In the passage “Mindset and School Achievement” Carol Dweck effectively convinces her readers that those with the right mindset will allow a person to live a successful life. Dweck jumps right into her dissection “why having a right mindset play an important role in all aspects of life” argument. She address how growth mindsets can lead us to greatness. She knows what it’s like to feel like you’re not good enough and connects with her readers using the knowledge. Throughout the passage, Dweck focus on the recognition that it’s not about intelligence, not about destined to be special.…
In conclusion, Dweck's writing moves in Mindset convinced me of the importance of a growth mindset with real evidence. There are always new challenges arising in our life. If we can learn the way to turn from a fixed mindset into a growth mindset, we may handle them more easily. From this reading, I asked myself, “Which mindset is a better mindset to be?” I suddenly realized that the ability to succeed in learning and in life is not IQ or talent, but it was each individual's effort and…
Dweck demonstrates the existence of the growth mindset. Personally, I see the growth and fixed mindsets everyday at school. It has become clearer and clearer to me that school is no longer about learning; it is about receiving a good grade. Students, including myself, will cheer if they get an easy teacher in a class where they will learn little, and will groan if they are stuck with a hard teacher who will teach them a lot, rather than simply “giving” them an A. After reading this article, I have realized that I hold the fixed ability mindset. Moving on, I will try to transfer over to the growth mindset. I will make the most of the opportunities bestowed on me and try to learn as much as I can. I will try to raise my hand more without the fear that my answer or question will sound stupid to my peers. I will also attempt to do new things, and put myself into situations in which I feel challenged and slightly uncomfortable. I believe I can do this, because as Dr. Dweck says, though one may have a fixed mindset, he or she can change. Dr. Dweck proves that it is of the utmost importance that we do not define ourselves; we are neither smart nor dumb, talented nor inept. This applies to categorizing myself as having a growth mindset or a fixed mindset: I can always change my beliefs, and strive to…
The quote, “The moment we believe that success is determined by an ingrained level of ability we will be brittle in the face of adversity,” by Josh Waitzkin expresses how if people believe that success is based on capability when they face a problem, they’ll tend to give up and fail. Growth mindset is when people believe that their most basic abilities can be developed through dedication and hard work. Grit is perseverance and passion for long-term goals. Grit and growth mindset has been proven to help one achieve in academics, personal life, and career.…
I read the Mindset book by Carol S, Dweck. This book really made me think and reflect about what kind of person I am. It focuses mostly on the benefits of having a growth mindset and the downside of having a fixed mindset. I learned a lot about how you can grow as a person instead of failing and giving up. Most of the most successful people are people with the growth mindset who learn from their mistakes and apply it to their career or everyday life. I use to believe that some peoples born talents are better than those who work harder but are not as naturally good. For example Michael Jordan got cut from his high school basketball team. Instead of giving up after he was told he wasn’t good enough that motivated him more and he worked hard and improved and eventually became one of the most talented basketball players in NBA history. One thing that I disliked was that the writer focused on the positive of the growth mindset when sometimes the fixed mindset can be useful. It sounds like common-sense but it is in how it carefully uses both biographical data and scientific research to strengthen the reader's understanding of the true implications of this finding. After I read 'Mindset', I understood much better why John McEnroe was famous for his tantrums (he had a very fixed mindset, a tennis loss meant that he was inherently worthless, that he was, permanently and in all aspects of life, a 'loser'), as well as why a four-star chef like Bernard Loiseau committed suicide. I learned that Chinese students who think that intelligence is unalterable don't follow remedial English courses, but also that American medical students who believe in innate ability flunk chemistry much more often than students who consider early failure as a sign that they haven't worked hard enough or that they should try other learning strategies. I also learned some things that are counterintuitive, such that you should never praise children for being smart or talented. I knew I liked the book…
A growth mindset is not a failure if you try something and it didn’t work…
style instead of giving up. Students with growth mindset see their education and life as…
Everyone has a mindset, whether it is a fixed mentality, or a growth mentality. Mindset is defined as an attitude, and a growth mindset is believing that “...intelligence is not simply a static trait that they inherently possess or lack to a certain degree, but something that can be grown and enhanced over time through effort, learning, and support…” (Dweck, 1). Those with growth mindsets believe that a person’s level of skill and intelligence can always be improved through hard work and dedication. This is because they believe that skills and intelligence should be grown. A fixed mindset is believing that “...failure indicates a fundamental lack of aptitude...Easy, predictable successes are seen as ideal, and these fixed-mindset individuals…
Math and physics are of huge interest to me, but some aspects of a unit or lesson puzzle me beyond compare. Because of those two subjects (and my endless amount of stuborness) I have witnessed how much a growth mindset can benefit you. Take grade 10 math (foundations and pre-calculus) for example, I understood nothing about the three formulas to find a slope and how they could intertwine. My quizzes for the unit were abysmal at best, and the unit test was coming up faster than i'd like it to. Everyday for a week I studied with my math teacher to try and improve enough to not fail the test. I had hope. every lunch time i would go in and try, and try, and try. the day of the unit test there was a lunch block before the test, and i was there studying. About ten minutes before the lunch bell sounded and then the unit test would begin i asked my teacher, "I am going to fail right?" and he looked at me and said, "probably, yes." Throughout the test I honestly thought I was going to fail, I had no proof that all my extra help helped me in any way. I handed my test in and hoped for the best. The next day we got the test handed back and when my teacher handed mine to me he said, "I have no idea how you managed this, but you got an A on the test." I was able to go from having no understanding, and from the teacher telling me I was most-likely going to fail; to getting an A on the test. If that's not growth, then I don't know what is. It shows that you can do anything if you really want to, and in university, and in life, that is very important to know anything can be improved and/or…
