Logo





  About us
  Advertising
  Privacy
  Terms
  Directory
  Submit Feed
  Analytics
  Trending
  Bias
  Trust Ranking
  API

The Guardian // World // Europe

Deadlines may be vital, but so is procrastination. I’ll tell you why … soon | Imogen West-Knights

Wednesday 13th November 2024, 8:00AM

Scientists tell us the same piece of work is judged more harshly if it’s handed in late – but that won’t stop me taking my timeIt’s a classic dilemma. A deadline is coming up, but you’re not quite finished. Do you hand in the work on time in its half-baked state, or do you miss the deadline, use the extra time to improve the work and hand it in late? Now, it seems, we have a scientific answer to this question. A study published in the journal Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes this month found that the same piece of work is judged more harshly if it is handed in late than if it is handed in on time. Procrastinate at your peril, the study suggests, because it really does matter if you don’t make that deadline.This news didn’t strike fear into my heart for a couple of reasons. First, it feels intuitive. If you go to a restaurant and order food, and then it takes ages to come, you want that food to be extra delicious to make up for the time you have sat there getting irritated waiting for it. Second, I am a punctual person. I meet the vast majority of my deadlines. But, for me, procrastination is integral to achieving that. So the takeaway from a study like this can’t, I think, be the abandonment of procrastination in toto.Imogen West-Knights is a journalist and writer Continue reading...

Full Story