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Students Who Believe Intelligence Can Be Developed Perform Better
ScienceDaily news story on research of Carol Dweck,
PhD and others
Research on how junior high school students' beliefs about intelligence
affect their math grades found that those who believed that
intelligence can be developed performed better than those who believed
intelligence is fixed.
The findings come from two studies conducted by researchers at Columbia
University and Stanford University, and are published in the
January/February 2007 issue of the journal Child Development.
One study looked at 373 12-year-olds over two years of junior high
school. Although all students began the study with equivalent
achievement levels in math, students who believed that their
intelligence could be developed outperformed those who believed their
intelligence was fixed. Furthermore, the researchers found, the gap
between these two groups widened over the two-year period.
Researchers concluded that the difference between the two sets of
students stems from the fact that students who believed their
intelligence could be developed placed a higher premium on learning,
believed more in the power of effort, and had more constructive
reactions to setbacks in school.
A second study looked at 91 12-year-olds in two groups, both of whom
had shown declines in their math grades. One group was taught the
expandable theory of intelligence as part of an eight-session workshop
on study skills. Another group participated in the same workshop, but
did not receive information on the expandable intelligence qualities of
the brain. The students who learned about the intelligence theory
reversed their decline and showed significantly higher math grades than
their peers in the other group, whose grades continued to decline.
"These findings highlight the importance of students' beliefs for their
academic progress," said Carol Dweck, one of the researchers and
professor of psychology at Stanford University. "They also show how
these beliefs can be changed to maximize students' motivation and
achievement."
Summarized from Child Development, Vol. 78, Issue 1, Implicit Theories
of Intelligence Predict Achievement Across an Adolescent Transition: A
Longitudinal Study and an Intervention, by Blackwell, LS (Columbia
University), and Trzesniewski, KH, and Dweck, CS (Stanford University).
Adapted from Society for Research in Child Development (2007, February
7). Students Who Believe Intelligence Can Be Developed Perform Better.
Source: ScienceDaily
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Carol S. Dweck, PhD, is a Professor of
Psychology at Stanford University whose work "spans social and
developmental psychology and examines the self-conceptions people use
to structure the self and guide their behavior."
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