Winter Shorts 4: Voices In Our Heads

Explaining the science of self-handicapping

Episode Fast Facts

Time: 20 minutes

“Next time you find yourself avoiding the work you should be doing, remember: your values hold the key to success.” 

Tom Carbery

Episode host: Emma Gill

Episode Guest: UWA psychology student, Tom Carbery

A 20-something white male with glasses, black zipper jumper and jeans, smiles at the camera while sitting in a soundproof recording studio, a mic on a stand nearby and a rubber duck and laptop on the table next to him
A 20-something white male with glasses, black zipper jumper and jeans, smiles at the camera while sitting in a soundproof recording studio, a mic on a stand nearby and a rubber duck and laptop on the table next to him
Tom Carbery in the recording studio. Image: Emma Gill

Episode Credits

Episode Host: Emma Gill

Special Guest: Tom Carbery

Producer and Audio Editor: Emma Gill

Audio Engineering: Matthew Gill

Show notes: Emma Gill

Audiogram by Adobe Podcast

Copyright information:

The cover image for this episode features “Stressed” by Sodanie CheaCC BY 2.0 and Ibiza Events by CARMΣMIX l’estraperlista

Are you ever so worried about failing at something that you actively seek out other activities to do instead… and then ‘blame’ those as the reason you fail?
You might be ‘self-handicapping’.

On this episode, UWA psychology student Tom Carbery shares his mini podcast about self-handicapping with our host, Emma. They discuss how self-sabotaging behaviours can impact academic performance, the psychology behind maladaptive coping strategies, and the importance of self-affirmation.

Tom also shares his creative process: why he chose the topic, how he aimed to reduce ATAR students’ anxiety about assessments, what’s good – and not – about recording inside a closet, AI tools for podcasting, and the importance of authority, evidence, and appropriate guests when sharing psychological science.

“You need to show all parts of the spectrum… the empirical evidence, the case study, as well as the more personal feel. I think that creates the best balance. Self-help advice is great, but you need to have evidence for what you’re saying.”

– Tom Carbery

Episode links:

Tom talks about this paper:
Steven Berglas and Edward Jones (1978). Drug choice as a self-handicapping strategy in response to noncontingent success. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 36: 405–417. https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-3514.36.4.405

For more information about the consequences of self-handicapping behaviour, check out the SAGE Encyclopedia of Social Psychology: https://sk.sagepub.com/ency/edvol/socialpsychology/chpt/selfhandicapping#_

SciShow Psych cover self-handicapping in this YouTube video: https://youtu.be/d1YYgY0etrU

If you or someone you know is living with anxiety or self-destructive behaviour, help is available. Connect with Beyond Blue or your local counselling services: https://www.beyondblue.org.au/

Find out more about the undergraduate science communication minor at UWA: https://www.handbooks.uwa.edu.au/minordetails?code=MNR-SCCOM#minor-overview.

Keywords:

Science communication, Student podcast spotlight, The SciComm Collective, self-handicapping, performance, psychology, anxiety, academia, ATAR, students, self-affirmation, mental health, procrastination, coping, exams, stress, educational psychology, research, personal values, youth mental health, AI tools

The Collective on this episode:
Emma Gill

Emma Gill

Producer, Host, Editor, Shownotes

We love hearing everyone’s stories of how they got into science communication. What about you? What brought you here? Feel free to share in the comments!

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