I'm trying something new! As I grapple alongside clients and colleagues, I wonder if it would be helpful to share resources in more quickly digestible snippets. You are invited to comment below each Quick Note with your thoughts, reactions, wonderings, or additions. Let's give it a try!
In her research on Growth Mindset, Carol Dweck shares with us that "we can grow our brain's capacity to learn and to solve problems. In this talk, she describes two ways to think about a problem that's slightly too hard for you to solve. Are you not smart enough to solve it … or have you just not solved it yet?"
Source: Carol Dweck: A Summary of Growth and Fixed Mindsets
The above graphic by Dweck shares that fixed mindset demonstrates a belief that intelligence is static and displays the following tendencies. (Italics added by me.)
In comparison, a growth mindset holds the belief that intelligence can be developed and leads to a desire to learn and a tendency to:
What did your schooling experience teach you about growth or fixed mindset? How do you see growth or fixed mindset in yourself?
My K-12 experience taught me subtly, yet poignantly, that I was stupid, even though I'd participated in gifted and talented programs. It wasn't until undergrad that I learned that I'm great at applying concepts, soaking in research, reference sources, following curiosity, and seeing complexity, but I am NOT gifted in memorization.
A system that values memorization is rooted in a fixed mindset. Growth mindset is seen in an organization or system that sees people as curious, creative, tenacious, and persistent, where fear doesn't freeze us and we value grappling with what we don't know...yet.
I hope this encourages you to train your brain to practice a Growth Mindset and get less stuck. You deserve the liberating affects of growth mindset.