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Carol Dweck

  • Andreahar citeretfor 5 måneder siden
    A no-effort relationship is a doomed relationship, not a great relationship. It takes work to communicate accurately and it takes work to expose and resolve conflicting hopes and beliefs. It doesn’t mean there is no “they lived happily ever after,” but it’s more like “they worked happily ever after.”
  • meleraishar citeretsidste år
    it’s not always the people who start out the smartest who end up the smartest.
  • Fiznikhar citeretfor 2 år siden
    You know, we’re going to go to other schools, and I bet the kids in those schools would like to know about the problems.”
  • Fiznikhar citeretfor 2 år siden
    Would you believe that almost 40 percent of the ability-praised students lied about their scores
  • Fiznikhar citeretfor 2 år siden
    Research by Claude Steele and Joshua Aronson shows that even checking a box to indicate your race or sex can trigger the stereotype in your mind and lower your test score. Almost anything that reminds you that you’re black or female before taking a test in the subject you’re supposed to be bad at will lower your test score—a lot.
  • Fiznikhar citeretfor 2 år siden
    In many of their studies, blacks are equal to whites in their performance, and females are equal to males, when no stereotype is evoked.
  • Fiznikhar citeretfor 2 år siden
    that the stereotypes get to them. Negative stereotypes say: “You and your group are permanently inferior.” Only people in the fixed mindset resonate to this message
  • Fiznikhar citeretfor 2 år siden
    The growth mindset also makes people able to take what they can and what they need even from a threatening environment. We asked African American students to write an essay for a competition. They were told that when they finished, their essays would be evaluated by Edward Caldwell III, a distinguished professor with an Ivy League pedigree. That is, a representative of the white establishment
  • Fiznikhar citeretfor 2 år siden
    thought math ability could be improved—felt a fairly strong and stable sense of belonging. And they were able to maintain this even when they thought there was a lot of negative stereotyping going around
  • Fiznikhar citeretfor 2 år siden
    This vulnerability afflicts many of the most able, high-achieving females. Why should this be? When they’re little, these girls are often so perfect, and they delight in everyone’s telling them so. They’re so well behaved, they’re so cute, they’re so helpful, and they’re so precocious. Girls learn to trust people’s estimates of them. “Gee, everyone’s so nice to me; if they criticize me, it must be true.”
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