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1.
Psychol Sci ; 33(7): 1086-1096, 2022 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35699476

ABSTRACT

School underachievement is a persistent problem in the United States. Direct-to-student, computer-delivered growth-mindset interventions have shown promise as a way to improve achievement for students at risk of failing in school; however, these interventions benefit only students who happen to be in classrooms that support growth-mindset beliefs. Here, we tested a teacher-delivered growth-mindset intervention for U.S. adolescents in Grades 6 and 7 that was designed to both impart growth-mindset beliefs and create a supportive classroom environment where those beliefs could flourish (N = 1,996 students, N = 50 teachers). The intervention improved the grades of struggling students in the target class by 0.27 standard deviations, or 2.81 grade percentage points. The effects were largest for students whose teachers endorsed fixed mindsets before the intervention. This large-scale, randomized controlled trial demonstrates that growth-mindset interventions can produce gains when delivered by teachers.


Subject(s)
Academic Success , Achievement , Adolescent , Humans , Motivation , Schools , Students , United States
2.
Child Dev ; 78(1): 246-63, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17328703

ABSTRACT

Two studies explored the role of implicit theories of intelligence in adolescents' mathematics achievement. In Study 1 with 373 7th graders, the belief that intelligence is malleable (incremental theory) predicted an upward trajectory in grades over the two years of junior high school, while a belief that intelligence is fixed (entity theory) predicted a flat trajectory. A mediational model including learning goals, positive beliefs about effort, and causal attributions and strategies was tested. In Study 2, an intervention teaching an incremental theory to 7th graders (N=48) promoted positive change in classroom motivation, compared with a control group (N=43). Simultaneously, students in the control group displayed a continuing downward trajectory in grades, while this decline was reversed for students in the experimental group.


Subject(s)
Educational Status , Intelligence , Psychological Theory , Psychology, Adolescent , Adolescent , Child , Cohort Studies , Culture , Female , Helplessness, Learned , Humans , Internal-External Control , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Mathematics , Motivation , Teaching/methods
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