To be honest because, I’ve gotten to understand what growth mindset means, fixed mindset doesn’t cross my mind any more. I now try to make be determined and positive when new challenges arise and find solutions to difficult situations that might arise now. I can now tell when I don’t try my hardest on an assignment and when I do. I do feel it easy now to react when something I don’t like happens if it’s from failing on a test to not being able to do something well i'm determined now to finish what i'm doing with my best effort. Although this has been the first time I’ve read this book it has helped me become motivated not only in this class to finish my work but also in the rest of my classes. I really like the message that this book gets across…
uses animal experiment data from psychologist Martin Seligman from the university of Pennsylvania to show how some students give up when faced to difficulty, whereas others continue to learn and strive. The researchers observed how animals give up after repeated failures and as the result of the experiment, Dweck is able to compare these behaviors to those of students; Dweck wondered if students also give up when face to face with a difficult situation or continue to strive despite the difficulty of the situation. With this in mind, Dweck developed a theory in which there are two classes of learners, The helpless learner's mindset, which believe that intelligence is a fixed trait and only reaches a certain point. Versus the mastery-oriented learners, or learners with “Growth mindsets” which on the other hand, believe that intelligence can be shaped or molded through education and effort. The benefit of having a growth mindset within a student’s perspective is that they are in store for significant academic success rather than those fellow mates who have a fixed mindset. In similar fashion to Malcolm Gladwell’s study on students in KIPP schools, Dweck, along with Lisa Blackwell of Columbia University and Kali H. Trzesniewski of Stanford University monitored 373 students in jr high school to deduce how their mindsets will affect their math grades. The students were given mindset statements and were tested according to their beliefs to get the result of their grades. The final result confirmed how the students with growth mindset beliefs received superior test scores in comparison to those who held a fixed…
Having the right mindset can make a big difference in person’s life because it can either inspire the individual to keep going or give up completely. In her book, “Mindest: The New Psychology of Success”, Carol S. Dweck argues that growth mindsets are individuals who love challenges and are not afraid of failures, they believe in their learned abilities over talents. On the other hand, fixed mindset people focus on the results only. One person can alternate from a fixed mindset to a growth mindset with the correct social influences and good mentoring from others.…
Growth by most definitions is an increase of some sort or another. Growth means starting at one point and continually achieving more over time. The growth mindset is no different. The concept of the growth mindset is that over time and throughout one’s life, they continually adapt, change, and achieve a higher level of understanding about themselves and how they perceive themselves. This growth is due to the fact that they are generally able to identify their faults and weaknesses as well as understand their strengths. They accept the fact that they have these deficiencies, however, they are not satisfied with them, therefore they attempt to fix them or change them. This mindset that one is never done growing, learning, developing or bettering themselves is the basis for the “growth mindset” and the epitome of what these types of individuals stand for. The ideal example of a person that would have to have a growth mindset is a golfer. Every golfer knows that they could always do better the next time. Whether it be a missed put or a shanked nine iron, there is no such thing as a perfect round. Without a growth mindset, an individual would just give up after their first round. They live by the motto that failure isn’t okay, but it isn’t the end either. They will try over and over again, hoping to achieve a different and better outcome the next time. No outcome is fixed in the eyes of these individuals.…
Is intelligence set and unchangeable, or can it be developed and molded? Does failure mean that you can’t do what you attempted, or is it just a setback-- something that you can learn from? Are challenges seen as condescending, or an opportunity to improve? In the story of Snow White, there is an Evil Queen that is jealous of Snow White’s beauty. Before Snow White, she was the fairest of them all. The Queen had a plan to poison an apple, which would kill Snow White. However, when she fails, she becomes extremely angry because she feels that her failure showed weakness. Snow White, on the other hand, is more peaceful and she sees the Evil Queen as a challenge; a way to build her character, strength, and mind. In life, people have their own preferences and their own thoughts on certain topics. When I am living my life, I can be both the Evil Queen and Snow White depending on the situation; I have a tendency to see others at a threat at times; however, I also see failure as just a setback, and I am constantly trying to improve.…
A mindset is the view a person adopts. Whether their abilities and characteristics can change, the growth mindset, or whether they are set in stone, the fixed mindset. Carol Dweck, a Stanford University psychologist, analyzes the difference between a fixed mindset and a growth mindset. People with a fixed mindset “care so much about how smart they will appear that they often reject learning opportunities” (Dweck 2) instead of wanting to achieve their full potential. Other people, the ones with a growth mindset, seek for higher achievements in learning, wanting to develop their knowledge capacity. It’s either they give up on their selves or learn from their setbacks and try again. A person with a fixed mindset believes that they are born with…