards with collegues and peers. I enjoyed the comments and I especially like the conclusion.
“The future of critical exchange stands at a crossroads. The increased reliance on faint praise, along with the rise of anonymity online, threatens to enervate the free flow of ideas in academe…. It is time for literary scholars to question their critical affiliations, to question behavior that encourages conformity over nonconformity; faint praise over pointed criticism; anonymity over transparency. Telling a colleague “You’re wrong” shows more compassion and collegiality than remaining silent—or hiding behind a cloak of anonymity.
We need to grow thicker critical skin. Why? Because critical behavior that always results in a chorus of affirmation is nothing more than conformity; because allowing views to persist that need to be challenged is nothing less than critical mediocrity; and because failure to tell our colleagues what we truly think about their work is simple dishonesty. A reshaped critical culture will help build a more robust, honest, and transparent academy.”
Even though the writing is focused on the academic world I think the ideas have usefulness outside that context. It made me think about the implications at work for direct reports, peers and bosses as well as colleagues in the technology industry.
What’s your thoughts on the situation?
- Critique (even if it’s harsh) to help your friend, employee, colleague, boss make a better argument or take the approach of “If you don’t have anything nice to say don’t say anything”?
- What is the proper forum for criticism – private, publicly or anonymously
- How does one prevent critiques from getting personal?