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Kids are champions when they arrive (and often valedictorians): They expect to ... test results and attitudes, US vs. Asian; PBS Special, 'Are American Kids Stupid? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS President bassettnais.org


1
Mindsets How Fixed Mindsets Hurt Students
School Systems
Patrick F. Bassett, NAIS Presidentbassett_at_nais.or
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2
Two Mindsets
Mindsets The New Psychology of SuccessSource
Carol Dweck, NAIS Board Meeting, 11/11/07
  • Fixed Mindset Intelligence is a fixed trait
    (nature)
  • Growth Mindset Intelligence is a malleable
    quality a potential that can be developed
    (nurture)

3
People with Fixed MindsetsSource Carol Dweck,
NAIS Board Meeting, 11/11/07
  • Why do so many bright students quit working when
    experience a setback?
  • Why cant many athletes take feedback/criticism
    without exploding?
  • Why do so many employees, especially the
    Millennials, need daily rewards and recognition?
  • Because
  • They have a fixed mindset, thinking that
    intelligence, or athletic ability or professional
    competence are set.
  • Fixed mindset people organize their lives around
    trying to look talented and trying never to look
    inept. Blame others for setbacks. (The young John
    McEnroe).

4
People with Growth MindsetsSource Carol Dweck,
NAIS Board Meeting, 11/11/07
  • Believe that intelligence/ability is a malleable
    quality, a potential that can be developed with
    hard and persistent work and resolve.
  • Presented with setback, see a challenge and
    learning opportunity, not a defeat.
  • Presented with success, they seek improvement
    e.g., the mature Tiger Woods, who dismantled his
    winning swing, began losing, stuck with the
    growth plan, and has returned with an even better
    swing and more success.

5
People with Growth MindsetsSource Carol Dweck,
NAIS Board Meeting, 11/11/07
  • Understand that Einstein wasnt Einstein when he
    was born, and didnt become Einstein until after
    years of dedicated, passionate study. In fact,
    Einstein was a delayed learner.
  • Note Gladwells Outliers (study of
    high-performing individuals-Mozart, Gates, etc.
    and high-performing cultures-Asian Not genetics
    but hard work persistence opportunity to do
    hard work the basis of success. (See Gladwell
    YouTube Interview on Outliers.)

6
What Do Mindsets Do?Blackwell, Trzesniewski,
Dweck, 2007
Stanford Study of 400 7th graders over 2 years in
math.
  • Mindset Revealed by Ones Goals
  • Learning Goal The Growth Mindset
  • Its much more important for me to learn
    things in my classes than it is to get the best
    grades.
  • Performance Goal Fixed Mindset
  • The main thing I want when I do my school work
    is to show how good I am at it.

7
What Mindsets DoSource Carol Dweck, NAIS Board
Meeting, 11/11/07
  • Mindset Revealed by Ones Beliefs on Effort
  • Growth Mindset - Effort is positive
  • The harder you work at something, the better
    youll be at it.
  • Fixed Mindset - Effort is negative
  • To tell the truth, when I work hard at my
    school work it makes me feel like Im not very
    smart.

8
Mindset Revealed by Reaction to Failure
Asking children what they would do if they did
poorly on a test in a new class they liked
  • Mastery-Oriented Growth Mindset
  • I would work harder in this class from now on.
  • I would spend more time studying for the tests.
  • Helpless Fixed Mindset
  • I would spend less time on this subject from now
    on.
  • I would try not to take this subject ever
    again.
  • I would try to cheat on the next test.
  • PFB Fight or flight reactions.

9
Mindset Revealed by Reaction to Setbacks
  • Dweck as advisor to high-powered Stanford Golf
    Team
  • Kids are champions when they arrive (and often
    valedictorians) They expect to be perfect and
    winnersand struggle when discover the
    competition is fierce. Duck syndrome on the
    surface appear calm, but paddling for their life
    under the surface.
  • Their coach emphasizes its good to struggle
    creating safety to struggle and fail is
    tremendously liberatingand encourages the growth
    mindset.
  • Dweck also advises NASCAR racers Those with
    growth mindset find it easier to stay in the
    zone in long racesmistakes are inevitable and
    opportunities to make adjustments and win more
    races.

