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Meaningful Access and Success: A Growth Mindset

2/18/2016

11 Comments

 
Picture
Students in South Africa actively engaged in team project.
My colleague, Sharon Silverman, and I have been interviewing university students who faced significant barriers such as inadequate academic preparation, lack of financial support, misconceptions about college and being a first generation student. Despite these obstacles, the students were all able to successfully achieve their goals, and we wanted to identify the factors that may have contributed to their success. We discovered that the most significant factor in their success was having someone who believed in them. This was the primary driver, but there were several personal attributes that were correlated to this. One of the strongest was the presence of a growth mindset.

Research indicates that mindset is a reliable predictor of academic performance. According to Carol Dweck (2006), there are two types of mindset: fixed and growth. With a fixed mindset, one believes they have been endowed with an intelligence that does not change over time. A growth mindset, on the other hand, leads one to believe that their behavior impacts their intelligence and ability to achieve. They see intelligence evolving over time through their efforts and strategic behavior. Each of the students we interviewed exhibited a growth mindset. We asked them to respond to Dweck's four basic statements (p.12) related to mindset:
  • Your intelligence is something very basic about you that you can't change very much.
  • You can learn new things, but you can't really change how intelligent you are.
  • No matter how much intelligence you have, you can always change it quite a bit.
  • You can always substantially change how intelligent you are.

When we presented the students with these options, 100% of them chose the last statement. One of them told us, "Intelligence to me is your ability to focus on learning the task at hand. Many people have that ability, but some people choose not to use it...you have some students that are not doing well in class, but they know the name of every song out there. They're intelligent in that realm...so I disagree that intelligence is fixed."

This leads us to believe that we need to be fostering the development of this mindset in our classrooms. What challenges do you see with the mindsets of your students? How do you promote growth mindsets with your students?

Please join the conversation and help us explore instructional principles and strategies in our practice that will promote the development of a growth mindset.
11 Comments
Karen Lim link
2/20/2016 11:08:19 pm

I have my students take Cornell notes on Carol Dweck's presentation, "Developing a Growth Mindset" on YouTube.
Also students can learn about Angela Duckworth's research on "Grit" and take the Grit Scale test.
http://americanradioworks.publicradio.org/features/tomorrows-college/grit/angela-duckworth-grit.html

Reply
Sharon Silverman
2/21/2016 07:12:06 am

Thanks for this great idea, Karen. Have you noticed changes in your students' behavior as a result of this activity?

Reply
Karen Lim
3/23/2016 04:52:07 pm

Students see a sense of hope that they can change their behavior and thinking. For my College Reading and Study Skills class I use two books: Zadina, Janet. Six Weeks to a Brain Upgrade: A Student’s Quick-Start Guide for Using Brain Research to Boost Learning. www.brainresearch.us ISBN:978-0-9824637-1-0
McGonigal, Kelly. The Willpower Instinct: How Self-Control Works, Why it Matters, and what you can do to get more of it. New York: Avery. 2012. Print. ISBN:978-1-58333-508-6 (McGonigal teaches a very popular a 10-week “The Science of Willpower” course at Stanford University.) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NzVoQkPswRk. These two resources fits perfectly in a 16-week curriculum.

martha casazza
2/24/2016 01:25:19 pm

Our research has found that growth mindset seems highly correlated with grit and resilience. We will talk more about this relationship in an upcoming blog. For additional resources related to mindset, please see the ppt. entitled, "Mindset: Its powerful impact on achievement" that framed my recent presentation at UNC.

What strategies do you use to move your students from a fixed mindset to a growth mindset?

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10/14/2018 09:32:04 am

I also agree that these two factors will bring many changes in students life. This is strong believe ad i personally have experienced it.

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If we let these students be exposed no the things they should know, I believe that they have a great future ahead of them. I have nothing but respect to all teachers out there who do nothing but work hard for their students. This is a good thing because we can see how bog of a sacrifice they are willing to offer as long as their students will learn something from the end. The photo says it all; the teacher has been spending too much of her time for her student's team project!

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