Go For It: Risk-Taking, Challenge, and the Value of a Growth Mindset
Date and Time:
May 9 2014 7:00 pm - 8:30 pm
Location:
Evanston Township High School Auditorium
Address:
1600 Dodge Ave., Evanston, IL 60201
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Carol Dweck, Ph.D.

Lewis and Virginia Eaton Professor of Psychology at Stanford University

Go For It: Risk-Taking, Challenge, and the Value of a Growth Mindset

Advice | Character | College

“Our society worships talent, and many people assume that possessing superior intelligence or ability – along with confidence in that ability – is a recipe for success. In fact, however, more than 30 years of scientific investigation suggest that an overemphasis on intellect or talent leaves people vulnerable to failure, fearful of challenges and unwilling to remedy their shortcomings.” This quote is from a 2008 Scientific American Mind article by world-renowned motivational psychologist Carol Dweck, Ph.D., the Lewis and Virginia Eaton Professor of Psychology at Stanford University, and the author of Mindset. For Dr. Dweck, people’s self-theories about intelligence have a profound influence on their motivation to learn. A person with a “growth” mindset believes that intelligence can be developed, which fuels a desire to learn, and consequently a leaning to embrace challenges, persist in the face of setbacks, see effort as the path to mastery, learn from criticism, and find lessons and inspiration in the success of others. By contrast, a person with a “fixed” mindset believes that intelligence is static. This leads to a desire to look smart, and therefore a tendency to avoid challenges, give-up easily, see effort as fruitless or worse, ignore useful negative feedback, and feel threatened by the success of others. Students with a fixed mindset may plateau early and achieve less than their full potential, but those with a growth mindset reach ever-higher levels of achievement, including higher test scores and higher grades.

Dr. Dweck’s hugely influential work examining learning, motivation, success, failure and resilience has impacted parents, educators, athletes, coaches, corporate executives and others vested in high achievement. Her research concludes that we produce confident learners when we praise students for the process they engage in, not when we tell them they’re smart or talented. The elements of success – effort, persistence, determination, hard work, enthusiasm, and discipline, to name a few – are hallmarks of growth mindsets, and will be invaluable as a student progresses through her education and the world of work.