10
How Are Mindsets Communicated?
Students told the test measures their aptitude
lose interest as difficulty increased some lie
about their scores on an anonymous survey.
Students told the test poses a challenge that
develops their learning ask for more problems.
Answer 7
11
How Are Mindsets Communicated?
  • Teachers and Parents Those with fixed mindsets
    promote fixed mindsets fixed teaching style
    strategies fixed assumption about which students
    can learn and IQ fixed belief that great
    teachers are born not made. Ways schools
    contribute to fixed mindsets?
  • Please remove that student from my class shes
    not a good match for my teaching style.
  • Nature of Communicating Mindsets Important
  • Weaving biography into math and science Edison
    the perfect example of inventiveness being 10
    inspiration and 90 perspiration. Einstein
    failed algebra but eventually fell in love with
    math.
  • Vs. emphasizing the genius of prodigies.
  • Those told the former did better in math than
    those told the latter.

12
How Are Mindsets Communicated?
  • Self-Esteem Movement Undeserved Praise Creates
    False Expectations and Undermines Work Ethic
  • PFB Note PISA test results and attitudes, US
    vs. Asian PBS Special, Are American Kids
    Stupid?
  • Nature of Praise Communicates Mindsets
  • Intelligence Praise Wow, thats a really good
    score. You must be smart at this.
  • Effort Praise Wow, thats a really good score.
    You must have tried really hard. It was easy?
    Well lets have some fun and do some hard ones
    so you grow.
  • Control Group Wow, thats a really good score.

13
Number of problems solved on Trial 1 (before
failure) and Trial 3 (after failure).
Random mindset sampling in all 3 groups So type
of teacher praise TRUMPS natural mindset,
positively or negatively.
Number of Problems Solved
Type of praise impacted confidence, effort,
performance ( honesty)
Progressively harder trial tests
14
Fixed Mindset Instructions
  • The test you are about to take, the verbal
    portion of the MCAT, is a measure of your verbal
    intelligence and verbal reasoning ability.

15
Growth Mindset Instructions
  • The test you are about to take is not a
    measure of verbal ability rather it is a measure
    of your current level of reading comprehension,
    retention, and speed. All of these can improve
    considerably with practice.

16
Mindset Instructions on MCAT Problems (Dweck
research at Columbia)

25.9 better
17
Dweck Research on Testing
  • Showing students performance and strategies of
    those who did much better and those who did much
    worse
  • The fixed mindset students focused on those who
    did worse, said I feel much better now, and
    performed worse on the next test.
  • The growth mindset students focused on those who
    did better, said I see now, and performed
    better on the next test.
  • Related findings introduction of gender or race
    as demographic question before testing depresses
    performance.
  • Performance is maximized for minority students
    when a growth mindset is highlighted.

18
Growth Mindset School Values
  • Stretching and engagement over talent
  • Feedback focused on process of learning
    Constructive not judgmental criticism.
    Student-led parent/teacher conferences My goal
    is. Im not there yet-my plan is.
  • Message Setbacks tell you what to do next
  • Grading for learning Ungraded schools. Not yet
    as a grade in one school. Has Alfie Kohn been
    right all these years?
  • Message Keep on learning

19
Growth Mindset Parent Values
  • Messages to your child
  • Failures are useful.
  • Message Setbacks tell you what to do next
  • Grades measure progress not being.
  • Message Keep on learning
  • Successes come from hard work.
  • Message Youll succeed as long as you
    continue to learn.

20
Growth Mindset Case Study
  • Your daughter, 9, is lean and tall, built for
    gymnastics, which she has taken to with relish.
    She enters her first competition with dreams of a
    blue ribbon, and is devastated when it turns out
    she earns none, since the other girls were more
    skilled. What do you tell her?
  • We thought you were the best.
  • You were robbed by poor officiating.
  • There are more important things than
    gymnastics.
  • You have the ability, and next time you will
    win.
  • You didnt deserve to win this time.

21
Growth Mindset Case Study
  • We thought you were the best.
  • Insincere, since you and she know otherwise.
  • You were robbed by poor officiating.
  • Blames others when she was just not as good.
  • There are more important things than
    gymnastics.
  • Message is to devalue what you dont do well in.
  • You have the ability and next time you will
    win.
  • Desire not the same as ability.
  • You didnt deserve to win this time.
  • The other girls have worked longer and harder. If
    you want this, you can do likewise.

22
ConclusionsSource Carol Dweck, NAIS Board
Meeting, 11/11/07
  • Mindsets play a key role in motivation to learn.
  • They affect achievement.
  • Mindsets can be changed.

23
The End
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